Yesterday I went the entire day without the use of social
media, and by that, I mean Facebook. My
disquiet with several of the platforms has extended over the decade or so I
have used them. Not scrolling through my
newsfeed, I felt like a junkie suffering withdrawal from heroin. I kept picking up my iPhone and hitting the
Facebook button only to realize I had deactivated my account. I could have slipped on with just the use of my
password, but I didn’t.
The news yesterday sustained my resolve. The fact that every “What Character Would You Be in Love Actually” quiz I had taken
allowed data miners full access to my friend’s lists and my daily postings
showing my left leaning, licentious and human secularist ways just told me to
say no. I played a little more solitaire
than usual and I read a bit.
Avoiding Facebook is problematic. It has become the de facto common marketplace
for personal news. It is where I met one
of my favorite distant cousin and it was the place where I learned of his
death. It is where I hear what places
from my youth have closed and been torn down.
It is where I learn who is divorcing and whose children are succeeding in
life.
The egregious use of the data by the entities who bought
information from these social platforms should be a warning. The manipulation of facts and the wily
insertion of propaganda as truth should make us shudder. I will go a week and
see if the withdrawal symptoms abate.
Maybe I will start a 12-step program, Facebook Former Users Anonymous,
and help others to quit.
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