Part of the reason for this permanent urge to connect is the speed at which information is disseminated. Information is knowledge. Knowledge is power. Just imagine for a moment that the Ebola virus ravages through your immediate region: emergency notifications would be reaching you within seconds because we have signed up to receive them through respective infrastructure channels. You would be able to search the CDC website for precautions; schools and office closings would follow and supermarkets would experience a rush for basic non perishable food items. Not so in West Africa, where the epidemic has a grip on several countries. City residents might have access to some news coverage, but rural areas are so remote and off the grid, that it is not a choice to be offline, but rather a sad and devastating reality. The global inequality of access to the internet becomes very apparent in situations like this, resulting in a different type of poverty, in "information poverty". Instead of twitter feeds, pinterest pins and facebook posts, handwritten warning signs on cardboard are held up by people as they are riding on pick up trucks through remote villages in order to share the information about the virus. Information is knowledge. Knowledge saves lives. How fast can we pass on information, so that more lives can be saved, more myths and beliefs about disease prevention be debunked?
All through history, mankind has always shared information that we validated as vital for someone to know. Smoke and lamp signals, hieroglyphics, individual letter printing press, pony express and pigeon airmail all served that purpose. Later on, telegraph, telephone, fax, and emails took over, so social media is just an innovative extension of sharing information. We always determined who and who is not the recipient of that information, given the premises that the recipients is literate or can decipher the message.
With the most recent upheavals around the world, I reevaluated the need for social media. Going back to my thought in previous blogs, about the Maslow Pyramid of Needs, I feel that the use of social media greatly depends on the socioeconomic rung on the global ladder a country has reached. The more of the basic needs are met, the more the individual uses social media for the individualistic purpose of self presentation. The further down on the Maslow Pyramid of Needs a country finds itself, the more these sites are used to raise awareness for the political and/or economic struggles under which the population lives, a sort of cyber revolution. Instead of cute kittens, we might see a video of a military attack.
Despite the criticism of social media, its use and applications, it is a tool for the global population to come together by choice. It is in our human nature to connect with others. Communicating with others broadens our understanding of each other, allows us to look at things from a different perspective and might even leave behind a human milestone in the historic continuum. And if you choose not to connect, there is always the option of going offline for a while - but it remains a free choice of an individual and should be available to all. It is a part of the freedom of speech and part of self-preservation, as much as the human connection. The next time you google, tweet or pin, appreciate the wealth of information that is available to you at your fingertip.