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Would Social Media Have Made Life Worse For Richard Jewell? (mcall.com) 81

Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes: Clint Eastwood's new movie Richard Jewell recounts the incredible tale of the security guard. Jewell was later [erroneously] considered a suspect after being hailed by the media for saving many from injury or death by discovering a backpack containing three pipe bombs in Atlanta's Centennial Park during the 1996 Summer Olympics and helping to evacuate the area before the bomb exploded. Despite never being charged, he was subjected to an intense "trial by media" before receiving an apology from Attorney General Janet Reno and ultimately being completely exonerated.

The movie prompted Henry Schuster, an investigative producer for CNN at the time of the bombing, to offer an overdue apology in the Washington Post for his and the press's role in turning Jewell from a hero to a villain by serving as "the FBI's megaphone...."

Schuster warns, "Think how much worse it would have been for Jewell in 2019."

The article mostly shares the thought processes of that investigative producer. (He remembers that in 2005, "I sat at the computer and started my letter of apology, got frustrated and hit save. A year after that, Jewell died at 44, after months of failing health; my letter remained unfinished and unsent.")

But the CNN producer also writes that in the 23 years since the incident, social media has "made the rush to judgment instantaneous -- as quick as machine trading on Wall Street, but without any circuit-breakers." Would that have changed the way things played out if the incident happened in 2019? It's an interesting thought exercise -- so share your own thoughts in the comments.

Would social media have made life worse for Richard Jewell?
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Would Social Media Have Made Life Worse For Richard Jewell?

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  • by NoNonAlphaCharsHere ( 2201864 ) on Saturday December 28, 2019 @10:40PM (#59566230)
    Social media makes life worse for ALL of us.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Saturday December 28, 2019 @10:59PM (#59566248) Homepage

      That is not true, it is entirely dependent upon the nature of the social media, so avatar based social media is entirely different to real name social media, not even the slightest bit alike in outcome, real name social media is extremely destructive and decisive as has been amply demonstrated. Avatar or pseudonym based social has gone on for decades without much problem at all and mostly fun and games, as avatar not your real identity.

      The reality about the claim is entirely opposite. In corporate main stream media where they all toe the same line, the corporations decide who is villian and who is hero based upon WHAT WILL SELL THE FUCKING BEST, get the most eyeballs, fuck the truth there are advertising dollars to be generated.

      In social media, there would have been defenders, he would have been heard, his family would have supported him. Corporate main stream media actively silenced him so they could attack him. On social media, he would have had a defence and probably, yeah pretty rough in the first week but after independent analysis, there would have been a kick back.

      Now the apology is being forced by social media because normally the corporate main stream media would say nothing or twist it around to still make him look guilty if it was more profitable to do so.

      • One could argue that the ties to real identity are exactly what make it social media: certainly your "avatar based social media" has not had the same kind of destructive effects, but one could argue that the fact of its basis in avatars disqualifies it as "social media" in the first place.

        This isn't just snobbery. The reason you can't count avatars as social media is, in fact, the very same reason avatars don't have the same destructive effects as social media: it's all just pretend, and everyone knows it.

      • The people today who would aggressively demand to be treated "innocent until proved guilty" have no problem denying others the same rights for anyone who disagrees with their particular world view. Various segments of the US government and law enforcement agencies use social media to make an end around on the rights they are sworn to support and defend.

    • by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@g m a i l . com> on Saturday December 28, 2019 @11:48PM (#59566330) Journal

      I concur.

      I have an uncommon but not unique name. It's uncommon enough that if you search you only come up with a couple people in my area, and more than one has similar demographics to me.

      I've often wondered what I'd do if one of them made the news for some unsavory reason. It's not even how do I convince a potential new employer that that wasn't me, it's if I even would get the chance. If they google the name and find someone unsavory with the same name and about the same demographics, do they even bother checking further?

