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Dublin: 13 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

Column: Social media has society in a panic. What does that tell us?

There is a political lesson behind the widespread condemnations of social media, writes Gavan Titley.

Gavan Titley

IRISH SOCIETY IS witnessing its very own moral panic concerning social media. While the primal evil being attributed to the ‘tweet machine’ is faintly embarrassing, all such moral panics are politically instructive, and this is no exception.

Following suggestions that anonymous messages may have played a role in the death of junior agriculture minister Shane McEntee in December 2012, ‘cyber-bullying’ has received significant attention. The chairperson of the Oireachtas Committee on Transport and Communications, Tom Hayes, warned that ‘this thing can’t be left go unchecked, where people can put up vile comments and get away with it’. Hayes is of course correct; if specific threats were made to McEntee they should be investigated. However, more recent statements indicate that the governing class is animated by a patrician disapproval that is far more general, and historically established – a fear of too much democracy.

Liz O’Donnell put it this way earlier this week in the Irish Independent: “the lawyer in me recoils at the notion of random and unguarded mass communications. What is to be gained from such a scrappy, ill-considered dialogue?” In an article in The Irish Times yesterday devoid of a single reference, fact, statistic or case, David Adams informed us that “so-called internet journalism is at a level equivalent to the Stone Age. Its main consideration is attention-grabbing, not accuracy; “hits” matter more than fact-checking.” And today, fresh from participating in a YouTube video aiming for viral status, John Waters argues that a “venomous and toxic social media is out of control”.

Parody

It would be easy to parody the ways in which different media platforms – integrated, of course, with mainstream media – are reduced to something called ‘the internet’ and thus bemoaned (in each of these articles, the writers underline their lack of engagement with the media under discussion, a form of pride not usually associated with informed comment). However, this form of reductive condemnation is established. Historically, the social apprehension of new technologies has always involved a tension between visions of emancipation, and fears of enslavement or anarchy – two sides of the same cyborg (so remember, don’t try to play Twitter backwards).

In the context of modern struggles for emancipation, the democratic potential of communication technologies has always intensified the anxiety of elites. It is no accident that recent discussions of social media’s negative power have regularly featured images of a ‘mob’. In his history of the idea of the mob in political thought, JS McClelland argues that the imaginary of the ‘mob’ – as a way of thinking about peoples and populations – has always been central to anti-democratic thinking and political practice:

…justifications for forms of rule are made that much more convincing if the ruled can be made out to be at best a crowd, therefore needing to be ruled, or at worst a mob, therefore threatening rule…

And so it is with as-yet-woolly calls for social media regulation – the modern mob just can’t handle the power they have unwisely been granted. Or, to paraphrase, “the elitist in me recoils at the notion of random and unguarded mass communications.” This recoil is predictable; columnists paid for comment in a culture awash with comment need to protect their privilege; politicians dependent on the insulating membrane of professional communications require a moral justification for their aloofness. But this is only part of the story.

A central dimension of that story is a rapidly shifting media and communications landscape that cannot be understood in terms of a superficial opposition between old and new, social and mainstream. Social media, as Nick Couldry observes, involves a “constant invitation to discourse”. As Una Mullally discussed in an Irish Times blog yesterday, established media players are heavily involved in issuing these invitations, but in a transitional “media limbo”, are unsure as to how to work with this abundance of digital content. Thus the pessimism/optimism pendulum continues to tock; Irish newspapers celebrate their own extinction by attempting to monetise their tiny stake in the structure of the internet; Frontline abandons basic journalistic scepticism by treating a tweet as an instance of pure public opinion.

Nastiness

The current moral panic may stem from a fear of the messy democratic potential of social media, but this does not mean that critics need to romanticise social media access and interactivity as inherently democratising. It is self-evident that an increased capacity to communicate provides infinite opportunities for nastiness. But a more fundamental question is this; if ‘everyone’ is commenting, who is listening?

Anxieties over the wayward powers of participative media are embedded in a political context where the public is consistently told that there is no alternative to the current dispensation, and that fundamental questions about the nature of this society are not up for discussion. The question, in this context, is what happens when more people can participate communicatively, but their political participation in the decisions that shape their lives becomes increasingly restricted, formulaic and lacking in agency?

The answer provided in this moral panic is that criticism of politicians becomes personalised. In a public culture where Presidents resign over insults and economists are invited to commit suicide, this is hardly novel. But where democratic governance is reduced to a choreographed spectacle of management, and where political success in Ireland frequently depends on cultivating a form of ‘local’ personality that actively repudiates a public function, is it so incredible that personalisation is so prevalent?

