Someone on the Internet is Wrong
Clay Shirky, in his article “ We are indeed less willing to agree on what constitutes truth ” highlights his particular point of the power of the Internet and its ability to see what people actually think. Shirky’s commentary is salient as it exposes the freedom the Internet provides – it is a platform for any and all, the intelligent and ignorant, for all to publish their opinion for all to see and respond to, possible consequences be damned. This liberty, unrestrained and unfiltered, pervades media outlets as well which should cause the public to question their objectivity. As Shirky notes, “Each organization will have to try to convince its audience that it is trustworthy, without being able to rely on residual respect for any such entity as ‘the press.’ . . . They can no longer fall back on “experts,” as if every professor or researcher is equally trustworthy.” Even though this development can be framed as a negative, it should be viewed as a positive –...