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Position Paper 4

 Social Media’s Positive Impact on Society            I have talked all semester about how Social Media tends to have a negative impact on society. I will not argue with that, but on the other hand, I sincerely believe that it can have a positive impact as well. A new social media hit the app store in September of 2016. This app was TikTok. This name is now known widely in arguably almost all countries worldwide. TikTok has blown up immensely over the past few years. It was a platform that many people were taking part in, especially at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic . “ TikTok saw a significant increase in popularity during the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak in the United States, with a growth of 180 percent among 15-25 year old users after the pandemic broke out and people started working and studying primarily from home” ( Statistica ). TikTok was the number one top grossing app on iOS App Store globally in the second quarter of 2020, w...
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Position Paper 3

 Digital Media Literacy Many countries are not as lenient with journalism as the United States. “Under Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, everyone has the right to seek and receive news and express opinions” ( CPJ ). A majority of countries follow these principals and allow opinionated expression through journalism. Some countries, though, are the opposite and defy these international standards and ban or severely repress independent media and intimidate journalists with imprisonment threats, digital and physical surveillance, and other forms of harassment. The media serves as the representative for the country, so media laws are strict. In countries with strict media literacy policies foreign journalists are usually not permitted to enter, and when the select few can, they are closely monitored. There are repercussions against freelance journalists and actions are taken against these people. North Korea is an example of a country that has excessive controls ...

Position Paper 2

  Covid-19 and Its Effect on International Media Usage The coronavirus pandemic changed many parts of our daily lives, our media usage included. From spending month in shutdowns with not much else to do but occupy our time with technology, to spending quarantines scrolling through social media, and even education turning remote, media became a necessity in most of our lives. Personally, I remember days during the shutdown where I took advantage of streaming services and laid on the couch, for longer than I would like to admit, watching TV. Additionally, during my 10 day quarantine when I was COVID-19 positive, I spent every hour that I was not sleeping either streaming a show, scrolling through social media, or attending lectures over my computer. At the start of 2020, we could have never imagined just how much our lives and global media usage would come to be impacted over the next year. One of the biggest issues relating to the increase in media usage because of the coronavirus...

Position Paper 1

            Imagine being so addicted to something that you must use it as soon as you wake up, as well as right before you go to sleep, if it was not a factor in keeping you awake. Not to mention, you have to use it so often throughout the day, that if you do not, you feel like you might go crazy. Well, that is how most of us are with our phones, me included. That is not an easy thing to admit that I am so dependent on a rectangle, but with how technology has evolved, it is hard not to be. Having the ability to get answers to practically any question, issue, or need within seconds just at your fingertips makes the addictive usage of phones seem justified. Not only the ability to access information makes phones to useful. Phones can connect people who are states, countries, and even continents apart, almost instantaneously. Justifying an addiction seems like a way to seemingly deny the fact that it exists, but technology controls practically everything...