Showing posts with label COVID-19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label COVID-19. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2021

Instagram and COVID-19 Information

     Instagram has been marking posts and stories that mention COVID or the vaccine with an information label with a link to learn more about COVID from a verified source such as the World Health Orginization (WHO) or the Center for Disease Control (CDC). If a post contains claims or information that goes against or violates Instagram's COVID-19 and vaccine policy, Instagram will remove the posts. 

     It is important that large companies are taking misinformation seriously, and doing their best to try and stop the spread of misinformation. Especially when misinformation can lead to negatively impacting others. When going through the policy, there are some interesting points, (that to my own non-scientist eye) seem incorrect in themselves. Just a few days ago, the administration of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine has been halted due to rare side affects of blood clotting. Yet under Instagram's policy, posts can be removed based on sharing "Claims about the safety or serious side effects of COVID-19 vaccines, including: Claims that COVID-19 vaccines kill or seriously harm people (such as, causing blood clots)."  

    My hope is that Instagram updates their policies as new discoveries and updates are made as we learn more about the virus each day and the vaccines that are being distributed to stop the spread. 


https://about.instagram.com/blog/announcements/continuing-to-keep-people-safe-and-informed-about-covid-19

https://help.instagram.com/697825587576762

https://www.cnet.com/health/us-officials-call-for-johnson-johnson-vaccine-pause-due-to-rare-clotting-problems/ 

Sunday, March 7, 2021

The Importance of Social Media to Society During the Pandemic

     We all can recognize the importance that social media has in our lives and the role that it plays. When we look back on the last year of our lives, I think that we can all agree that social media was somewhat of a positive factor in many peoples lives. At the end of the day, social media was created to keep people connected that can't always be physically near. 

    Humans bond over shared experiences, and quarantining during a pandemic is definitely an experience people across the world had to suffer through. Social media acted as some peoples main communication between friends and family members both near and far.  Facebook introduced the "care" button during the pandemic, a new reaction showing a smiley face hugging a heart. While this may seem trivial, to many an emoji hugging a heart was a way to send an emotion and an action that was for many impossible to convey otherwise. When talking about the new emoji, Facebook product manager Misbah Uraizee explains, "Love already works really well. But we also tried to find a reaction that can work for use cases where it's not purely about love, like when someone wants to show an emotion like sympathy, support, or care. Something beyond Love.” Social media is also a great place to share content. Many were able to get lost in the TikTok trends and stay entertained that way, others were able to find a relatable comic and share it with family and friends. 

Saturday, March 6, 2021

Across the Web and Down the Street

So much has been said about social media and the Internet's ability to bring people together across incredible distance -- we can wish a friend happy birthday in Belize, fire off an email to a colleague in London and then take a turn in a game of Words With Friends with your sister in California, all from the comfort of your New York home. But what happens when your social network is centered around being around the corner and down the street? NextDoor is a social networking site centered around neighborhoods, allowing communities to connect and communicate online instead of through the time-honored method of stapling a flier to a telephone pole. As you might expect, people use it in a variety of ways -- advertising their local plowing or dog-walking businesses, selling unwanted items, sharing photos of lost pets and found mementos, complaining about the person who doesn't clean up after their dog, and asking for local recommendations. During the pandemic, however, use of the site ramped up, both for better and for worse. CNN ran an article on March 18th, 2020 by Samantha Murphy Kelly, right as the United States was locking down, about how rapidly usage on the site was changing in light of the pandemic. Some users saw the site as an opportunity to make a quick buck or trade high-demand goods for their own needs. Hand sanitizer, toilet paper, and cleaning supplies like Lysol wipes were difficult to obtain (and though we may not have realized this on March 18th, but would be nearly impossible to get for weeks and even months after this article's publication.) Selling these sought-after goods to your neighbors is an ethically dicey situation, particularly when combined with rocketing prices for the most in-demand items, but many newfound entrepreneurs used the site to profit from pandemic fears and shortages.

On the reverse of this, however, were people using the site to help out their fellow neighbors. Unlike Facebook, in which your social circle may live all over the world and are often people you already know, such as friends and family, NextDoor consists of people in your neighborhood who you may not know at all (or only know as "the person down the street who really needs to get their truck's muffler fixed.") Some people, seeing the unrest and fear swirling through their streets as the country began to understand the seriousness of what we were dealing with, used NextDoor as a way to check in on their neighbors and their community. Some reached out with offers to grocery shop, pick up medicine or run important errands for elderly people, immunocompromised people, those who were quarantined from exposure or a positive test result.

Even for users who limited their interactions strictly to online-only, the pandemic brought about a big increase in a behavior long-present in both online and in-person social behavior: the spread of misinformation. While conversations about how misinformation spreads through online communities and social networks are not new, well-known platforms with global audiences, such as Twitter and Facebook, often have at least some form of method for identifying and annotating or removing such misinformation to prevent its spread. Additionally, these user pools may contain people knowledgeable in the fields of the alleged information who may choose to dispute or discredit these posts in their comment sections or by posting to their connections in an attempt to mitigate the harm of the misinformation. On NextDoor, however, the communities tend to be smaller, as they are made up of people in a neighborhood. While a post on Facebook about a supposed COVID cure might go viral and have a nationally known and trusted medical professional respond to debunk it, that is a lot less likely on NextDoor -- unless you live down the street from a celebrity doctor.

NextDoor may make the internet feel a lot more local, but the COVID pandemic has highlighted some of the holes in the plan. This site can bring people together and encourage neighbors to help each other, but it also is a place where scams, schemes and misinformation can spread.

Netlytic

I used Netlytic for the first time a few days ago for our assignment. I haven’t dealt much in external social media analytics before this. ...