Endangered

Similarly, government and commentator denunciations of uncivil media would do well to consider the contemporary scope of incivility. Austerity ideology has prompted many politicians and their media partners – irrespective of Pat Rabbitte’s opportunistic surfing of the bad media zeitgeist today – to collaborate in stereotyping the unemployed, welfare recipients, single mothers and others as undeserving, or a problem, a strategy designed to provide a moralising justification for state retraction. Where is this ‘civility’ in our political culture, so endangered by cascades of angry bytes?

None of this, obviously, is to excuse vicious and threatening communications. But assessments of media power must always take place in social and political context, if only to avoid over-estimating media power. In this moral panic, these inflated assessments are designed to ensure that the context passes without comment.

Gavan Titley lectures in Media Studies in NUI Maynooth. He is the author, with Alana Lentin, of the recent book The Crises of Multiculturalism: Racism in a Neoliberal Age (Zed Books 2011). Information on the book, and further writing, can be found here.

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Comments (80 Comments)

  • Social media does not bully people , people bully people . What has to be looked at is the mind set of the individual that posts threatening on defamatory content . What is needed is education the social media outlets are here to stay and it is how people engage with it that is to be considered .

    Reply
    • What we see is more fake accounts where people can attack willy nilly without being identified, we need more stringent security when a person is setting up an account if its possible!!!.

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    • What do you mean Oliver? Should I have to show up to the Garda station with my passport and proof of residency before I can open a Facebook account?

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    • Kevin, no i mean where people are not willing to put there names to an account and attack as they seem fit, why are people unable to show there face and show there proper name what are these people hiding ?

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    • Oliver, some people do have valid reasons for using a pseudonym. If there is threatening or defamatory content expressed by them it can be traced anyway. But it can’t be traced without good reason – and that’s important.

      You can tell people who started using the net after Facebook got popular from people who started using it before that. The ones who are new to it are TOO open, they post where they are, who they are with, what they are doing / eating etc with their Facebook profile set to “public”. It’s like they never stop to think how easy it is for someone who wants to confront them about an opinion expressed online to do so. Or worse, and it has happened.

      For some people the pseudonym is a layer of protection. Like a wall – it’s not complete cover, but it keeps the majority of intruders out. It doesn’t mean that they have set out to act the maggot online, it might just mean that they are protecting their own privacy on a public forum.
      You don’t tell everyone in a public audience where you live if you are giving a talk. Same way you shouldn’t have to put your name and face to every comment on the journal..

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    • Perfectly put shanti.

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    • Shanti, you nailed it.

      Thank you

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    • Thanks guys.. I set up this twitter account for use on sites like this. I noticed very early on that people had a habit of visiting each others profiles and making comments about them on here and that made me wary. Facebook have their moments where they don’t keep their end of the privacy deal and I figured I’d set up a shield. I would imagine many others did the same and possibly for the same reason.

      As a self employed person my name is my business, I keep my private and my professional life COMPLETELY separate. I have seen what can happen when you give too much away online, and I would prefer to learn from other people’s mistakes than have to deal with it myself.

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    • Nothing to stop people writing anonymous hate mail so maybe we should make all letters be registered with photo id shown. Plenty indebted business and home owners committed suicide and the politicians weren’t too bothered. Losing control of public opinion worries political and especially ruling class – the wealthy elite who influence politicians.

      Reply
  • It does not have people in a panic …It has Main stream media in a panic …
    Most people I know enjoy social media

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  • In my humble opinion Irish politicians fear “Social Media”, because it is makes them accountable, and they know without bringing in legislation, they cannot control it like they can the print media.

    Tweeting, Blogging & Facebook comments can be posted as the politician speaks, Youtube clips take only a few minutes longer. Everybody with a smart phone can tweet, blog & Youtube exactly what the politician said and did and the politician can do nothing to stop it.

    Were the final days of the last Government caused by the “He sounds drunk”, tweet? I don’t know if that were the case but the members of the print media who were in the bar until 4am drinking with the person who sounded drunk on national radio were never going to tell us that, until the tweet that is.

    What is important to the print media is access to the politicians and the politicians know that. The politician can determine what is up for discussion and what is out of bounds. If the print media breaks those rules, gone is the access.

    That does not happen with social media and that scares politicians. They are human after all they make mistakes, and they don’t want to be accidently recorded saying something they should not like, Gordon Browne the former UK PM while out on the campaign trail.

    This issue is not about “Social Media”, it is about politicians in the modern day being held accountable. They long for the good old days when Daddy was the TD or Minister. Nobody held Daddy accountable, so why should they expect me to be accountable. No better to use the tragic death of one of their own as a way to remain unaccountable.

