Since the advent of the internet, there's been all sorts of methods of communication. Usenet, IRC, forums of every type and subject. Comment sections in news articles are a newer one we've not had for a long time, social media is another one of those. The methods and types of communication are always there, even if some become outdated. The internet thrives on communication, the sharing of ideas and prose.
One thing I've always noticed, though, is the near-constant level of vitriol, anger, and simply trolling by denziens of the internet. Best surmized by a picture I'm sure almost everyone's seen at one point:
'
Online disinhibition effect' is a much more scientific title for this effect. Yet, the existence of such types is not quite the topic of this. I've been asking myself lately how exactly the rampant Disinhibition comes to a head in real life. We live in days of a very wide partisan divide, on any issue. Go ahead, find a news article about anything. Read the commentary.
If you only saw the US through a lens of internet activity, you'd think we were in a state of civil war already. It wasn't quite so.. let's say, personal, before. Of course; there was always the times where people would get ad-hominem, but I rarely find a political disagreement where it doesn't end up boiling down to such attacks. I feel like, over time, this does have a noticeable effect on how people do regard those whom are politically different. Those who disagree aren't simply coming up with an opposing thought, but an enemy of the thinker itself. Makes it easier to dismiss otherwise reasoned arguements. Human nature I suppose.
But, is there a point where this will blow up in our faces? Many writers on the subject claim it is lowering the value of public discourse by dragging everyone down to the lowest common denominator [Those screaming and shouting in comment boxes], which affects how they discuss and react to disagreements in the real world. While others claim anonymity on the internet fosters a culture of free-thought, unfettered speech and unique ideas [not to mention revolutionary activities].
I'm a bit on the fence myself, the internet's been around long enough that if either theory were solidly true, we'd have already succumbed to the predictions therein.
I think, honestly, it's more the fact of our social/internet lives becoming interchangeable with 'real life'. People take Facebook comments seriously because they consider that their domain. Political disagreements are personal since
they don't agree with
you [worsened by a soundboard-type environment aka the 'Living in your own bubble' type] in your place of relaxation. This of course only covers those who do this unconsciously. Trolls will always be trolls.
Are we at the peak of how infused internet vitriol and public discourse fuse, or are the times just a beginning of what we're about to see? We rarely see issues crop up from internet disagreements, but there are reports of
Facebook causing violent gang activities. Disagreements, vitriol, trolling all come into play here.
This OP may be a bit rambling but the topic is a likely one to come up anyways in the future, so I figured I'd bring to question to Bay12, one of the least vitriolic forums I've been on myself. Is this the a time where the the internet actually creates a negative influence on others in the forum of public speech? Or is the hyper-partisanship/violence of the times a separate issue entirely, only exacerbated by the availability of [no-accountability] free speech? I'd like any take on this subject. And please, let's keep it civil.