Instigator / Con
0
1587
rating
182
debates
55.77%
won
Topic
#4222

The rise of social media as a primary source of news distribution does more harm than good.

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Winner
0
3

After 3 votes and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...

AustinL0926
Judges
Barney's avatar
Barney
50 debates / 1,283 votes
Voted
whiteflame's avatar
whiteflame
27 debates / 196 votes
Voted
oromagi's avatar
oromagi
117 debates / 397 votes
Voted
AleutianTexan's avatar
AleutianTexan
4 debates / 27 votes
No vote
Tags
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
Three days
Max argument characters
10,500
Voting period
One week
Point system
Winner selection
Voting system
Judges
Contender / Pro
3
1636
rating
33
debates
93.94%
won
Description

On-balance.

Pro argues that the rise of social media as a primary source of news distribution does more harm than good to society and Con argues that it does more good for society than harm.

The focus of the conversation ultimately comes down to whether or not social media does more overall good for society or bad, as a news outlet. The two standards to measure are the quantity (multiple examples of good or bad) and the quality (overall significance and impact of examples.) Both of these will be crucial to the debate. Whoever maxes out on both of these will ultimately win. If Pro or Con fall short in one of these areas, they can compensate by maxing out in the other. If both sides are even or it falls somewhere in the middle, then it is a tie.

But if the quality or quantity of one side's examples are significant enough to outweigh both the other side's contributions, they can also be declared the winner.

Definitions:
Primary Source- A main or essential lead of information that is relied on by default to stay informed.

News Distribution- An organization which collects, processes, and distributes information.

Social Media- Websites and applications that enable users to create and share content or to participate in social networking.

Good- Benefit or advantage to someone or something.

Harm- Causes/Causing an unfortunate or distressing result/result(s).

Rules:
1. BOP is shared.
2. Pro and Con are weighed by the quantity and quality of their arguments.
3. One forfeit is the loss of a conduct point. Two forfeits are an auto-loss.

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@AustinL0926

Not too surprised by that. It came off as somewhat slapdash. Still, worked out.

BTW, voters and my opponent alike might be amused to hear that my definitional Kritik was completely unintentional - I was writing my argument in a hurry, and didn't notice that Lancelot had already put (rather reasonable) definitions in the description. By the time I realized, my only option was to double down and do what I do best: pretend I know what the heck I'm doing.

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@oromagi

Thank you for the informative RfD.

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@oromagi

Thank you!

Oro's RFD Part I

The RISE of SOCIAL MEDIA as a PRIMARY SOURCE of NEWS DISTRIBUTION does MORE HARM than GOOD

Ultimately, CON loses this debate because of a significant disconnect between thesis and most of his arguments. CON's definitons all seem pretty on point but CON's first three arguments address how social media can provide advantages to law enforcement. While law enforcement certainly is a fundamental interest of journalism, PRO correctly argues that's not the same thing as news journalism- the collection, process, and distribution of current information about public interests including law enforcement.

The fourth point notes how social media has revolutionized journalism but, as PRO counters, without describing any public improvement or benefit by that revolutionary change.

The fifth point highlights how social media has created more jobs for journalists but more doesn't always mean better as PRO retorts.
***( Pew reports that there has been 28% decline since 2008 in people whose job is to actually investigate and report news stories. The point about where do draw the line between "journalists" and "employees of media calling themselves news" is debatable but I still consider it convention wisdom that there are far fewer journalists now than in previous decades. Newsrooms used to support reporters in every state legisture, many city councils, often supported a number of foreign correspondents- all of that is mostly in the past now. Nevertheless, both CON and PRO agreed that there are more journalism jobs than before so neither side gets a disadvantage for being misinformed here).

The final point addresses how social media has made E-Therapy more accessible to those who cannot access in-person therapy. Again, PRO points out that medical treatment is not news reporting.

For ALL six of CON's arguments, I find myself agreeing with PRO that CON failed to show one solid argument resembling "the rise of social media as a primary source of news distribution does more good than harm because..." 4 claims were not examples of "primary source of news," 2 examples failed to show more good than harm.

Oro's RFD Part II

PRO wastes time on definitions and framework- having accepted CON's definitions up front, PRO is not at liberty to offer an alternative set of definitons. CON's definition and framework stands. Nevertheless, PRO establishes within that framework a few of the current impacts of social media as a news source, demonstrating how the harms it causes to society are significant enough to outweigh the benefits. PRO points out that social media platforms often recommend news to users based on their past interests, creating echo chambers and reinforcing biases, which can have serious real-world harm. Additionally, social media news is far less reliable and accurate than news from traditional sources, and using social media as a primary source of news can cause serious harms to media literacy.

CON correctly objects to alternative definitions. But CON loses credibility trying to argue that improved criminal justice is the same thing as the news. CON fades a little more challenging PRO's use of a Forbes's article since as PRO points out, the facts cited are not disputed. CON misses the point by countering that innaccuracy, echo chambers, etc are not problems that began with social media and therefore not to blame: just because social media didn't invent the problem doesn't mean they didn't exacerbate the problem and the question we are trying to answer is degree of harm, not origin- more harm than good. CON's outrageous claim that "Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube use fact-checking features to erase harmful or misleading information and hold people accountable for lies," was very discrediting- almost as if CON does not have a handle on the scale or impact of current events. CON rapid fires a bunch of ways social media helps journalists without citation:

more jobs (I'm don't think research would back this)
improved journalistic standards (I don't think experts in journalism would agree with this claim)
made research easier (obviously true and obviously a net good- this is CON's best argument, though unsubstantiated)
more jobs for disabled people (100% non-sequitur)

CON then gives us five ways in which Social Media Saves Lives, none of which are relevant to social media as a primary source of news.

