Tired
of that friend or relative who won’t stop posting or tweeting political
opinions? Online loudmouths may be annoying, but a new survey suggests
they are in the minority.
In a report released Tuesday,
the Pew Research Center found that most people who regularly use social
media sites were actually less likely to share their opinions, even
offline.
The findings run counter to how
many people view social media. But a survey that asked some 1,800 adults
about the case of leaker Edward Snowden found that people on Facebook
and Twitter were more likely to clam up on whether widespread government
surveillance is a good thing. Researchers also noted the “spiral of
silence” phenomenon: Unless people know their audience agrees, they are
likely to shy away from talking about hot-button issues.
In other words, most of us are more comfortable with ice-bucket challenges than political banter.
“People do not tend to be using
social media for this type of important political discussion. And, if
anything, it may actually be removing conversation from the public
sphere,” said Keith Hampton, a communications professor at Rutgers
University in New Jersey, who helped conduct the study.
The survey focused on the
willingness of adults to share their opinion on Snowden’s 2013
revelation of widespread government surveillance of Americans’ phone and
email records. Hampton said the Snowden case provided a concrete
example of a major national issue that divides Americans.
Among Pew’s findings was that
the typical Facebook user — someone who logs onto the site a few times
per day — was half as likely to discuss the Snowden case at a public
meeting as a non-Facebook user. Meanwhile, someone who goes on Twitter a
few times per day is one-quarter as likely to share opinions in the
workplace compared with those who never use Twitter.
Lee Rainie, director of the Pew
Research Center Internet Project, said it’s possible that social media
actually sensitizes people to different opinions.
“Because they use social media,
they may know more about the depth of disagreement over the issue in
their wide circle of contacts,” he said. “This might make them hesitant
to speak up either online or offline for fear of starting an argument,
offending or even losing a friend.”
Another finding was that social
media didn’t make it easier for people to share opinions they wouldn’t
otherwise voice. Of the 14 percent of Americans unwilling to discuss the
Snowden case with others, fewer than half of 1 percent were willing to
discuss it on social media.
While many people might be
relieved and say keeping political debate off Facebook is a matter of
tact, Hampton said there is a concern that fear of offending someone on
social media is stifling debate, adding, “A society where people aren’t
able to share their opinions openly and gain from understanding
alternative perspectives is a polarized society.”
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