'Social noise': So many platforms, and too much choice?

By | April 18, 2011, 4:16am PDT

Summary: Even with presence technology, it doesn’t always show when we are truly available. With so many services, how do we know how to contact one another?

Do you ever wonder why it is sometimes so difficult to determine which service is best to get in touch with someone?

Last week I had the pleasure of speaking to an undergraduate student working towards their final dissertation; as am I. Through the conversation, discussing the differentiation of digital natives and digital migrants- the iGeneration versus those who are often older who have had to adapt to the world of information technology - an interesting point emerged.

Back in the day, a posted letter would suffice. A phone call may work, but you knew the postal service would prevail. But a phone call never guaranteed that somebody would pick up. Arguably, neither did the letter, but you always knew it got there in the end.

Through to present day, there is no linear way to contact somebody nowadays. We are drowning in so many social services – from Facebook to other social networks, Twitter and microblogging sites, to presence-enabled instant messengers and Skype, all the way down to mobile phones and text messaging.

How do we know which is the best service to contact someone with? The truth is: we don’t, and more often than not we either stick with what we as senders feel as the most comfortable route, or we gauge the situation best and go with the standard ‘professional’ route of contact; the phone or an email.

I’ve come to realise my platforms for communications ‘noise me out’.

The ‘default’ has switched over the years. The letter reigned long over the phone call, which was still a developing technology in the 1950’s and ’60’s in the post war period. Of course, nowadays the mobile phone would still be a good bet for one to get in touch with another, but it does not guarantee a response.

Yet we live in different times now. Technology has flooded us with so many routes and paths of communication, it has become natural to stick with what we as senders of information become comfortable with, with the recipient not necessarily finding it appropriate.

But how does one communicate with another person based on the varying level of relationship one has with them? Sure, a phone call or an email, but what if they are not very confident in dealing with a ringing phone, as so many of the Generation Y innately are?

Through my eyes, I personally find either face-to-face or a phone call best. Nevertheless, over time I have built up certain knowledge of my colleagues and friends and know which is the best way to communicate with them. For some it is Facebook, for others it is Twitter or a phone call, whereas some take the route of instant messaging, like BlackBerry Messenger or Facebook Chat, for example.

Of course, we could all subscribe to services whereby our online presence is constantly displayed and automatically updated. But the implications for surveillance and uniform consistency would become boring.

I don’t necessarily foresee a ‘Big Brother society’ where everyone knows where everyone else is, in a barrage of constant updates through colleagues, friends, relationships, all the way to acquaintances and the people frankly you cannot stand to be around.

But with so many services, and so many to choose from, I suspect the younger generation may suffer the most. The older generations have letters, email and phone calls, and the younger ones have Facebook, Twitter and granted, email too, but linked in with instant messaging and social networking.

Then again, it falls down to adaptability and the appropriateness of such. And as I am in the thick of it with my fellow colleagues, I know all too well that this is something we as an entire demographic need to work on.

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Topics

Zack Whittaker, a criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, Canterbury, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

Disclosure

Zack Whittaker

I worked briefly with Microsoft UK in 2006 but no longer have any connection with the company. Regardless, I remain impartial and unbiased in my views.

I don't hold any stock or shares, investments or industrial secrets in any company, but have signed confidentiality agreements with a number of UK and U.S. organisations, whose names I am not at liberty to disclose.

I was involved with Kent Union, the University of Kent's student union, undertaking voluntary, non-salaried, elected positions between early 2009 and mid-2010.

No other company, body, government department, non-governmental organisation or third sector organisation employs me or pays me a salary in any capacity whatsoever.

As a freelance journalist, whenever expenses are given and taken by a company that is not CBS Interactive, these will be disclosed in each relevant post to ensure transparency.

I currently work with a UK law enforcement unit, but this is an entirely separate position which bears no connection to other work.

(Updated: 23rd October 2011)

Biography

Zack Whittaker

Zack Whittaker, criminologist who studied at the University of Kent, UK, is a journalist, writer and broadcaster.

After studying criminology at university, though still in his early-20's, he has already had a series unconventional work and voluntary positions. He has worked with researchers studying neurological illnesses like Tourette's syndrome (which he suffers from), has given lectures on the nature of disabilities in the public community, and occasionally ends up speaking on television and radio discussing the events of the day.

He first had academic work published at the age of 22, then still an undergraduate, and has been cited by a wide range of publications: from the Huffington Post, Business Insider, AllThingsDigital, The Atlantic Wire and CBS News.

