Reviews tagging 'Xenophobia'

Antisocial by Andrew Marantz

2 reviews

larabavery's review against another edition

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challenging dark hopeful informative reflective medium-paced

4.75

This book was so absorbing and well-reported that sometimes I had to take breaks. Marantz went as deep as any sane person could go into the delusions of neo-fascists and alt-right trolls, seemed keep his emotional boundaries even in the face of bigotry toward his own person, and still shared what he found with balanced care and complexity. My only wish was that he had put his rigor and enthusiasm toward (at least) a chapter on the power of online communities to foster *the opposite* of hate and paranoia. If an actual techno-utopia could exist, what might it look like? In the opinions of those who still believe in it, why isn’t it happening?

After hearing his analysis of the profit-driven or pseudo-philosophy-driven choices that lead to the hijacking of social networks, I think he could have made the stakes higher if he showed more of us a taste of what these techno-utopians imagined (was it really just early Reddit?). We get a hint of that in the Reddit epilogue, but I think there are still Internet optimists/visionaries out there, for better or worse. What less harmful communities are thriving because of new Internet vocabulary? Anyway, I will be following Marantz’s tech reporting more closely at The New Yorker. 

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kumquatlemon's review against another edition

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challenging dark informative reflective slow-paced

4.5

Nothing I've read in the book was seriously surprising in that I didn't expect it, but to see it all laid out, with descriptions from the perpetrators themselves, really puts into perspective the severity of lack of censure within internet communities. 
There were quite a few times where I had to take a break from reading because of the amount of cynicism this caused me to feel about the general state of the world. Though it does call into question the role of techno business capitalists in this spread of viral hate, but reflecting on the past two years since "Antisocial" was published, especially after the events of January 6th, 2021 there doesn't seem to be lasting effects in how the world treats issues of this magnitude, only treating symptoms and not causes. 

This is less of a review than a general inquiry, and I'd especially appreciate a discussion on this from other community members who are interested in this topic, but does this phenomena arise the need for policy reform especially as we continue to discuss political and social affairs on social media? This book is a very America-centric viewpoint and fails to account for the different cultures things like Facebook and Twitter affects. There are policy restriction on communication that are already enacted throughout the world that promotes political censorship of minorities under authoritarian rule. How might we account from how social media affects different countries? 

Might be be useful to break up these companies to small subcategories? But that might also promote the censorship of citizens in a way that prevents them from enacting meaningful, positive political change. It's a much broader topic than just the removal of Nazi's (which should happen, of course). But if we have to beg these companies to remove these voices of racism and violence, can we really trust them in leading discussions that affect us culturally and politically?

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