| > a small fraction of kids branching off into fringe networks that are off the radar and will take them to very dark places very quickly. I've been grappling with this all afternoon and I still cannot determine what my stance on this. I grew up when the internet was a bit of a wildwest, and I've definitely seen things online that I wish I never had without my consent. But there's also a bizarre thought that mayb exposure to this isn't such a bad thing because it keeps us human, and aware of privilidge and our safety - and why that is such an important thing to think about I'd equate it at some level to seeing the inside of the production of food and being put of eating meat, or eating anything non-organic again. I'm not sure I would like my own children to see it, but I'm hyper aware of what conflict and crime looks like as a result. Comparatively to social media at least I was making a choice to click on something risky or that I would not like to see rather than having a algorithm choose for me. Not sure if I am just becoming a middle-aged tech dinosaur though., |
And then there's the issue with ourselves even. We pretty much all do, say, and believe dumb things when we're younger. It's just a part of growing up. But I can't imagine what life must be like if you mix this reality with social media. Not only does this then stay attached to you forever, but pretty much anything can be artificially reinforced. With both factors probably working to impair general maturation.
These are all just consequences of 'normal' things that you'd have even if we censored 100% of vice on the internet, and it's still quite awful.