During the height of the technological revolution of the 21st century, there has been increased controversy on the costs and benefits of a technology-driven society. While it is easy to point out the over-excessive amount of time the public spends online, many fail to see the much more favorable aspects provided through a more interconnected world. Technology is helping amalgamate the world. The use of elements such as the internet and social media grant access to a vast expanse of information, establishing both a local and a global community. The concept of community is being transformed from a physical group of people to a virtual network as people all over the world have increasingly more access to connect with one another.…
The Internet promotes both convergence and divergence amongst different culutres and nations of the world.…
Another blessing the internet has brought us is the ability to communicate across cultures without leaving our homes. On sites such…
The Internet is a substantial catalyst for continuing globalization, breaking down national boundaries and rules to allow free interchange of communications, ideas, goods and services around the world…
Such a process of acculturation yields to a branch of culture called ‘Cyberculture’. It is defined as a unique set of habits, values, and other elements of culture that have evolved from the use of computers and the Internet. Thereby individuals exist in the prevailing…
References: The Internet Revolution history and significance . (n.d.). SICS. Retrieved February 20, 2012, from http://www.sics.se/~psm/ar97/…
Throughout the years continuing positive advances of the Internet have impacted American culture and lifestyles drastically. From advances in the medical field, the way we communicate and how education has changed over the years. There are many advantages and disadvantages having the Internet so prominent in our lives. For most of us the Internet plays a very important role in our lives.…
It is really amazing how the Internet has changed the world; how social networks are allowing young people to voice their emotions and aspirations for the people to hear them; how fast information can spread for new knowledge to be gain. Because of the Internet, many possibilities have opened up, even in remote parts of the world, because of the Internet.…
“Belonging to a digital culture binds people more strongly than the territorial adhesives of geography” (Mackay pg.123) Many who are not able to use conventional methods of communication are given an outlet whereby they can. Many are unable to visit places of interest to them and ICTs host many features allowing people to view and learn about places they would in most cases not be able to physically visit. “Internet communities – which are seen as binding people together in some sort of common culture in which imagined realities are shared” ( Hugh Mackay pg.159) The new ICTs can…
The Internet has historically been considered an “open and free” medium. Currently, Internet users get access to any Web site on an equal basis. Foreign and domestic sites, big corporate home pages and low-traffic blogs all show up on a user’s screen in the same way when their addresses are typed into a browser. (NY Times 2010) Having its beginnings in military and research facilities in the late 1960’s, ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network) slowly evolved into what is now known as the Internet in the 1990’s. Since then is has become the backbone of American and world culture and economics. There is almost no limit to the content available today. Any person with an idea and access to the Internet can share that idea with the world more quickly than in any other time in human history. (Hunter, 2010)…
In just a few years, the Internet has established itself as a very powerful platform that has changed the way we communicate. The Internet, as no other medium, has given an international or a "globalized" dimension to the world. It has become the universal source of information for over 1,463,632,361 people.…
“The growth in internet use has affected cultures around the world, leading to a westernised, homogenous world culture.”…
What gives the clash of coffee shop talks and online participation in the discussion by commenting on the news? Surely, this differs from what an influential political scientist Samuel Huntington wrote about in his book “Clash of civilization”. The case with civilization is merely an upgrade of cultures but burdening and open issue among politicians. As for the “clash” of the natural discussion in an open air practiced in the XVII century with the global networking is about upgrade of communication. The latter is vice versa to the first is warmly welcomed by the contemporary communicators. Internet enlarged the scale of discussion as well as it made it right away.…
As technology has rapidly advanced, the ways in which humans communicate with each other have been dramatically altered. These technological advances have given birth to a variety of new forms of media, which include a multiplicity a communicatory devices including everything from mass media and social media, to digitization and data sharing. Within the journal China Media Research, (Volume 8.2, pg. 1-12, 2012) Professor Guo-Ming Chen of the University of Rhode Island authored, “The Impact of New Media on Intercultural Communication in a Global Context”. Within this piece, Chen illustrates the powerful influence that new media possesses within intercultural relationships, which in turn, have created new communities that challenge traditional norms. Chen presents her argument in a clear and concise manner, beginning with a brief history of communication studies, paralleled with how new media has been a dominant cause of globalization. This introduction establishes an outline from which she thoroughly expand her thesis (which I have previously noted) surrounding the theme of intercultural communication. This particular article aids the reader to further understand, and fully comprehend the difficulties that exist within technology’s effect on intercultural communication. Chen’s ideas relate to many of the course themes of CMNS 110, but specifically in Unit 2’s subsection titled the “Cultural Model vs. Transmission Model” of communication, which will further be elaborated within this paper.…
To study the internet as a cultural artifact involves looking at how a means of communication is used within an offline social world. To study the internet as culture, on the other hand, means regarding it as a social space on its own right, looking at the forms of communication, sociality and identity that are produced within this social space, and how they are sustained using the resources available within the online setting. The claim that the new media sustain online social spaces that can be inhabited and investigated relatively independently of offline social relations has been advanced on quite various grounds, and from the earliest days of the internet. We can summarise them in terms of four properties: Virtuality, Spatiality, Disembedding and disembodiment.…