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RE: 'Social noise': So many platforms, and too much choice?
esm2012 24th Sep
@pupkin_z but this is where we are now. Social platforms control how we do thing. A friend of mine has to "check in " everytime she goes some where. Privacy? Maybe I don't want to. texas real estate attorney
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LinkedIn for Adults in Business
davebarnes 18th Apr 2011
That is all you need to know.
@davebarnes All I can say - email. I do not need some shady ad sites to maintain my network of contacts.
@pupkin_z

Agreed, the best ways are by Phone, Email, txt message and the classic letter. Social Networks are run by "companies" and what do companies do? They make money! I'm sorry but the GOV prying into my business is enough to be concerned with. I don't need another BIG BROTHER so he can tailer advertisements to me and profit from it. I think the real issue is Gen-I which doesn't realize their future and security is at stake by sharing so much online. I can't wait for another 15-20 years when a Presidential hopeful is shreaded by a Social Networking post he made as a youth. It's going to be so much fun to see these guys or gals destroyed by something they thought was harmless. Wait and see guys it's going to happen. Score some corn and enjoy the show!
@pupkin_z but this is where we are now. Social platforms control how we do thing. A friend of mine has to "check in " everytime she goes some where. Privacy? Maybe I don't want to. texas real estate attorney
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From one who has been around
Romas27 18th Apr 2011
I hark back to the day of snail mail and rotary dials - no answering machines. You talked to your friends face to face and developed string relationships. You met new people in person at social gatherings. You got to see what they were all about, phoney facades were easily exposed.
Today I see a very "unsocial" social networking style. Too much emphasis on the "facebook" mode of socializing to the point where people assume you are tracking their life and will know everything that is worth knowing - including invitations to parties, etc. Well you know what happens when you assume - you make an ass(out of)u(and)me. Credit to the odd couple for that.
And it is not just the younger generation (pick a letter) that is hung up on this, I know many baby boomers who have adopted this type of communication style.
Since snail mail has become unreliable and very slow (and too many people don't even know what cursive writing is anymore) e-mail has become the best choice for a delivered message. It will stay there until read. And if the person is one of those you rarely checks their e-mail, then the phone with a voice mail if needed. Texting is acceptable for short notes or tracking down your children. All other modes become too dependent on people being plugged in to the network 24/7 - give me a break; one has to work and sleep.
And of course face to face communicATION CAN'T BE BEAT.
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There's no compelling reason to feel obligated to join every social platform that tosses their hat in the ring. If your pals hang out on Facebook and use its messaging to communicate, use Facebook. If your colleagues are sharing useful tips in some LinkedIn Group, join that conversation if you're so inclined.

All the platforms are like roads and streets. You don't have to (and can't) drive along all of them at the same time; you just drive on the ones that take you where you want to go at the time.

Another fair analogy is that the platforms are like modes of transportation. Sometimes you drive. Sometimes you take public transit. Or ride a bike. Or hail a cab. Sometimes you need to take a plane, and you can choose from whatever carrier provides the service at the price point that makes sense to you. Sometimes you may have to take a train, or a boat...

Just use what you need or what makes sense at any given time.

This needn't be complicated, and I dare say I prefer this age vs. back in the day when you dropped everything at the front door when the phone was ringing only to pick it up and find that the person had already hung up; or it was someone you really didn't want to hear from but you wouldn't know that until you picked it up.
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RE: 'Social noise': So many platforms, and too much choice?
kevinnewton@... Updated - 18th Apr 2011
The way I look at it, social networking is for saying hi occasionally if someone is online and playing games, and so on. I have accounts with Twitter and Facebook, Skype, AIM, MSN Messenger, Yahoo! Messenger, ICQ, and so on, but I only use one for regular communication with friends - Skype.
It's a chat client that lets me leave and receive messages when offline, the chat is encrypted, I can use it to make phone calls if I so desire, it's free to download, and almost everybody uses it. So that's the only one I use. People who know me, know to contact me on Skype or email (or text if they have my number) anything else and there is a chance you won't get a response. There is a need to cut through the "me too" software and just use one solid and reliable platform, and that's what I decided to do a long time ago.
Email is good but I only check it once or twice a day, text is good but I reply only if I have credit. However, Skype is on every time my computer is on, and it is installed on my mobile phone too. So I can chat for free wherever I happen to be, at any time I happen to want to chat. And if I miss your message, it's there when I get back on and I can reply right away. In all the IM and social networking platforms, only Skype provides me with the flexibility and security that makes me feel comfortable.
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No form of remote communication (as opposed to speaking to someone face-to-face) will "guarantee a response," because on any platform, it comes down to whether the other person *chooses* to respond. In fact, even face-to-face, the other person can choose to ignore you. And that is how it should be: no one is compelled to respond merely because someone else arbitrarily decides to seek a chunk of their time and attention.