    Sure everything will be alright come the next election cause they will make sure to get the pot hole fixed.

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  • Politicians are bullies. Just look at the labour party chairman now being bullied because he stood by his values. FG are no different just when one of their party took his own life as a result of his despair from not being strong enough to stand up to his party bully boys. Then they have the cheek to lecture on bullying. Shame on them.
    Now they want to transfer the blame on to social media.

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    • Frank, Expand on that if you would as I, for one anyway, am at a total loss as to why the party elders decided to blame anonymous internet posters for the untimely end of a great man’s life. The man earned a living as a farmer, a salesman, a publican and a politician and doing those jobs achieved a status as a Man that led thousands to choose him as their representative in Government. I can’t get my head around the simplification of the reasons for his end of life.

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    • Just where did ‘the party’ blame social media? Afaik, it was his brother who started the crticisms. He didn’t resist the whip, presumably because he felt, maybe wrongly, that he’d be better off inside the tent, long term.

      Heat of the kitchen problem, pols need to realise that there are a number of new ways to interact with those whom they claim to represent.

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  • I think the main drive of the panic is that the media, who bully us all with their inherently conservative entrenched established certitudes, find themselves open to querstion in a way they have yet to figure out how to control and censor.

    Like the church who resent the people coming of age and thinking for themselves, the heirarchies of the media pulpits resent the loss of their powers over the debate, as do our misrepresentatives. They fear the very redundancy they so callously expect the rest of us to swallow quietly, along with our emigrate pointers, so they can maintain their expanding gains.

    And who owns the media?DO’B, DD, TO’Ry…The paternalist patricians of commerce and speculation, mostly absentee and obscenely financially obese, but feeling poor because their portfolios took a hit.

    The tears run down my face, laughing.

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    • Well said man, the press hate that everybody has the microphone now.

      But, but…. I am a journalist, you people know nothing…. how could you? I went to UCD!

      Kinda like how professional photographers must feel with all the instagram heroes out there

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    • John Waters rant was a hoot today in the IT.

      I had to reply. I suggested he might find China more congenial.

      Do you think I’ll make the front page?

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    • @ Damien haha! Good work.

      He came across like a woman scorned.

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    • Not fair to the women..a cranky girl maybe.

      Couldn’t bear to read beyond the petulant first few snivels.

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    • @Damien Flinter,

      Are you really entitled to judge JW’s piece if you didn’t even bother to read it? Your comments that the media are inherently conservative are hard to fathom. The Irish Times is blatantly anti conservative. The media has no interest in censoring or control. Its a crazy notion. The bottom line for the likes of DO’B, DD, TO’Ry is revenue. Its a completely different driver.
      The internet isn’t a free place to do what is not accepted elsewhere. The same libel laws apply.

      Reply
  • I like lamp

    Reply
  • Any politician who is upset at the angry mutterings of disgruntled citizens is surely practising their profession in a bubble and needs to get out more and chat to people other than hangers on and party members for there are lots of angry people out there who in the absence of mass public expression are venting their fury on the only Public forum open to them.

    Reply
  • This is fantastic. Let them start posting the news on Facebook and the like and we’ll jump in and tear their reporting apart. They’re afraid of the truth. Of people hearing something other than their truth. Of feedback. Of criticism.

    We’re kicking them with their own shoes! And we’ll keep kicking. We don’t need them to filter what we hear anymore.

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  • Not overly concerned, but then again perhaps I should be. Our esteemed public reps have always excelled at regulating for and taking care of themselves. Ironic really when one considers the fact that up until Mr McEntee took his own life the government had about as much interest in cyber-bullying as they have in meaningful ministerial pension reform.

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    • Cyber bullying had no more to do with that than had the aussie prank call to the Windsor ward.

      They are desperate for excuses because the people are mobilising and they can smell their own excrement running out.

      Their media harness has unravelled, and the horses could kick the traces.

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    • Now they want to crawl all over the issues like flies on shit whilst mumbling something about moderate discourse with a view to manufacturing a legislative muzzle at some stage in the future.

      All orders hail from a little hill on a bog commonly referred to as the high moral ground. It’s where politicians reside when something that effects everybody else finally makes it’s way home and effects them. It’s always then that we see what can be done.

      Ask the folks who lived at Priory Hall where they spent their Christmas.

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    • 100% right Damien, Irish journalists gave these bottom feeders the license to enrich themselves, now it appears the Irish public could not give a good shite what the Independent or the Irish Times run with, there are plenty of places to get the news, personally I would prefer to get mine from someplace that doesn’t stink with the smell of cut price liquor sold over the Dail bar.

