The Role of Digital Media Tools in Our Journey for Knowledge

The existence of digital media tools are helping the expansion of our knowledge, that is if we use it for good. What is defined as “good” though? Well, for everyone, “good” would obviously mean you’re not using these tools to commit crimes such as murder or even something like terrorism. Just like you shouldn’t use a knife to murder but rather to cook a delicious steak for dinner. But how can something like this help expand our knowledge? Well, thinking about the internet on general, it creates a bridge for everyone that wasn’t there previously. You never would have expected a professor from West Canada to communicate with another professor from Southern India about their thoughts in alternative energy. Previous to the internet, you only communicated via mail and telephone. And even then, you needed the other party’s information such as their number or address and mail would take time to reach its destination. With the help of the internet and digital media tools, anyone can join in on the conversation and provide insight that no one else would have thought about. In recent years, the internet has expanded tremendously with billions of users online and serverloads of data being generated everyday, it’s impossible to say there isn’t a chance you can learn something from visiting a site. However, it would be understandable to think why someone would oppose digital media as it allows anyone to easily access data about a person to make pressumptions. Jeffrey Rosen writes about the Web’s influence on how people will never be able to forget things. After all, nothing ever gets deleted from the internet. Rosen claims a Microsoft survey revealed “Seventy percent of U.S. recruiters report that they have rejected candidates because of information found online, like photos and discussion-board conversations and membership in controversial groups.” With the extreme accessability of information posted onto the internet, it’s hard to make sure people have the correct assumption of you and that’s why some rely on services like ReputationDefender and TigerText, that go about purging your online footsteps. What’s to say you forgot you made some silly mistake when you were young and your recruiters for a top-level position takes that into account during your hiring?

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