      If I had a unique name I wouldn't worry, because it would either be me or it wouldn't be. If I had a common name, they'd get buried in results and realize that there were a ton to pick from.

      It's the uncommonness that worries me. If there are only 3 results and two are about a felon, do I really trust HR to get it right? All my experience says, "Fuck No."

      • This reminds of an employer confronting me, having conducted a background check of me himself, and demanding to know why I hadn't revealed that I was having my wages garnished. I asked to see the report that suggested this was the case. I pointed out to the employer that even if the person with the same name living in the same city were me, I would have been 4 years old at the time of the incident. At least one employer jumped to unreasonable conclusions based on insufficient evidence.
      • by Way Smarter Than You ( 6157664 ) on Sunday December 29, 2019 @02:52AM (#59566650)
        Oh yeah? You think you got it tough? My real name is John Smith. Do you know how many John Smiths are serious felons? You ain't got nothing on me, pal!
        • True story: My former boss knew a Jamaican guy whose real name was John Smith. He got put through the ringer at any and every kind of security checkpoint in existence. When he got married, he took his wife's last name.

    • Social media makes life worse for all lifeforms.

    • How exactly does me sharing a picture of my son with family affect your fscking life in any way? Troll.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday December 28, 2019 @10:56PM (#59566242)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Freischutz ( 4776131 )

      There's a much greater variety of sources and ways to cross-reference everything the press says. The press isn't as much of an authority as it used to be. They don't have the megaphone because everyone has a megaphone.

      Not just the press, anybody with a platform, anything people read in some piece of dribble posted to their Facebook page. Everybody having a megaphone is one of the problems. That's how bullshit like the anti-vaxxer movement stays alive. POTUS claims wind-turbines give you cancer, how many people bother to fact-check that? Not all that many judging by the number of people I've run into who regurgitate it as fact. We've got people on this forum who've apparently never heard of high and ultra high voltage pow

    • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Sunday December 29, 2019 @12:24AM (#59566388) Homepage Journal

      There's a much greater variety of sources and ways to cross-reference everything the press says

      Reference the Covington Kids incident earlier this year.

      Firstly, you are saying that there are ways to check things the *press* says, but isn't the press supposed to be doing this checking in the first place?

      Secondly, the availability of fact-checking orgs didn't seem to work for the Covington kids.

      Isn't the press supposed to be the fact checking org?

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • What exactly was gutsy about the watergate reporters? They had a huuuuuuge scoop and published it. It's what all reporters would kill for.
        • I'm... sorry. Didn't you just prove my point by voiced a rebuttal backed up by an opinion piece about bias in the media?

          You missed the bigger picture. This is Slashdot so the situation is skewed towards commonsense by the fact we have a moderation system. However were this any normal media situation a hierarchy of truth applies. That would imply that your post is taken as truth with +5 insightful and all subsequent criticism of it sits down at 1 or 2 at best.

          Having snopes or other people fact check the media is quite pointless when the media are the ones promoted and only the occasional critical thinker bothers to fact check

        • The short story is that there was a completely out of context picture of a kid in a Maga hat smiling at a Native American man, which got pumped by multiple media outlets until the kids ended up getting death threats and etc. The events in the report did not actually involve the people in the picture at all.
    • by arglebargle_xiv ( 2212710 ) on Sunday December 29, 2019 @12:30AM (#59566398)
      Most people don't want to hear the truth, barely know about Snopes, and wouldn't use it even if they did. Once the dogpiling got started it'd be curtains for him, there'd be dozens or even hundreds of conspiracy-theory videos posting made-up "facts" and half-truths invented as required about his past "proving" that he was the bomber. That's alongside the ones proving it was a false-flag op planned by the Clintons and a million other types of instant-outrage clickbait.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          but that irresponsible people are given a chance to voice themselves in a way equal to responsible people

          That's what the current medium does. In the past, in order to get wide distribution, you at least had to get hired by somebody, and were open to a libel/slander lawsuit. Jewell did in fact sue a bunch of newspapers.