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    • Over here they call it cyber bullying and the same thing happens in Egypt and Co and they call it the Arab Spring! Quite confused!!!

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    • has anybody tried to find out MCANTEEES financial situation as to was he broke and being hounded by the banks like the rest of us.

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  • Liz O’Donnell, long gone and forgotten.

    The opinions of someone who regards TDs not wearing jackets as a national catastrophe are worthless.

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  • I still can’t believe there were 50 sheep killed in Roscommon!

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  • The traditional media in Ireland don’t understand the Internet and new media,nA prime example of this is the millions of euro the Irish times paid for myhome.ie at the end of the boom?nTraditional Irish media is on its deathbed!

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  • ‘Cyber bullying’ the Y2K of tomorrow’s world

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    • There’s always something isn’t there?
      In America it’s terrorism, keep the public on edge – remind them the next big threat is imminent.. All that pent up stress.. It can muck with your mind.. Add to that the constant measures to widen the gap between the ordinary Joe Schmos and the wealthy.. More and more stress, eating away at you.. It has a deadening effect on the brain..
      I guess that’s why they do it.. Keep everyone stressed out and frazzled then it’s easier to dupe them..

      But the Internet is a big, scary and liberating thing.. If they can’t switch it off then they have to control it too.. Anonymity has to go, they don’t need to be held to account but everyone else does (ooh, like the whole debt thing that I am loathe to bring up because its so overdone around here).

      People? Getting together? Talking? Having… “Ideas”? Next they’ll be… “Organising” things… Quick – it must be stopped!!

      Reply
  • Legacy media is dead, Newsweek have recently gone digital only. The dinosaurs in Leinster House are afraid they will lose control of the message, how it is delivered and responded to!

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  • A very good article. I enjoy social media very much. Although I would like to see cyber bullying being tackled, I believe over regulating is not the solution. When it comes to politicians using these media for communications, my suggestion is if they don’t like what they are hearing from comments, block, privatise more or shut it down.

    Reply
  • “IRISH SOCIETY IS witnessing its very own moral panic concerning social media. While the primal evil being attributed to the ‘tweet machine’ is faintly embarrassing, all such moral panics are politically instructive, and this is no exception.”

    Summed up beautifully in the first paragraph.

    Reply
  • Jason 04/01/13 #

    I’d like to see what you think when my Facebook friends find out about this.

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  • Great piece, but then again Gavan Titley just talks alot of sense alot of the time, so much sense the government might deliberately take zero notice of him!

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  • Social networking is not a threat or a danger, its people who take offence to things said online and those that scream ‘cyber bullying’ every time something mean is said that are a danger, ruining the internet for normal mentally stable people.

    Reply
  • I Lynch 04/01/13 #

    It is a little sad that an article of substance is criticised. I enjoy reading most articles, but be honest, many on The Journal are fairly ‘fluffy’. It is fine to have social media for everyone to feel connected and make you feel as though you are ‘having a say’, but the only real way to bring politicians to account is on voting day. How many people vote? I know, they (politicians) are all the same. The fact that decent candidates don’t put themselves forward perhaps is a bigger problem. Why don’t they? By all means engage in what is happening and have your say, but I always keep in mind that comments come from all quarters – the good, the bad, the ugly and sometimes plain ‘nutty’. When reading comments from some people I thank OUR lucky stars that they aren’t in charge. (I recently joined Twitter. My solution to potential personal cruelty will be to close my account. I don’t get in the middle of a shouting matches with strangers in real life, and I won’t in cyber world. It is easy – manners rule – face to face or online.)

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    • Lots of things need a “handle with care” warning attached, but I think social media forces mainstream media to tackle or put forward perspectives that may not otherwise be explored. Fair enough the true test is at the ballot box, but we can’t disengage in the interim. Engaging with social media makes us question our own values, priorities etc, so when it comes to election time we can make an informed thought-through decision.

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  • “Anxieties over the wayward powers of participative media are embedded in a political context where the public is consistently told that there is no alternative to the current dispensation, and that fundamental questions about the nature of this society are not up for discussion. The question, in this context, is what happens when more people can participate communicatively, but their political participation in the decisions that shape their lives becomes increasingly restricted[...]?”

