I Chose The Echo Chamber

I Chose The Echo Chamber After reading a recent post by Steven Hodson it made me think some more about the dreaded ‘echo chamber’ and its effects.  In my opinion, the echo chamber is what you make it.  Chances are you’ve isolated yourself on Twitter, or FriendFeed, or dare I say, even Facebook.  This is understandably so, we have only so much time to waste spend online and it becomes increasingly difficult to keep up as technologies advance and networks grow.

 

 

Does Your Social Network Isolate You?

Like Steven, I did wonder if FriendFeed isolates us, in a way.  But then I realized that I chose to isolate myself — in 2 ways:

  1. I chose to eliminate noise in search of the much-desired signal.
  2. I chose to focus my interactions on a more personal avenue rather than just reading anything and everything (in other words, be more social!).

By doing this, I narrowed my scope of interactions, purposefully, for fear of information overload.  I just wanted to be able to cut to the good stuff.  After this refinement, should I expect to find that only one or two people who think they have stuff figured out?

Is There A Way Out?

Is there a way out? There are many opinions on this; Colin Walker makes a couple good points:

Social media must not become a self congratulatory love-in unless there is actually something worth celebrating.

..it [social media] becomes boring when “the same topic goes round in circles and, just when you think it’s done with, someone else throws in a ‘me too’ post and rakes over it all again but with no insight or added value.”

I agree with Colin, but who is to judge what is worth celebrating and what isn’t; what is value and what isn’t?  It is really up to the individual or is there something the community can do? 

I believe there is. We can stop being so quick to belittle those who have an opinion.  We should not be afraid to disagree, but how are we going about it? I think this negative type of chastising behaviour encourages a kind of ‘groupthink’ that only amplifies the effects of the echo chamber. 

Believe me, I’m not saying we should treat everyone with kid gloves, but we’re all human beings with sensitivities, unique experiences and walks of life — we should appreciate that and use it to the community’s advantage.

I think we can encourage the expression of diverse opinions. If we choose not to, our complaints about the echo chamber are in vain.

Why is the echo chamber a problem for you?  What can you/we do to correct it?

I Chose The Echo Chamber Tags: Blogging, community, conversation, echo chamber, friendfeed, Social Media

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  • July 31, 2008 at 1:15 am Shey
    In my opinion, the echo chamber is what you make it.
  • July 31, 2008 at 1:26 am mike "glemak" dunn
    what shey said ;)
  • July 31, 2008 at 2:10 am Shey
    @Aden I'm still pretty new myself, my advice: keep reading and ask questions. Don't be afraid to say what's on your mind and just be yourself. Holding back can get frustrating sometimes :)
  • July 31, 2008 at 2:51 am MaryAnn Chick Whiteside
    Aden: Nobody will hand out a report card - jump. Nice folks over here will catch you :)
  • July 31, 2008 at 2:57 am Adam Helweh
    I like the article quite a bit. This is what has kept me from posting certain things. On the other hand though, I have found that I can post away and get absolutely no participation from others. I see similar posts to what I am sharing elsewhere with tons of comments. Its not a popularity thing, but a time investment thing. I don't want to spend time sharing if no one is caring. Reasonable?
  • July 31, 2008 at 3:06 am Shey
    @Adam It takes time. What I do know is that your participation by sharing/creating good content will will reciprocated eventually. Maybe you aren't interacting with the right people? On FriendFeed there are many people who have accounts but participate in discussions at all.
  • July 31, 2008 at 4:42 am Shey
    @Christopher I can understand your hesitation, sometimes it can seem a little cliquey. Personally, I just comment where I think it's appropriate and I can add value or awareness to the conversation. Try letting go and see how it feels :)
  • July 31, 2008 at 5:17 am Charlie Anzman
    Another way to help this along is to reciprocate and/or subscribe to people (from the everyone tab) and just see how it goes. I've come across incredible talent of all kinds here (on FF) and some of it (like Twitter??) has been from those with very few followers to start ... Thoughts?
  • July 31, 2008 at 12:52 pm Shey
    Charlie, I think that's an great idea. Fresh sources of content is a start. But we still have to encourage new thought, tech or non-tech.
  • July 31, 2008 at 1:06 pm Cyndy
    This whole meme has me floored. Absolutely floored. To the point that I'm demanding we discuss it on the podcast tonight (tomorrow for those of you on the other side of the GMT line).
  • July 31, 2008 at 1:06 pm Colin Walker
    Diversity of opinion is definitely key - too many times I have seen people get shouted down just for having one that may not agree with the 'established' view. This is all definitely what you make it and we make different things with it - as you say, it's all personal choice and preference. We do run a dnager of losing what we started with though. I have made a specific effort to follow those outside of the usual suspects to get a wider picture but, while I see more non-tech/early adopter content, less of it is relevant to me and I have to make a decision on whether to hide or unfollow - we have to find our balance.

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9 Responses to “I Chose The Echo Chamber”


  1. 1 robdiana

    Well, some of the conversations are worth having, like who owns comments, conversation fragmentation, etc. Others like “OMG the iPhone 3G is coming”, there just is not too much to add. As you say, the whole blogging and echo chamber thing is what you make it.

  2. 2 marshallkirkpatrick

    Well said. And by the way, this is the best looking blog I’ve seen in awhile! really impressed with the design!

  3. 3 Mona

    I echo your FF comment, “In my opinion, the echo chamber is waht you make it.”

    ;)

  4. 4 Shey

    Thanks Marshall! *bows*

    Still tweaking it, but I’m glad you like it :)

  5. 5 Christopher Harley

    I hear you on the issue of exacerbating the inherent problems of the echo chamber by narrowly defining who can access your posts on FriendFeed. I believe groupthink is a more acute threat than social faux pas yet I still find myself biting my tongue and not commenting on certain posts. I hate to sound needy but group acceptance plays some role in this race toward transparency. I guess my admitted reluctance leaves me a bit more opaque.

  6. 6 Shey

    I can understand your hesitation, sometimes it can seem a little cliquey. Personally, I just comment where I think it’s appropriate and I can add value or awareness to the conversation.

    Try letting go and see how it feels :)

  7. 7 work from home

    pls someone tell me what is the Echo chamber…!

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