          With the current medium, any dipshit can say anything they want, anonymously, and be heard all over the world.

        • People didn't vote FOR Trump. Let's be verrrry clear. They voted AGAINST Hillary. A ham sandwich could have beat her in 16.
          • Who got Trump the nomination? He wasn't running against Hillary in the primaries.

            I am among those who voted for Trump because Hillary is terrible, but I know many people who thought Trump was wonderful from the beginning. I thought Trump was all bombast, but I have been proven wrong.

        • At the end of the day it seems like 21st century Democracy is starting to live up to the kinds of awful things the aristocratic elites warned us about.

          What I can't decide is if they're actually right, and at some point the great unwashed masses really need their voices and choices limited to options pre-selected for them by their betters.

          Or if somehow this is all the byproduct of Putin 4D-chess disinformation schemes to sow chaos and make liberal democracy just seem worse than it really is. Like if without

      • by Jack9 ( 11421 ) on Sunday December 29, 2019 @01:41AM (#59566538)

        > barely know about Snopes,

        At the same time, some people hold Snopes up as an unmitigated source of truth.

        • Please, point me to a Snopes article you can verifiably prove wrong.
          • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

            by malkavian ( 9512 )

            Only anecdotal, but I have come across some. As I've had no great crusade against them, I've not bookmarked or otherwise held record of the offending articles. I'd say Snopes is better than no Snopes (as it's more accurate than the general media), but isn't infallible and isn't without bias.

          • I think rather than an accusation of dishonesty, he's pointing out the basic truth that no source is infallible. You should treat any source with at least some basic degree of skepticism and, ideally, cross-check against other sources to ensure accuracy. This isn't a knock on Snopes, it's a general policy when trying to verify the truth.
          • by Jack9 ( 11421 )

            https://www.snopes.com/fact-ch... [snopes.com]

            They used interpretation to come to a conclusion, rather than the facts speaking for themselves.
            This is not the only instance, but it's a straightforward example.
            The facts are self-referential, which avoids most of the arguments that serve as cover, when arguing about sources of truth.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Eh, I think it would have been worse. I remember the incident. We didn't get much news coverage of it, just that the security guard who found the bomb was under investigation. Everyone pretty much assumed he was guilty based on that.

      People love scandal, so that's the way the majority will jump.

    • 'The internet makes us all reporters and part of the conversation, for better or worse"
      It's pretty much more worse than better. Jewell would have been doubly crucified today and even an apology by the FBI would not stop people from persecuting him on social media.

    • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

      At some point, one of those "sources and ways to cross-reference everything the press says" is going to need to be authoritative enough for people to, y'know, believe it. More likely, the authoritative sources will get lost in the jumble, and people will either believe nothing - or everything. Which pretty much describes the political climate today...

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Saturday December 28, 2019 @11:15PM (#59566262)
    it is 20% social and 80% troll fest, i even caught my own brother using an alternative profile to troll his friends and family (including me) he thought he was being clever but i figured out it was him, i bet that is more common than most people think, i quit using social media a long time ago and am better off for it, just look at facebook how many real people do you know on there that have hundreds of followers and you know they dont know all those people, some are probably fake accounts of trolls and spammers, why waste your time with that
    • It it were really a troll fest, it would be kinda fun in a rude fashion. Most of these so-called trolls are just rabble-rousers with an agenda. How would "social media" deal with some of the aimless, mindless, shock-fest trolling that Slashdot has seen over the years? We'll never know.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ... social media has shot its wad. The 2016 election showed how ephemeral and banal the bubble has become and all of us are aware of that.

  • It already happened (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Saturday December 28, 2019 @11:31PM (#59566292)
    People on social media sites basically went on a witch hunt [theguardian.com] for the person(s) responsible for the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing [wikipedia.org], wrongly implicating several innocent people just because they happened to be wearing backpacks, or showed in multiple videos.