In the final round, CON tries to his defend his conflation of "social media" with "social media as a primary source of news, using example from Round1 that illustrate murderers who were radicalized online and were using social media as a stage to publicize their crimes with the hopes of elevation to martyrdom. Yes, such publc acts of extremity make the cop's job easier but this voter fails to understand how such acts are supposed to improve the condition of any news consumer.

PRO's focus on impacts was particularly illustrative. In fact, I found CON's impacts less convincing overall than did PRO. CON was right about sticking to defintions and PRO definitely loses that point but as far as the actual balance of harm vs. good when it comes to way social media distributes the news, PRO's arguments overwhelmed CON's in both quantity and quality.

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@oromagi
@AleutianTexan

About one day remains to vote if you choose to do so, BTW.

Just to add to Barney's point, there's a problem with arguing that those who receive news from social media are less news literate than those who receive news from other sources, and that is that it makes a fundamental assumption: all or many of those who receive their news through social media would otherwise get their news from a better source. In the absence of social media as a news source, many people who use it as a news source may just not seek out news from other sources at all, or may receive it from an even less savory source. So a point in favor of social media journalism would be that it exposes them to news at all.

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@Barney

indeed, there was SO MUCH that the Con sides of this missed on all 3. I kind of wish I'd taken Con instead of Pro now. I knew Pro had the more straightforward/defensive case to make but Con had so many left-field angles if they dug deep. They could drown Pro in example after example of real-world beneficial examples of SM as an NDP helping society.

I’m happy to discuss any other parts of this debate, along with the broader topic.

A major point I will make in favor of social media journalism is not having to align with the interests of the advertisers. Fox News for example will not merely lean a news story to fit their bid, they’ll pretend it never happened. If you want to be a reporter on the 10 o’clock news you’ve got to play ball. Online news outlets gives us the example of Project Veritos (spelling?) showing a return to investigative journalism instead of merely being mouthpieces for the commercials.

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@Barney

Thanks for the vote!

Thanks for the feedback. Looking forward to your vote.

I pay SUPER close attention whenever Barney is commentating.

Con does well with the reminder of the attention seeking terrorists… and problems with mainstream news as well during Covid.

Pro basically extends to close out the debate.

Pro’s R2 contained some problems. Most notably pointing out that many governments control their news networks, which inherently makes social media a vital resource for those affected. I also would not call the definitions uncontested, given that they were directly contested (even while I’m not buying it, it was there). A strength of his case this round was focus on Covid, which could have been nicely linked to the bad governments point with Russia’s fake news farms and such.

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@Barney

I think both of us went slightly bonkers with the definitional debate, honestly.

Read con’s R2…

Played way too defensively. Main stream media also engaging in circle jerks, could have been a highlight with clips of stupid mainstream news people.

The definition thing is painful. There’s times when nuance in a definition is a deterministic to the outcome but this is reaching too far. Pokémon Go would be a news source under this definition and the attempts to apply it like that. I don’t know if pro catches this but when an attempt to define things this broadly it would be social media against every non-online interaction.

It seems to me the spirit intended at the onset of this debate was social media news >= mainstream media news.

Rings of Power makes for some interesting news stories but is not in itself news even while it technically contains information distributed by an organization.

I took whiteflame’s major critiques and included them in my notes’ folder.

Will do the same for Barney and Oromagi’s vote.

Noting that as a reference experience for future debates.

Just finished reading R1. Pro is clearly ahead at that point, due to the Fox News circle jerk effect being leveraged against social media; in addition to the majority of cons points being far outside the scope.

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@Barney
@oromagi
@AleutianTexan

bump for votes

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@whiteflame

Thanks for the vote - I definitely appreciate the detailed feedback.

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@whiteflame

Thanks for the vote

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@whiteflame
@AleutianTexan

Thank you, sir.

I doubt AleutianTexan will vote because he hasn’t been active lately.

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@Sir.Lancelot
@AustinL0926

I'll try to plug through this this weekend.

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@Barney
@whiteflame
@oromagi
@AleutianTexan

Thanks to all of you for your time and consideration in being willing to judge a long and complex debate for an important event. My opponent and I appreciate it. Please vote fairly, regardless of any past feelings :)

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@RationalMadman

Well, I have the excuse of realizing this debate existed 30 minutes before the deadline. But yes, it was far sloppier than my best - I could definitely have done way better.

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@AustinL0926

I will tell after this is over where I think you went wrong here.

In short, you are completely legally allowed to leave all rebuttals to Round 2. That part you can't change. Lancelot is known to dish out new stuff in Round 3 and WF and Oromagi don't punish that at all.

The rest I'll just let you realise in your own time. You have both been much sloppier than I predicted in how this has gone down, I can't predict the winner at this point.

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@RationalMadman

I would never try this versus Intel lol, he would destroy me if it came down to definitions.

Hey, RMM!
How’s it going?

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@AustinL0926

Why is this and the intel vs lxam debate so ridiculous in how loosely it defines 'News'? Lol...

Both Pro debaters let the Con get away with a really abusive definition of News in the descriptions. That is ridiculous. Furthermore distribution is a noun relating to a verb 'distribute', an organisation is a noun referring to a verb 'organise' and in this case to a group of people being organised...

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@Sir.Lancelot
@AustinL0926

A useful tool for you both:
http://tiny.cc/DebateArt

Basically I suggest using headings to separate different contentions, and copy your opponent’s headings when replying to them. This both saves a ton of characters, and makes it easy for judges to follow.

For this debate you might both share quality and quantity as primary headings, but I’d expect different sub points; in addition to any other major headings for things outside those two pre-agreed metrics.

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@Barney

Thank you, sir.

Good setup.