English, asked by jujuBJB2006, 1 year ago

An article on internet: connecting and dividing people

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Answered by upenderjoshi28
70

           Internet : Connecting and Dividing People

Internet has literally isolated man. Mobiles have become a source of major distractions for the students. Young boys and girls seem to have become inordinately addicted to these sites. They are thoughtlessly and uselessly wasting their precious time on these useless sites.

There is no denying the fact that social media has affected almost each and every aspect of our life. Family ties and linkages are no exception. Before the advent of mobile phones, people had plenty of time. All the members would often sit together at the dining table and have their meals exchanging anecdotes, happenings and ideas. They would often converse with one another in thousands of way, using different words and structures. This improved their conversation skills.  

However, the advent of mobile phones has deprived them of this interaction. Social media and networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter, and general internet browsing have become source of major distractions for everyone. They seem to have become inordinately addicted to these sites. The irony of the situation is in spite of being physically close they are miles apart mentally and socially. Glued to their smart-phones or laptops, they prefer to remain enclosed in their own rooms. Even if they come to the dinner table, they are focused on their devices, ignoring the other members sitting at the table next to them.

They are thoughtlessly and uselessly wasting their precious time on these sites. Wise people say time well utilized is time well spent, but the youth of today is only and only wasting time on chatting, messaging, uploading photographs and modifying profiles. The smart phones and 4G connections have made the situation worse. Accessing such sites has become so easy that young boys and girls are using these sites almost everywhere and almost all the time.  All this is isolating man from his social interaction and family ties.

The parents, teachers and the government must look into the problems being caused by these networking sites and must formulate a strategy either to curb or completely stop its fast growing negative influence on the minds of our youth. We must encourage our children to use social media moderately. The elders too must set a good example in front of the children. The children need to be taught the family values. Some regulatory policies must be made to wean the youngsters off the addiction to social networking sites.

Similar content can be read here: https://brainly.in/question/11657942

Answered by abhay4476
16

Answer:

The Internet has the unique ability to connect any user with any other user, according to any quality possible — relationships, beliefs, viewpoints, goals, problems, identity, or interests. For example, using email and chatting software, connecting with family and friends who are far away geographically is cheaper and easier than calling or writing letters. Using a combination of the World Wide Web, chatting software, email, and discussion groups, minority groups that may have been ignored by traditional media have come together online to share information, support each other, and organize events.

However, critics of the Internet believe that Internet use, while connecting more people virtually, makes people more isolated socially because the more time they spend online, the less time they spend interacting in real life. They believe that electronic communication is not as in-depth or reliable as communication in person or on the phone. Critics also see a possibility of the Internet breaking people apart into minority groups, as a result of less dependence on mainstream media, a phenomenon known as "balkanization."

Critical forecasts of the future of the Internet, for example in the movie The Net, show people whose only friends are online buddies, whose real names are not even known. In these distopian worlds, social relationships are not even based on reality, but on the façades of other online users, whose anonymous interactions can be untruthful and unreliable. These people work from home, so there is no interaction with fellow employees, and their social lives are mingled with their work, which both revolve around the Internet. These distopian views are countered by utopian views of a global village, where anyone can reach out to anyone else and geographic barriers are nonexistent, because the Internet allows users to be always connected.

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