    Law enforcement in that case keep the investigation secret, releasing minimal information to the press, and eventually released video of the correct suspects. Iin 1996 law enforcement was convinced Jewel was the correct suspect. Add wild speculation on social media on top of that, and he probably would've been driven to suicide.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I think people have learned from that debacle. Nowadays they are more likely to by cynical and doubt any claims being made, or even benefit from people trying to debunk Mainstream Media reports.

      We have gone from one extreme to the other.

      • Uhm aren't you on the list of people who believed the Russian spawned Trump dossier was real?
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          You mean the one written by Mueller? The one full of extensive evidence and which came from an investigation that sent many people close to Trump to jail? That dossier or some other one?

          • You just proved his point. The Mueller report specifically, explicitly stated there was no collusion or conspiracy, none, nada. But you have your world-view, and it will not change it because you have your social media/tainted-media streams to reinforce your beliefs.
            • by runenfool ( 503 )

              You just proved his point. The Mueller report specifically, explicitly stated there was no collusion or conspiracy, none, nada. But you have your world-view, and it will not change it because you have your social media/tainted-media streams to reinforce your beliefs.

              I think you may have proved the point. The Mueller report did not say there was no collusion - you didn't even have to go far in to find the statement about it. From the report (searchable version via the Washington Post) - "In evaluating whether evidence about collective action of multiple individuals constituted a crime, we applied the framework of conspiracy law, not the concept of "collusion." In short, they weren't looking for anything called "collusion".

              I get why people wouldn't download and read the

              • No collusion [americanbar.org]. No collusion [reuters.com]. No collusion [latimes.com]. Don't believe the media or the Bar Association? Then see page 2 of the Mueller report [washingtonpost.com] where it explicitly states:

                the investigation did not establish that members of the Trump campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities

                Maybe the very words of the Mueller report itself will convince you that Mueller didn't find any conspiracy or collusion. If that still does not convince you - you're beyond all reason.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              No collusion, just enough criminality to put his friends behind bars and to go after Trump himself if it wasn't for the fact that he is POTUS.

      • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

        Bullshit on that one. I've only got to pick a news site and I can find 'cancel culture' everywhere.

      • I think people have learned from that debacle.

        Have you ever met another person? There is absolutely nothing at all in the modern world that could possibly back up that statement. People are desperate to burn witches whenever possible and will happily support any story that fits their world view.

        See Covington Kids as an example of how we have learnt nothing.

  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Saturday December 28, 2019 @11:33PM (#59566298)
    The issue is not whether social media makes life worse for one specific person.

    The issue is whether or not social media makes life worse for people in general.

    And my answer is a resounding YES.

    • Whether it's social media or Network News programs, the solution is the same:

      Stop caring what other people think of you.

      You will generally be happier, and be able to weather such a negative report.
    • Social Media gives bullies a huge platform and let's them basically follow you everywhere. Once upon a time, once you left the neighborhood (or town/state), you were almost guaranteed the bully was out of your life for good. Now, they can basically attack you anywhere on the planet.
      So, overall, I'd say that given its usefulness as tool for wrecking lives (and the number of people willing to use it that way), it makes life worse.

  • The term âoesocial mediaâ would have meant a lynch mob.
    Facts and/or due process just do not matter in either case.

    • It's not really fair to call it a Lynch mob when it's just a bunch of people writing tweets.
      • Not all of them merely write tweets. Some of them "dox" people by revealing personal details of accused people publicly. Others "swat" people they dislike. Others put on black masks and plan violent protests on social media.

  • While the answer is obvious, it is worth asking this question, if only so that when another hero is smeared by prejudice and cynicism we'll be hopefully less likely to accept that narrative.
  • The obvious, and well thought out answer, is "yes". This is the opposite of Betteridge's Law of Headlines, which says:

          "Any headline that ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no".

