The internet echo chamber has presented an unparalleled threat to truth and objectivity.
In the art world,
an internet echo chamber promotes writers who do little more than restate press releases and previous reviews.2
Not exact matches
The
internet can be an
echo chamber too.
This place, like practically everywhere on the
internet, does have a tendency to drift towards being an
echo -
chamber.
This message is spreading rapidly through the toxic
echo chamber of US news organisations, being amplified as it goes by the tendency of the
internet to feed off itself.
However, new Oxford University research suggests that social media and the
internet are not the root of today's fragmented society, and
echo chambers may not be the threat they are perceived to be.
Using a random sample of adult
internet users in the UK, researchers at the Oxford Internet Institute and the University of Ottawa examined people's media choices, and how much they influenced their interaction with echo chambers, against six key variables: gender, income, ethnicity, age, breadth of media use and political i
internet users in the UK, researchers at the Oxford
Internet Institute and the University of Ottawa examined people's media choices, and how much they influenced their interaction with echo chambers, against six key variables: gender, income, ethnicity, age, breadth of media use and political i
Internet Institute and the University of Ottawa examined people's media choices, and how much they influenced their interaction with
echo chambers, against six key variables: gender, income, ethnicity, age, breadth of media use and political interest.
But the
internet is an
echo chamber of haters.
Unfortunately, the
internet has, as with everything else, created an
echo chamber for writers that makes it harder than ever to break away from formula and discover your own voice, style, and approach.
The
internet can be an incredible
echo chamber of unconsidered and ignorant ideas, with discussion about games being no exception.
(Dunlap and McCright, 2008) As a result of the
internet communication between participants in this campaign, charges by one of the participants have been quickly transmitted to others creating an
echo chamber of counter-claims made in opposition to the mainstream scientific view of climate change.
By pulling away from the
echo chamber of
internet culture, I found my ideas branching out in new directions.
This con nement of recursive hypotheses to a small \
echo chamber» re ects the wider phenomenon of radical climate denial, whose ability to generate the appearance of a widely held opinion on the
internet is disproportionate to the smaller number of people who actually hold those views (e.g., Leviston, Walker, & Morwinski, 2013).
Difficulties in dating information is one of my pet
Internet peeves, and one that contributes mightily to the «
echo chamber» effect, even in the absence of malign intent.
However, in the great
echo chamber of the
Internet, these slips will nevertheless travel in large circles, and critics warn that corrections — if they come — may not come in time to prevent people from walking away with mistaken impressions of reality.