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Jonathan Boyd

ByJonathan Boyd, Jonathan Boyd/View from the data

Opinion

The world has changed and it’s not all good

Social media has changed the nature of discourse - from birthday greetings to antisemitic comments - and someone needs to intervene says Jonathan Boyd

March 11, 2019 11:53
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3 min read

Birthdays have taken on a whole new dimension since the advent of social media. Before I joined Facebook, I was grateful if anyone remembered mine; since I joined, I get messages from friends all over the world, including, last year, from several people I haven’t seen for more than 30 years.

That said, upon closer statistical analysis, it turns out that only 7.96 percent of my Facebook friends bothered to send me a birthday greeting last year — a ratio of about one in twelve or thirteen — which either says something about me, them, or all of us, although I’m not really sure what. But whatever it is, I’m looking to break the ten percent barrier this year.

I bring it up because it is becoming increasingly apparent that social media is dramatically changing our world. It does so in many wonderful ways— birthday greetings being just one obvious example among many. But there is another, much darker side.

A study we conducted last year about antisemitism in Europe included a question about the contexts in which Jews most commonly experience antisemitism, and where they find it to be most problematic. Several possibilities were offered: in the media, politics, on the street, at sports events, cultural events, in universities, graffiti on Jewish buildings, desecration of Jewish cemeteries, etc.