User:Kian Ferreira
Effect of social media on the brain
[edit]Social media matters to me because now days since everyone is working at home people have spent 10 times the amount of time on social media than before working from home. This make’s it easier to spread false news or negative news to people through social media. Limiting time on social media and stop leafing through false or negative news matter’s to the people around me because a bad influence on social media could affect the emotional sate or their sate of mind to and if everyone is depressed it affects more people around them so it’s like a never ending cycle until all the people around the globe are affected emotionally by social media. This matter to the world because most people tend to get addicted to social media after using it a few times which makes it harder to focus on anything else and that is bad because if 7 and a half billion people got engrossed in social media they would forget to pay bill or if some one was a high ranking officer they would forget to give out orders, so basically what I am trying to say is the world would be in chaos but no one would notice because of their addiction to social media, it is like world wide extinction but by phones and tablets instead of climate change of meteorites.
How could we change this matter
[edit]But what if people take this matter seriously the world would not be full of plastic or filled with fake news, so when people spend a limited time on social media so it is allowing them to do other things like pay bills water plants so over all their day will not be a full day spent on social media but a well balanced day, and if they were to spend a limited amount of time on social media they would not get influenced by false news or negative news for that matter, and it will help their emotional state improve. And for another point spending limited time on social media can impact other world problem’s like factory pollution , or animals trafficking, they could take action to stop these thing and spread awareness via social media. If I take this matter seriously I can changes many people lives and help the environment so the world can be paradise for living things like us and we just have to take one simple step limit our time and what we see or hear on social media. If the globe were to take this seriously we could change the way we live entirely, we could live more positively, we could live and eco-friendly life style, so if we just take that simple step we could love a better life. If people ignored this topic it could potentially lead to war between people based on fake news, the people who believed the fake news would be protesting or killing for absolutely no reason, and everything would be in chaos and like I said before it is like world wide extinction by social media.
How social networking affect human’s
[edit]Evgeny Morozov has said that social networking could potentially harm people. He notes that they can destroy privacy, and said that "Insurance companies have accessed their patients’ Facebook accounts to try to disprove they have hard-to-verify health problems like depression, employers have checked social networking sites to vet future employees. University authorities have searched the web for photos of their students’ drinking or smoking pot.
Who is Evgeny Morozov
[edit]Evgeny Morozov (Russian: Eвге́ний Моро́зов; Belarusian: Яўгені Марозаў; born in 1984) is an American writer, researcher, and intellectual from Belarus who studies political and social implications of technology. He was named one of the 28 most influential Europeans by Politico in 2018. Nationality: Russian and American Occupation: Writer Born: 1984 (age 36–37); Soilgorsk, Belarus Citizenship: Belarus, American
Morozov was born in Soilgorsk in 1984 , Belarus.He attended the American University in Bulgaria and later lived in Berlin before moving to the United States.
Morozov has been a visiting scholar at Stanford University, a fellow at the New America Foundation, and a contributing editor of and blogger for Foreign Policy magazine, for which he wrote the blog Net Effect. He has previously been a Yahoo! fellow at Georgetown University's Walsh School of Foreign Service, a fellow at the Open Society Institute, director of new media at the NGO Transitions Online, and a columnist for the Russian newspaper Akzia. In 2009, he was chosen as a TED Fellow where he spoke about how the Web influences civic engagement and regime stability in authoritarian, closed societies or in countries "in transition".
Morozov's writings have appeared in various newspapers and magazines around the world, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The Economist, The Guardian, The New Yorker, New Scientist, The New Republic, Corriere della Sera, Times Literary Supplement, Newsweek International, International Herald Tribune, Boston Review, Slate, San Francisco Chronicle, Folha de S.Paulo, and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
As of 2013, Morozov pursued a PhD in the history of science from Harvard, which he obtained in May 2018. He regularly holds lectures in the framework of university programs, cultural centres, and has developed teaching and mentorship activities.