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Media Facebook Social Networks The Internet Technology

Most Americans Don't Think Social Networks Are Good For the World, Survey Finds (axios.com) 98

A new survey from Axios finds that a majority of Americans don't think social networks are good for the world. An anonymous reader shares the key findings: Silicon Valley has a big and growing problem: Americans have rising concerns with its most popular products and a growing majority wants big social media companies regulated, according to new poll conducted by Survey Monkey for "Axios on HBO." In the past year, there has been a 15-point spike in the number of people who fear the federal government won't do enough to regulate big tech companies -- with 55% now sharing this concern. In that same period, there was a 14-point increase in those who feel technology has hurt democracy and free speech. The biggest spike has been among Republicans, presumably because of increased concern about perceived censorship of conservative voices on social media. About 40% of Americans still feel that social media is a net positive for society. Overall, 65% of people say smartphones have made their quality of life better. The study also found that nearly two-thirds (63%) of respondents say they sleep with their phone in or next to their bed; and that jumps to 73% among millennials. Also, "More than half (51%) say smartphones are the hardest technology for most people to live without," reports Axios. "And that jumps to 67% among millennials."
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Most Americans Don't Think Social Networks Are Good For the World, Survey Finds

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  • The study also found that nearly two-thirds (63%) of respondents say they sleep with their phone in or next to their bed; and that jumps to 73% among millennials.

    I mean, the cell phone was invented so that users could be contacted / contact other useres more readily, almost all the time. I do not see a problem here.

    This study simply confirms success at this metric, right?

    • by fazig ( 2909523 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @08:45AM (#57684170)
      What? You don't have your alarm clock across the room? You sleep with it next to your bed? What a strange person you are!

      Personally I still use a regular alarm clock and even wear a wrist watch, because that's how I grew up. But seeing how modern cell phones have become these all-in-one devices I am not at all surprised that other older and 'discrete' tech gets displaced by these new devices and that people want to keep them close at all times. That's one of the many other factors that have to be considered here as well.
    • Back in the days before cell phones, it was common to have a landline phone next to the bed. So I suspect the percentage of people sleeping with a phone in/next to their bed has actually gone down with the advent of cell phones.
  • I’d love to have a discussion about this but the extremists on both sides will overwhelm any reasonable disussion so I’m off to enjoy Thanksgiving. And the family members who advocated lynching a black man are out having Thanksgiving somewhere else.

    [John]

  • Time sink (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @08:49AM (#57684180)
    I avoid social networking like the plague and my wife is on Facebook all the time. Just the types of little humorous clips she shows me really imitates me.. like I can literally feel the seconds being drained away from my life. First of all, many of them that are intended to show some funny moment are so obviously staged; and people on average really don't have a great sense of humor.
    • I avoid social networking like the plague and my wife

      And you wonder why your marriage is falling apart!

      Just the types of little humorous clips she shows me really imitates me

      Imitates you? Oh my, so she shows you clips that mock you? Well, now we know why you avoid her! ;)

  • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @08:58AM (#57684202)

    Smart phones are not social media. Why does the summary conflate the two?

    • Because an awful lot* of social media-ing is done on smartphones.

      (*) most?

      • by Kohath ( 38547 )

        Social media is also accessed over WiFi service. Would it make sense to ask people if they like WiFi service in connection with social media?

  • Meaningless (Score:3, Interesting)

    by cstacy ( 534252 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @09:19AM (#57684264)

    Findings, if TFS is to be believed, are meaningless.

    To me, a "smart phone" is (1) phone (2) GPS (3) Calendar (4) email monitor (too small for real use) (5) text messaging (emergency/supplementary/alert short messages -- neither I nor anyone I know actually "texts" in the conventional sense) such as "Can't Answer Phone", "Downstairs", police-traffic alerts) and (6) Google: quick facts, restaurants and services such as flights (7) photo/video missions (scenic, birthdays, ...)

    I have an "old people" Facebook account for some limited family/friend photo sharing and for advertising one of my businesses. I never access it from the phone and don't have any social medial apps installed. I guess technically that's social media -- I used Facebook for about an hour over the course of two days in the last seven months (funeral announcement).