    Well done to the Slashdot editors.

  • Jewell got royally fucked by the media. Could it have gotten worse? Sure. But in that context worse is the difference between "let's hang you" and "let's hang you then let people rip your body parts off."

  • That's a trick question, it makes life worse for everyone

  • Anti-social media.

    That is how I usually refer to it in conversations about it.

    I would encourage others to do likewise.
    At first, it might sound funny or tongue-in-cheek.
    But, the more people say it, the more other people might start to appreciate it or get insight into its perfidious nature and its effects on sane society.

    Anti-social media.

    Also:
    anti-polite
    anti-politic
    anti-sensible
    anti-thoughtful
    anti-considerate
    anti-considered
    anti-cooperative
    anti-compassionate
    anti-measured
    anti-reasonable
    anti-empathetic
    anti-rat

  • I'd agree that social media has "made the rush to judgment instantaneous". The internet can also be the source of equally speedy corrections. I expect it will be far easier to promote the latter than prevent the former.

    • Re:Rush to judgement (Score:4, Informative)

      by malkavian ( 9512 ) on Sunday December 29, 2019 @10:30AM (#59567300)

      The problem being that almost nobody bothers with the corrections. That's already been established in research. Those that do read the corrections don't hold it in the same regard as the original sensationalist headline, so the tarnish will always remain when mud has been slung. That's why it's such an overused trope. It doesn't matter if you're guilty or innocent, throw enough mud and your target is done.

      The majority of people will rush from one sensationalist "clickbait" article to the next. That spreads rapidly due to its "compelling" nature (it's been designed to do this by people that very much knew what they were doing), with each person exposed acting as a megaphone to amplify the message (often distorting it slightly, and adding their own disinformation to the original).
      A correction to this hits the cognitive dissonance area; most people do not like to be exposed to being fallible (especially in this day and age when many have been brought up to be "protected" from failing, and be taught that their view is tantamount to being true), so most of those that see a correction will resolve that by forgetting or ignoring the correction.

      One of the interesting attempts to find ways to combat disinformation is "Bad News" ( https://getbadnews.com/#intro [getbadnews.com] ). These days, I think this should be baked into a curriculum; people need to be educated to spot the signs of disinformation, and develop the meta cognition sufficient to be able to have a chance at spotting manipulations of their instincts. If you inoculate a swathe of the population this way, they gain resistance to manipulation in the same way that vaccines affect diseases (well, that's the theory). There will always be the vulnerable, but it could go a long way to stopping the spread of this cognitive "disease".

  • You don't even need soviel media for this.

    Someone starts a bad rumor, others carry it once step further without checking for facts and your life as you know it is over.

    Is good to mentally prepare for such a situation from time to time.

    I would change my name and move my life to an entirely different place. After leaving statements and assessments of the actual facts somewhere where people can find them if they are looking a few years later.

    This is how lynch mobs happened, and they only don't happen today any

  • His life and all of his past comments would have been picked through and posted about. People would have been saying he just wanted to get 15 minutes of fame by being the hero and more people would have believed that. And when the real culprit was found, people would still be posting old information and opinions. Or even thinking it was a conspiracy to pass the blame.

    I actually could have been a suspect in this case too. As I was at the Atlanta Olympics and left the morning the bomb went off. I was 16

  • On the other hand, it could have PREVENTED it by somebody's video showing him nowhere near the blast area, or even showed who did leave that backpack there. We'll just never know.
  • Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes

    Bizarrely, the original submission by theodp is (still) labeled as "SPAM" [slashdot.org]... I noticed, because I upvoted it on the "Firehose", which placed it into my own "stream"...

  • In social media he would have been guilted into suicide within days, even though he was innocent. Some asshole would have had him SWATTED several times, some other asshole would have stolen his identity and used it to ruin him financially, etc. In today's world, people believe social media BS more than they believe the reality around them.

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