Confirmation Bias is what comes to
mind when I think of filtering bubbles. Most people when they want to affirm
their beliefs will look up something with the search terms already favoring
their view. It’s really difficult to be on the Internet and get unbiased or
objective results. YouTube has done a great job of personalizing users searches
to be tailored to their likes and interests. I love being on YouTube when I
don’t have any school work to do because when I look at the related searches it
looks like videos that I would really enjoy, and I typically do. Most people
that I talk with don’t get a whole lot of opposition politically on Facebook. I
personally don’t have this problem because I have several friends that lean
both ways politically and I’m always surprised by what I see. I follow several
twitter users that I disagree with politically on virtually every issue, but I
like to know what the other side is talking about.
It’s vitally important that we are
confronted with both sides of an issue, but if I’m YouTube or Facebook I want
my websites to be as intuitive and personal to users as they can be, and by
showing up more results that people are interested in is a great way to keep
users attention. I don’t believe it’s on Facebook or YouTube to force people to
look at material they don’t necessarily agree with, but seeing both sides of an
issue are also very important to having an informed society. It does hurt our
society when we just surround ourselves with people who agree with us and affirm
our beliefs because then we get stuck in our own bubble with never confronting
an opposing opinion. Polarization can be good when it involves team sports
where you want everyone on your team to be on the same page, but polarization
on every other level can be awful.
Final point about polarization,
dissoi logoi, and filter bubbles that really bothers me is people seeing
politics like team sports. It’s seems like if we’re going to vote for a
candidate then we need to defend everything that candidate does, and I think
that’s asinine. Just because we might like someone being a Republican or
Democrat doesn’t mean we have to justify all of his or her actions. We shouldn’t
trap ourselves in bubbles and believe everything “our” person/nominee/candidate
does. We should hope they push policies that we like, and when they do, let’s
praise them, but when they don’t let’s not find a way to justify their policy
just because their on our “team”.
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