Richard Menedetter wrote to Nick Andre <=-I think the quality has dropped considerably even over the past few years. I've looked at some news .. what they claim is news, and its a single short paragraph with large font surrounded by tones of add space. Libraries have books with lots of pages.
Hi Nick!
Sorry for the late reply ...
14 Aug 2017 04:38, from Nick Andre -> Richard Menedetter:
While that may be true, the information available is in most cases no different than one can (and have) obtained from libraries.
You have much easier access to geographically diverse information.This is true.
Etc.I wish this was the case. That was my hope and dream and still is, the information age! We could have it, but corps ... they've stolen the dream! data became a traded commodity vs its real use information, not money. It could be a lot cheaper, but ... its just being monetized.. like that is what drives people, .. usually no, but due the collective consciousness of corps about the all gains and growth vs all good and sustained, everyone has to play their game or fall behind financially and literacy (must keep working). The information age should have set many free, and make us more freer people!
Remember the early to mid 90's... The world did not suddenly morph
into some magical utopia when the Internet became popular, nor would
the "information superhighway" bring us together or improve our social standings with eachother by removing those geographical limits.
It depends on how technology is used.This is what allows the dumbing down, while it could also allow global education and understanding, but .. what is going on? Separation, ignorance, misunderstanding, misinformation at a rapid pace on a global scale.
But the fact remains that it is now much quicker and easier to
communicate with people from other continents, etc.
In fact, I think the opposite happened. People by and large just stareAgree! I've asked people why, why take a picture of your food, how many times have you looked at those pictures going back ... say 7 years. They don't really have good answers, not answers for reasons that would be logical, but more so about feelings or emotional based reasons.
off into their smartphones, or are addicted to Facebook, or seem
compelled to share pictures of what theyre about to have for supper. Cybercrime is more advanced and prevailent than ever nowadays.
There we are again, that it depends on how technology is used.Its nutty how fake news is spreading. At one point people were able to shed light on major media corps with simple small cameras and posting them on the internet, even some of the older smart phones, but now.. now you can be put in place of another and it can be almost undetectable. This was all before major censorship over the past 1.5 years.
And it also requires more education on the user side.
Eg. checking the crowd sizes for inauguration and to fact check "fake news"
I realise its not all doom and gloom and there are a few good websitesNot all doom and gloom is true. Think about how we (us on this board use the nets vs, basic smart phoners).
out there, but IMO western society's social skillset and intelligence level did not improve whatsoever by the Internet.
That is why education is important.Yes they do, but the tools are being produced and changes so fast, they have to be simplified and dummied down for users to understand them, and this is creating quality problems as well.
People need to LEARN to use the tools that are already widely
available.
I agree with both of you. Turn on encryption and start communicating with each other without allowing the giants to take and your comms and use them to turn us all into the product.The Internet is just a tool for communication.I really wish I could share the same sentiments, truth is, the
You need to select with WHOM you communicate.
Internet is by and large powered by companies who by and large earn profits by tracking and manipulating individual's on-line activity. Google, Microsoft, Amazon, etc.
educationI'll have to look this up.
Learn to use Privacy Badger, Adaware and other useful tools.
EFF is usually a good read on those topics.
One interesting part is browser fingerprinting. https://panopticlick.eff.org/
To RM, NA, and everyone else.
Richard Menedetter wrote to Nick Andre <=-
Hi Nick!
Sorry for the late reply ...
14 Aug 2017 04:38, from Nick Andre -> Richard Menedetter:
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