The internet is not ruined just because there are a few assholes on it.
This from author, journalism professor, media consultant and long time blogger, Jeff Jarvis, discussing the progress he sees with the open Internet, digital journalism, Internet advertising and social media platforms.
…[L]et’s please remember that the internet is not ruined just because there are a few assholes on it. This, too, is why I insist on not seeing the net as a medium. It is Times Square. On Times Square, you can find pickpockets and bad Elmos and idiots, to be sure. But you also find many more nice tourists from Missoula and Mexico City and New Yorkers trying to dodge them on their way to work.
Let’s bring some perspective to the media narrative about the net today. Please go take a look at your Facebook or Twitter or Instagram feeds or any Google search. I bet you will not find them infested with nazis and Russians and trolls, oh, my. I will bet you still find, on the whole, decent people like you and me. I fear that if we get carried away by moral panic we will end up not with a bustling Times Square of an internet but with China or Singapore or Iran as the model for a controlled digital future.
Too many lawyers, law professors, legal technology entrepreneurs, access to justice leaders and other legal professionals stay away from social media and even blogging because of their belief that the Internet is over run with noise and crazies.
Very few law schools incorporate social learning into their teaching as a means of getting students to learn, collaborate and network across social media channels. Law professors and deans, who shy away from the net out of ignorance, don’t see the potential.
A business colleague stays away from social media, in part, because of the Russians meddling in our election and businesses possibly violating people’s privacy.
A consultant who helps law firms build more profitable and efficient practice through the use of technology questioned my second guessing the majority of law firms’ failure to use social media strategically, wanting empirical evidence that social media could be worthwhile for lawyers.
I am not against social media but I do think it tends to be an echo chamber where those who do use it talk a lot about it to others who use it, while most of my atty friends & clients see it as the time suck it can be.
I suppose hanging out with and engaging those discussing only the subject of social media could be a time suck. But ask any appellate lawyer, general counsel or legal entrepreneur using social media to learn, network and grow business if that’s who they’re hanging out with on social media.
Things are far from perfect on the Internet, per Jarvis, and it’s going to take a global effort to solve some of its challenges.
First let’s be clear: No one — not platforms, not ad agencies and networks, not brands, not media companies, not government, not users — can stand back and say that disinformation, hate, and incivility are someone else’s problem to solve.
But I’m with Jarvis, “The net is good.”
Good for lawyers, legal journalists, access to justice leaders, legal technology entrepreneurs, law students and legal association leaders.
Staying away from the Internet because you see it being ruined by a few assholes is dumb.
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