探花视频鈥檚 timely and thought-provoking struck a loud, resonant chord with me. A few years back, I deleted my Twitter account, subsequently blitzed my personal YouTube channel and put my blog on an extended hiatus. This act of social media suicide 鈥 as my soon-to-be-teenage daughter likes to refer to it 鈥 was prompted by a number of the factors described, or alluded to, in the article online.
came in a 1am exchange with Louise Mensch: her riposte to a carefully crafted tweet was 鈥淟OLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL!!!鈥. Followed by a tweenage meme. Sigh. What was I doing with my life? (On the plus side, I was blocked by the legend-in-his-own-lunchtime that is Milo Yiannopoulos after just two tweets. With Deepak Chopra, one tweet was enough鈥)
I鈥檓 not going to听repeat the reasons behind my disconnection and distancing from social media. For those masochistic enough to be interested in all the tedious detail, it鈥檚 available at the . Nor am I going to trot out some trite, patronising, vacuous, TED-esque 鈥淭welve Reasons You Too Should Shut Down Your Social Media Accounts鈥 self-help guff. Not this time, at least. I鈥檓 , however.听
Social media platforms are just tools for communication. And, as Sara Custer highlighted in her article, not only do most academics like to communicate, communication is our core 鈥渂usiness鈥. We also tend to be a fairly argumentative species. From that perspective, the social media ecosystem is our natural habitat in many ways.
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But one aspect of social media engagement that is still not sufficiently recognised by universities in their headlong rush to encourage as many of their academics, and, increasingly, students, to connect online (so as to maximise that all-important impact factor) is just how toxic it can get.听
And that toxicity can bleed offline into real life. While universities consider the potential effects of social media posts and profiles on their brand, both positive and negative, many of those august institutions seem less concerned about highlighting the downsides of a social media profile to their staff. Even more worryingly, they are not always as supportive as they could be when things go wrong. That鈥檚 not a veiled criticism of the my own institution, the University of Nottingham, by the way. The school here is very supportive and 听is active on a variety of social media platforms and well aware of the risks.
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What used to be the preserve of cesspits听such as听4chan is increasingly now overground, polluting mainstream sites such as YouTube and Twitter.听
This point has been convincingly argued by Whitney Phillips (This Is Why We Can鈥檛 Have Nice Things), Angela Nagle (Kill All Normies: Online Culture Wars from 4chan and Tumblr to Trump and the Alt-Right)听and Mike Wendling (Alt-Right: From 4chan to the White House).听
And yet when I speak at academic meetings and workshops whose focus is the application and exploitation of social media, I find that there is often a worrying lack of appreciation of just how bad it can get.听
Mention of , for example, draws blank stares and a lack of raised hands when I ask those in attendance if they鈥檙e familiar with the torrents of abuse and threats that Sarkeesian and others have received. Here鈥檚 just from a few years back. I听also strongly recommend to any student or academic thinking about posting their research online.
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I鈥檓 a middle-aged physicist whose research focuses on pushing, poking and prodding single atoms. And I鈥檓 a bloke. As compared听with听a female PhD student in, let鈥檚 say, gender studies, I have it ridiculously easy indeed when it comes to communicating my research online.听
But it鈥檚 not just gender studies that鈥檚 in the firing line. Certain online gurus, including , would have it that entire schools of education, sociology, English, and swathes of the humanities are all deeply suspect at best, fundamentally corrupt at worst and, as befits those champions of free speech. Peterson, for one, has a substantial flock hanging on his every word.
University management and funding bodies need to inform themselves about how toxic it can get on social media. Too often, their perception seems to be that there鈥檚 an adoring public 鈥渙ut there鈥 waiting with bated breath to hear about the latest research findings. This is breathtakingly naive. For many, academics and experts are part of the problem, not the solution. Universities need to start thinking beyond the brand.
Philip Moriarty is a professor of physics at the University of Nottingham.听
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