Jacqui Palumbo
Last month,
Pinterest offered an unusual feature for its users: short exercises meant to
promote emotional wellness, from deep breathing to practicing gratitude.
Noticing the number of users searching the site for ways to cope with stress,
Pinterest’s team offered up a more meaningful solution than pinning a
motivational quote. “We know that life isn’t always so inspiring, and things on
the internet aren’t either,” explained the site’s product manager, Annie Ta.
Pinterest isn’t the
only social media site to try to refocus on positive engagement this year, with
design changes that center on community and wellness. Facebook tweaked its logo
and prioritized event and group pages over the News Feed. Its subsidiary,
Instagram, is beta-testing hiding public “like” metrics in several countries,
sending influencers into a panic. Twitter’s first desktop redesign in seven
years focuses on “delight” for users, according to its developers. It comes at
a time when the company is revising its hate content policies and deleting
millions of fake accounts.
Can redesigns save
any of these sites? With privacy policies under government scrutiny,
millennials looking for ways to disconnect, and Gen Z growing up with new apps
like TikTok, the old guard is facing a crossroads. It seems much too late to
pivot to wellness and positive engagement; each platform thrives on monetizing
your identity and holding your attention, whatever the cost.
The most egregious
recent abuse of the attention economy is YouTube’s AI algorithm, which serves
up increasingly extreme content to keep you watching. The New York Times
recently reported the algorithm’s disquieting role in radicalizing Brazilians.
Even Pinterest, home of mason jar inspo boards, has a toxic underbelly built on
circulating images of the idealized life. It promotes the exorbitantly
consumerist wedding industry and can’t rid itself of the pro-anorexia
communities that migrated from Tumblr.
This year, in particular,
public opinion on Facebook has soured, following founder Mark Zuckerberg’s U.S.
Senate hearing in April on data privacy and disinformation. The month before, Zuckerberg signaled a major change ahead in a lengthy mea
culpa posted to the company’s blog. “As I think about the future of the
internet, I believe a privacy-focused communications platform will become even
more important than today’s open platforms,” he wrote. “Today we already see
that private messaging, ephemeral stories, and small groups are by far the
fastest growing areas of online communication.”
Dr. Margaret Duffy,
a professor of strategic communication at the Missouri School of Journalism,
doesn’t think it’s so easy to backtrack. Social media sites at their core tap
into complex human behaviors. In 2015, media outlets splashed headlines across
the web that using Facebook could cause depression, based on a study by Duffy
and other researchers from the University of Missouri. They found that when
people go to Facebook to lurk on others’ profiles, they can develop feelings of
envy, which can trigger depression. “The evidence continues to be strong that
social media, in general, has a deleterious effect on individuals, especially
people who might be somewhat vulnerable,” Duffy said. Since their study, more
data has supported the notion that anxiety disorders have spiked in younger
generations, and that teenagers are becoming increasingly isolated and
depressed. The upward trend correlates with the rise of
social media, though researchers are still studying causative links.
“We know from behavioral psychology that
people feel somewhat unfettered when they’re online, even if they’re using
their own names,” Duffy said. She also pointed to “social proof,” the act of
emulating others, as another phenomenon that isn’t so easy to shake. “In an
online situation, it can be even more powerful and more toxic because it can be
so concentrated,” she said. To solve the issue “would require a huge
reengineering of the social media model.” Duffy doesn’t have too much faith
that tech execs have our best interests at heart. The changes they’ve
implemented are more concerned with evading government regulations than their
users’ wellness.
In an essay from Trick Mirror (2019), New
Yorker staff writer Jia Tolentino attributes our woes not just to social media,
but to the internet at large. “As a medium, the internet is defined by a
built-in performance initiative,” she writes. “For anyone to see you, you have
to act.” The architecture itself is to blame; it emphasizes the value of
personal identity above all. Even if you do delete your account, you’re still
living in a world shaped by the internet, “a world in which selfhood has become
capitalism’s last natural resource.”
Sites that capture our attention and our data
are built on persuasive design. Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter are
intentionally designed to be necessary to our lives—to make us loyal, if not
addicted, Duffy explained. Some of the decisions that these companies make to
improve the usability of their products can have resounding effects. “I think
that the proposition that social media—or any other technology—is neutral, is
wrong,” she said. “It has certain characteristics that can be negative or positive,
and some of those characteristics are engineered without too much thought.”
The news feed, “like” function, and timeline
shook up our online experiences when Facebook introduced them. If Facebook
follows through on Zuckerberg’s idealized vision, it could lead to another
significant shift across social media platforms. Some overhauls can cost you
your audience. Digg experienced it after its 2010 redesign, when users picked
up their memes and headed for Reddit. Tumblr is going through it now,
post-nudity ban. But the right feature can lead the charge. It takes bold
actions, not just bold manifestos, to effect change on a society that has
already been rewired.
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-redesigns-easily-remedy-toxicity-social-media?utm_medium=email&utm_source=17867956-newsletter-editorial-daily-08-24-19&utm_campaign=editorial-rail&utm_content=st-V
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