With
the advent of social networking sites such as Facebook,
WeChat, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+, Tumblr, Pinterest, YouTube and Instagram
to name a few, life has been more easy and fast, comfortable and short in
terms of communication and business.
Facebook
which has grown so widely in Bhutan for instance has almost supplanted the
communication alternatives that we have at our disposal, and for many of us, it
has been more than a substitute to social media itself. In the same vein,
WeChat, a Chinese social media application is yet another persuasive social
media limb that has strongly grown roots in our social network system due to
its facility to communicate and distribute images and videos at a lightning
speed even under an umbrella of a low network receptivity.
In
the dawn of such social media, life has been pretty cheap and easy to re-connect
with the long lost elementary or high school friends, relatives or even those
people whom we met briefly, somewhere sometime. It is even more fascinating to
find people having the same species of interest, thereby creating a niche for easy
transmission of the information at a relatively higher speed. What one knows can
also be scattered to the rest simply by sharing or tagging friends. In this
way, the cyclone of the newsfeed cycle or any human affairs becomes supersonic fast.
Thanks to social media for this Social Networking mystic.
Image courtesy: Click LINK |
However,
as much as it is comfortable to repose our life on a carpet of such social
media, like the emergence of any technological contraptions, of late, it has
reportedly generated some potential downsides.
While
many of us understand that social media guarantees a free space for ourselves
to post anything, we ignore to realize that the post we post is porous and
electronically transparent. Due to this ignorance (or for some due to frustrations),
the walls of our account apparently becomes more than a graffiti of emotions churned
out based on the heartbeat of our mood-meter.
At times, when despicable feelings
about our life, workplace, boss, employer or friendship are scribbled - though
merely in a form of words - we become vulnerable and susceptible to societal threats, official
predators, and occupational hazards. Even if it doesn’t invite severe
consequences, due to the leakage of such private feelings, the least it can do is stonewall
the intimacy and jeopardize the social web settings. The tremor caused due to
such action is so strong that once the nest of our relationship is disturbed, an inerasable
aftermath and tsunami of suspicions and hatred is bred, thereby making Social
Not-Working. In other words, the very purpose of social networking remains
futile and turns out to be the battlefield of abuses, fear, prejudices,
suspicions or disparaging. Under such circumstances, social networking turns out to be social Not-working.
However,
while many might argue with our own reasons of pros and cons, the bottom line is that social media itself is not good or bad. It depends on how it is used
and with whom we use it.
“We don’t have a choice on whether we DO social media, the question
is, how well we do it”- Erik Qualman
very true sir
ReplyDeleteI choose to largely ignore social media. No FB, no twitter. Somedays NOT being connected suits me best.
ReplyDeleteYou are right though - it is how we use it which matters.
Its thanks to these Social Networking Sites that we are all connecting with people from the remotest corners of the world. I try not to spend too much time on these sites, just enough to keep in touch.
ReplyDelete