Also, it's good to know I'm not the only one who's more comfortable communicating via text than voice.
Social Media can help people in the approach of new contacts. It is good that you can choose whats the best for your needs. If you like social talk or sharing photo's with friends it may give you a lot of pleasure. If you are searching for new abilities to do business or employement than its good that some networks give you the better opportunities. Its good that you can make your choice by your own. It should be better if it was not that difficult to find the best solution for the things you most wanted. For the young generation this kind of media are the best opportunity for the future. The world is not only depending on business. Happyness, Health and Freedom are more important for people all over the planet. I will prise the day that investigators and developers find a better solution to make it more simple for joining new contacts to reach that most important goal. Think about it...and we discuss this later on.
Henk Leferink, already retired....but far away from tired.
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In 2003, 2005, and 2007 I suggested proposals for a social networking site at a time when Yahoo was going through its first wave of problems. I made a generalized set of suggestions for any site to replicate because I didn?t want to discriminate between the sites. To this effect, I submitted the following proposals.
I suggested the collection of age, sex, relationship status, aspirations, inspirations, needs, wants, likes, dislikes, fantasies, mentor, and icon information, In addition, if possible, I also suggest the collection of information regarding the people, books, ideologies, stories, music, and the movies that left the greatest impression on a person and shaped his/her personality, values, ideals, and lifestyle
The purpose of this was to provide everyone with information tailored to his/her specific needs that would be a win-win situation for both these people in terms of the fulfillment of their needs and for the advertisers in terms of the delivering these needs.
The purpose of the exercise was never intended to collect information about a person that could be used in a manner detrimental to any facet of the life of that person. Toward this goal, each user was supposed to be identified by a random id derived from an equation using known variables from his/her different biometric ids( fingerprint, iris, arterial, skeletal, electromagnetic, voice, and thermal ids(these would have a range instead of a single value)) and other unknown random variable peculiar to the site (to enable him/her to use the same biometric id for all the sites, and yet for each site to have a different version of his/her biometric id to prevent the possibility of identity theft or id abuse). This, again, was supposed to be known only to the system (and not even the system administrators).
3- The need for each user to have the discretion to share what he/she wanted with a particular person or a particular group of people was also supposed to be incorporated into the interface through a Privacy Settings drop-down list that would enable each person to select if he/she wanted to share information with a specific person such as his/her romantic partner or a group of people such as his best friends, his old classmates, his work colleagues, his team colleagues, his immediate family (and each member within it), his extended family(divided into different subgroups), the friends of his friends, or everyone. This feature was to be also expected to be incorporated into the comments box for comments on different people's postings.
Furthermore, a portal also needs provide you with the ability to multi-task. For example, if you're waiting for a video to upload, instead of being tortured with the wait, you should be able to post and reply to emails, etc.
4- To bring new people together through discussion groups based upon common interests, since the notion of a social network would be incomplete without having the ability to search for like-minded people and forge new friendships and bonds with them.
I signed up at Facebook in 2003 or 2004, at a time, when it was still confined to college students; I hung around for a few weeks, but then didn?t sign-in till 2010.
The proposals were intended for all sites in general, not for Facebook, which was a tiny social portal for college students at the time
I had been frequenting Bulletin Boards (by dialing into friend's computers in the early 90s before the advent of the internet in the region) and the chat rooms on the IRC (in the mid-90s) along with MUDs (Multiple User Dungeons) where you could assume different personalities based upon characters from epoch periods in history.
I had also suggested enriching the site with features that would let you also perform some of your leisure and work chores from that site like the payments of the different bills( for values below a certain threshold), the booking of seats/tables/merchandise (at restaurants and cultural events, on transportation media, department stores), the synchronizing of your calendar with your boss, associates, colleagues, classmates, and family (through a secure calendar server that would perform all authentication and then provide every higher hierarchy with the privilege to modify the calendar or a lower hierarchy and for the lower hierarchy to receive a message on its calendar asking for permission to incorporate or negotiate the changes - the messaging related to appointments should be incorporated into the calendar, it shouldn't have to take place through email or messaging systems), the purchase of merchandise, the option to store your precious files and photos online, the ability to interface with other sites for your work/leisure chores (and to offer the ability to collaborate with other people and collaborate on common projects through the provision of video conferencing, messaging, calendar, and whiteboard services, etc.).
The problem also is that those of us that were social in the pre-internet era went through the transition of more content coming at us when the internet arrived so we had the opportunity to learn about tools, RSS readers, etc. as they were developing. For teens, like mine, there's no experience or good role models/websites catering to them to help them understand how to organize all this inbound communication so what they are left with is trying to tackle all of it at once...leaving them feeling like scattered over-stimulated newborns....

-Dick Harris

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