Wednesday, 29 February 2012

Have we become to reliant on social media for information


Years ago people read newspapers and watched the daily news to keep up to date with whatever was going on in the world. Be it economic, gossip, or criminal news etc. Nowadays we have many outlets to find out any news we want whenever we want. It is constantly available 24/7, 365 days of the year. We have social media to thank for this, we have the likes of Facebook, twitter, YouTube etc

The initial craze was Bebo when it was launched onto the web in 2005 this was shortly taken over by Facebook and in the last few months Twitter seems to be a strong contender in replacing Facebook. The question I ask is 'can we trust these outlets to be factual and informative?'

Let’s look at the presidential election that was held here in Ireland in 2011. It was the talk of the nation and spread across every newspaper, radio station, Facebook and was the topic of 1000's of tweets. There was seven candidates; Michael D Higgins, Sean Gallagher, Martin McGuiness, Gay Mitchell, David Norris, Mary Davis. There was plenty of controversy throughout the campaign but the main controversy was the scandal that surrounded the front runner for the election; Sean Gallagher. 

Sean Gallagher took part during in a debate between the seven candidates on RTE's programme The Frontline on October 24th 2011. A tweet was posted on the twitter feed '#aras11', it read: "The man that Gallagher took the cheque from will be at a press conference tomorrow". The twitter account responsible was "@mcguinness4Pres". This tweet was in response to Martin McGuiness' (Sinn Fein candidate) allegation during the debate that Sean Gallagher took a cheque of €5,000 for Fianna Fáil from a business man 'Mr Morgan' and convicted fuel smuggler. In the end this tweet turned out to be false but it damaged Sean Gallagher's campaign for the election so much that he lost lots of votes and ended up losing his bid to become Ireland's President.

This is a travesty to think that one simple post made by an anonymous source on a social media site may have changed the outcome of the election.



No comments:

Post a Comment