¶ … web 2.0 o Jaron Lanier o Andrew Keen to review Andrew Keen's views, watch video read transcript interview Andrew Keen: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/media/july-dec07/internet_09-17.html to review Jaron Lanier's views, essay, "Beware Online Collective" URL: http://www.
Andrew Keen vs. Jaron Lanier's views on Web 2.0
The Internet has transformed the way we communicate and interact. However, whether it has been an influence for good or for ill remains a hotly-debated question. According to media critic Andrew Keen, rather than improve the quality of information that can be accessed, the democratization of the Internet "is actually undermining reliable information and high-quality entertainment. By replacing mainstream media content, high-quality radio, television, newspapers, publishing, music...we're...replacing it with user-generated content, which is unreliable, inane, and often rather corrupt" (Brown 2007). How can a poorly-researched blog entry be a substitute for an article in The New York Times or even a well-written article in a local newspaper, asks Keen? In contrast to Keen's almost entirely negative view of the Internet as detrimental to democracy, critic Jaron Lanier praises the Internet's potential to facilitate creativity, although Lanier is dismayed by the way that corporate advertising interests have channeled and in his view hampered the potential of the Internet to promote idiosyncratic views of the world.
In defiance of conventional wisdom, Andrew Keen dismisses the participation facilitated online by the presence of social media such as Twitter, Facebook or the ability to leave comments on message boards. "I don't think that participation has been something that's been missing from American politics or culture" (Brown 2007). This seems to ignore the abysmal voting rates in America, and while hardly as substantive in number as they should be, there can be little doubt that the online fundraising and media campaign of Barak Obama played a significant role in generating interest in his race for the presidency in 2008, even when he was a relatively little-known candidate. Keen would contend, however, that the Internet lends itself to Balkanization of ideological communities online, whereby individuals can choose to interact solely with members...
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