It is only thanks to the Internet that when Paul Saffo, a consulting professor at Stanford, says “Heraclitus put it eloquently over two millennia ago: ‘Nothing new comes into our lives
without a hidden curse’” — you can quickly find out that Heraclitus was a pre-Socratic Greek philosopher, a native of the city of Ephesus, then part of the Persian Empire. Also that
he said, perhaps more famously, "There is nothing permanent except change."
Saffo was participating in a much larger discussion on whether the Internet is a good or bad thing. (His bottom
line: "We are in for a wild period of disorder, but beyond is a sunny upland.")
Between fake news, questionable privacy practices and the concern (voiced by many who helped launch it) that
that many aspects of the Internet are not healthy — especially for kids — we are bound to see more debate. The question: Is the Frankenstein we created a terrible beast — or,
at heart, a gentle giant?
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Is the Internet bringing out the best in us, or the worst?
Because for now (until AI really arrives) the Internet is simply a series of cable, routers and
computers, and there is nothing inherently evil about it. My elder son, Will, likens it to a car — which in itself is not a dangerous object, until you put an idiot behind the wheel. But that is
the point of the argument now: Have we put too many idiots behind too many wheels?
I don't have the space to list everything that’s good about the Internet —and you already
know what they are. Nor do I have the space to list everything that has gone wrong with too many idiots behind too many wheels.
But now that we have entire generations effectively
addicted to digital communications (for simplicity, I include mobile apps and functions as part of the internet) we have to pause and ask, is this thing trending in a positive or negative
direction?
I was an early adopter (can even remember those 2,400-baud modems), and soon found the internet indispensable for getting information, taking the pain out of preparing work
materials and expediting communications. As more entities came online, it was like someone handed you a magic wand. With one wave of your hand, not only could you produce information, but
entertainment, timing-wasting games, chat groups, porn — and communication with people like you, no matter how weird or distasteful your world view. When e-commerce hit, the world changed
unalterably.
It the early days, you had to really work to find the bad guys, who tended to stay in their echo chambers and amuse each other. Now they are everywhere.
Moreover, we have
found that some we thought were good guys — thinking Facebook here — are helping the bad guys bleed into your everyday life online, or are perhaps bad guys in their own way.
How
many accounts have we read of people who "went off the grid" and rediscovered the joys of direct personal communication, reading books again, and the tranquility of life away from the screens? That
these accounts are the exception shows just how tied we are to the little internets in our pockets (I still have a desktop, but am kind of a dinosaur in that way).
Says Will, "I think it
really comes down to engaging consciously and carefully. Twitter, for example, can be toxic, shallow, stupid garbage — or it can be a really amazing place where you see insightful, intelligent
folks, even sometimes experts, trade ideas and have positive discourse."
He is right, of course. But you don't have to be a victim of fake news -- or have one of your kids crushed by something
said about them in social media, or listen to Facebook's attempt to justify its user data policies -- for feeling that we have taken a downward turn from which there may be no recovery.