    So, yes, my S9+ is indispensable and it is next to my bed at night.
    I used to have a GPS, camera, calendar, and alarm clock and I lugged
    all that shit around (and some of it was implemented as a big paper book).
    This damn thing fits in my pocket!

    But I don't think that's what the point of the survey was.

    Oh, other apps I have installed? Well, I have some music files on there,
    but I don't normally play them from the phone. I also have a small
    database of specialized information that I use for work - I look something
    up on there about once a week. And I have some gas station and pharmacy
    loyalty cards on the phone. All those replace paper I used to lug.
    Those are all the apps.

  • Facebook is like any institution. You get out of it what you put into it. Compare government. People want to pretend it will function properly even if they ignore it, but it won't do that any more than will a car. It might look to be working correctly for some time, until you find out that neglect has been causing damage all along. All we put into Facebook is our information, we're not supplying any of the elbow grease, so it's not surprising that the machine we didn't build is churning our personal informa

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 22, 2018 @11:37AM (#57684676)

    Usenet used to be great. I'm not sure if you would consider that "social media" but it rocked. There are still some news groups I read which are still good. Although the trolls and spam has gotten crazy.

    "Social media" like facebook OTOH is a nightmare of crap. Seemingly sane, intelligent people post things that are insane and garbage. On both sides of the spectrum. The people who are middle of the road don't seem to post nearly so much.

    The number of people who post political junk is amazing. The worst part is many of them are literally in a state of doublethink. On the one hand they complain about how high taxes are, and then they simultaneously complain the government isn't doing enough. If you point out that having government do more will almost certainly cost more, they get frustrated and tend to resort to magical unicorns to try and solve that.

    Also, I don't care at all about the fact that the coffee shop screwed up your coffee. Big deal. To see you post some story about the plight of starving people while previously complaining about your coffee being screwed up makes you look like an incredible asshole. You should be glad you have the funds to afford your cup of hot coffee, and be glad the water to make it is is (mostly) OK.

  • by marcle ( 1575627 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @11:40AM (#57684688)

    So which one is it? The post starts off talking about a poll relating to social media, but then turns into hand-wringing over smart phones. To be sure they often go together, but this kind of fuzzy thinking is more click-bait than actual, you know, informed discussion.

  • by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @11:55AM (#57684744)
    If you don't think social media is good, don't use it. End of story.
  • by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Thursday November 22, 2018 @01:00PM (#57685064)

    ... in many ways.

    Facebook is looking to deploy AI on our photos to determine demographics like race, age, presence of boats, goats, grand kids, political affiliation, religion, sexual preferences, and they are going to make even more money then they do now.

    I have a bot that deletes everything older than the current month. I'm a photographer and I don't want to feed that goddam machine, which pisses me off because Facebook was a great venue. I don't bother to post photos.

    In fact, I'm down to 20 Friends. Used to be 750. They don't know it, but I'm doing THEM a favour, as well.

    I still rely on Facebook to keep in touch with family, but because my footprint is shrinking, I'll eventually just bring it down.

    I know of no way to circumvent. Email was compromised way before Facebook was created.

    Other social media platforms are just as bad. In my professional opinion, we're screwed.

  • I don't understand all the social network hate - my Facebook bubble consists of relatively 'normal' (by my standards) people, with about 10% people I don't even remember having added, but their posts liven up the echo chamber a bit, so that's cool.
    I mostly use it to share articles I found interesting online, some jokes and some of the nicer life events (hey! i'm at the beach! anyone want to hand out?). I don't really see the haem in that, and it helps me stay in touch with other people that wold otherwise
  • Not so great for the US. We demonstrated to the rest of the world how stupid and easily manipulated we are in the last presidential election.
    I'm sure they had a great laugh, but they're probably not laughing so much any more. But the Russians are still laughing...

  • When radio was new, people became addicted to it.
    When TV was new, people became addicted to it.
    Same for computers, modems, email, internet, Web, social media, etc.

    Remember when you had to constantly tell your friends not to send you those email forwards promising free money from Bill Gates? People have moved on.

    On social media, people were obsessed with photos of their restaurant meals, now it's selfies. Eventually, people will get bored with the petty stuff and start using it for what it's really good for:

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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