So this study kind of hints at it, but their (facebooks) algorithm worked exactly as intended. Showing users the stuff they want to see and that will keep them engaged. This has the unfortunate down stream consequence of radicalization of the consumer. I don’t recall the term exactly, but there’s a psychology term for groups that form and over time the members in the group tend to radicalize more and more. Us humans just did human things and we didn’t think about the group we’re trying to appeal to. You can see this on any left leaning political sub too. Rhetoric in both groups tends toward extreme especially with highly curated (eg. algorithms or upvotes) feeds. I don’t know how we can escape this other than cutting out constant political news out of our lives (which I have done and am much happier for).
The only thing you can do, really, is to take ‘detox’ breaks and perform self-assessment every now n’ then. I’ve noticed my own leanings shift towards extremes and it’s very hard to pull yourself out of it.
Same man! I, for awhile before Reddit shit the bed, decided I could handle politics again and unblocked politics subreddit and fuck. Quickly pulls you in towards an extreme. I saw what was happening and detoxed like you said, but damn I wish more people could look in the mirror every now and then
The problem is that very few people have the self-awareness required to understand what’s happening to them, especially when extremes are so…alluring. Nuance requires way too much higher-level thinking, and our monkey brains just love ‘thing good, other thing BAD’.
Also, there’s the comfort in belonging to a group of some sort. When there’s so many people who agree with so many of your beliefs, you see the extreme stuff they say and wonder to yourself ‘hm, but what if they’re right about this too?’
Here’s a really good video that explains this concept really well. It puts it in terms of thought germs and how they spread virally in the form of memes.
So this study kind of hints at it, but their (facebooks) algorithm worked exactly as intended. Showing users the stuff they want to see and that will keep them engaged. This has the unfortunate down stream consequence of radicalization of the consumer. I don’t recall the term exactly, but there’s a psychology term for groups that form and over time the members in the group tend to radicalize more and more. Us humans just did human things and we didn’t think about the group we’re trying to appeal to. You can see this on any left leaning political sub too. Rhetoric in both groups tends toward extreme especially with highly curated (eg. algorithms or upvotes) feeds. I don’t know how we can escape this other than cutting out constant political news out of our lives (which I have done and am much happier for).
The only thing you can do, really, is to take ‘detox’ breaks and perform self-assessment every now n’ then. I’ve noticed my own leanings shift towards extremes and it’s very hard to pull yourself out of it.
Same man! I, for awhile before Reddit shit the bed, decided I could handle politics again and unblocked politics subreddit and fuck. Quickly pulls you in towards an extreme. I saw what was happening and detoxed like you said, but damn I wish more people could look in the mirror every now and then
The problem is that very few people have the self-awareness required to understand what’s happening to them, especially when extremes are so…alluring. Nuance requires way too much higher-level thinking, and our monkey brains just love ‘thing good, other thing BAD’.
Also, there’s the comfort in belonging to a group of some sort. When there’s so many people who agree with so many of your beliefs, you see the extreme stuff they say and wonder to yourself ‘hm, but what if they’re right about this too?’
Here’s a really good video that explains this concept really well. It puts it in terms of thought germs and how they spread virally in the form of memes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rE3j_RHkqJc
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/watch?v=rE3j_RHkqJc
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.