    Gavan Titley has nailed the problem I have with those calling for censorship. We Irish, through the restrictive budgets, randomly abused thuggery of libel threats, rising debts, and evasiveness and censorship on such injustices as the cases of Kate Fitzgerald and Savita Halappanavar, have disengaged simply in order to protect ourselves against further acts of emotional violence and the internal struggle of suppressing these emotions. We are called upon to have more regulation of social media, when we already have a boot on our necks pressing us until we lie face down in the mud – and please note that my last metaphor is a pun, and a very deliberate one.

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  • Excellent article and lots of interesting comments.

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  • ” columnists paid for comment in a culture awash with comment need to protect their privilege”

    That sums it up. David Adams is a worried little bunny.

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  • I joined Twitter today after reading John Walters piece…. The msm are really on the offensive over the last 6 weeks. They’ve just upped their tempo after the sad death on Shane McEntee.

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    • Their collective survival hindbrain kicked in with its 5w bulb saying ‘Opportunity Knocks’.

      Its the limbic system, how they navigate. Only way when you’ve left your conscience and rationality in the Vatican.

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    • They know that if they don’t get the laws changed in their favour this time they might never get the chance again. They think they might just get away with it at the moment but not for too long more…

      If my business model goes obsolete – I adapt or go under. Nobody came in to save the bricks and mortar travel agent. They weren’t that politically connected I guess.

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  • Ummm …., is controlling social media, going to stop bullying, or is controlling social media (what the masses hear and read) just another way of the elite few controlling the masses (people)?

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  • Technology is moving to fast & people are in fear as they cant control it. Doesnt make sicial media a bad thing, it just means people cant manage it. People burying their heads in the sand springs to mind…

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  • Maybe it’s keeping the people off the streets and stopping it could cause violent reactions
    As long as it is not used to organise trouble leave it alone

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  • Nydon 05/01/13 #

    An excellent article.
    A few questions arising…

    Has social media really got the intelligent masses of society anything other than corralled and suppressed?

    Is social media now the religion (opium) of the western masses?

    Would Ireland have been so compliant over the last few years if the sociamediaites were not fooled into thinking that they had a direct route to the ear of god (government / IMF/ Germany) to let him have a piece of their minds?

    Is it true to say that while fingers are at home venting steam through tapping on technology, Idle hands are off the streets?

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  • “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people” … this is the same argument social media is not the bully or evil, people are.

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    • Nydon 05/01/13 #

      Rohan. That statement, when made in the context of guns, by NRA people, is just too simplistic and therefore distasteful to many. I know I will be massively red thumbed for saying this but there is a group of socialmedites who are, like the NRA so tunnel-visioned in defending a single right (the right to free speech in this case) that they fail to even consider that there are people who cannot deal with the responsibilities that go with the right to free speech.
      They also fail to see why, in order to protect free speech in general, there must also be a way to protect oneself from a free speecher “gone postal”

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    • Free speech is not a weapon in the sense that guns are. Guns are tools purely designed to cause destruction, often the destruction of people. Free speech is our ability to talk our minds openly without the fear of being silenced or endangered. Free speech becomes jeopardized, as a side effect of tackling cyberbullying. I’m saying it’s not worth it.

      There is no one good enough, in my opinion, to regulate me or others with regards to free speech. There is no one good enough to draw the line and say X cannot be said because it hurts Y’s feelings.

      I won’t permit such a power to anyone above the citizens of Ireland. Or at least I’ll argue against such an imposing force, while I still can.

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  • Denis 31/01/13 #

    Test

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  • “Frontline abandons basic journalistic scepticism by treating a tweet as an instance of pure public opinion.”

    i don’t think they were treating it as opinion they thought it was an offical PR statement via mcguiness, they should have checked it.

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  • Great article!

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  • Nydon 05/01/13 #

    The people who use anonymity to target, denigrate and bully online would, before digital exchanges, have made crank calls and probably still do send threatening letters.
    The only difference with Twitter and facebook is that they now get the extra buzz associated with having an audience for what they do.
    We should have a way to block these people from getting their kicks – if we want to.
    The target of this type of unwanted attention should be able to block it.

    The ability to apply an Anonymous Account filter would go some way towards achieving this. It’s not rocket science to build this facility into social media platforms.

    Just do it and let the people decide who they want to listen to.

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  • Good piece.
    The entrenched elite and their outdated paid pied pipers panicing.
    Only the oppressor fears the people.
    And they are scared of the revolutionary potential of digitial democracy.
    http://barringtonkevin.blogspot.ie/2012/01/occupy-and-democracy-glimpse-at.html

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  • This isnitan article, it’s an academic paper hence too complex language to read at a fridayevening.

    I don’t feel like engaging.

    Oh and Gavan.. Interesting to see that your facebook open to anyone. Any reasoning for such?

    Reply

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