In Amanda Hess’s “Why Women Aren’t Welcome on the Internet”,
she uses strong language and personal experience to demonstrate that the issue
of sexism and harassment against women on the internet is not just a boy having
fun but a very serious issue. She attempts to show the men in society, who
compose a large majority of the law enforcement and internet companies, that
the messages that he and other female internet users receive are not just “juvenile
pranksters” but real life people who can possibly be harmful towards them. The
author appeals to our ethos and logos through her own personal account with a cyber-stalker. This lead to her calling the local law enforcement
who ended up not even filing a report. Hess was forced to pay a private
investigator into order to get a court case, and eventually a one year
protection order. Her personally account exemplifies the extreme amount of time,
money, and personal effort that women must put forth in order to avoid this harassment.
The author also brings this problem to light so that other women may see that
they are not the only experiencing this issue. It may be difficult for some
women to share their experiences with other women because they are driven away
from online chat rooms, which is shown through a drop from “28 percent to 17”
from 2000 to 2005. By publishing her own experiences along with the experience
of multiple female activists and journalist, along with the use of extremely vulgar
examples of comments they receive, she is able to gain the attention of more
people. The author does a pretty good job of present her argument from all
points of view, but she fails to prevent a solution to the problem. However she does point out that there is no easy solution to this argument because most men
do not understand where women are coming from since it only happens to women
for the most part. One possible way to help women, but not completely solve the
issue, would be to increase law that are already in place. There are only 3
federal laws that apply to cyber stalking and only 34 states with cyber
stalking laws, so it is apparent that more needs to be done to get rid of this
issue.
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
The Loneliness of the Interconnected analysis
The Loneliness of the Interconnected is an essay on
how the internet has made it easier for people to become isolated, while being
in the midst of everything. The author, Charles Seife, proposes that humans
have strong mental foundations based on opinions we form throughout our lives. As
we encounter information that opposes what we think we tend to shy away from
it, and figure it to be lies. The goal of his essay is to illustrate to the
young adults and children of the internet age, that they should not be so
close-minded on their beliefs. The author uses facts and relevant examples to demonstrate
how the internet links us to an unimaginable amounts of information and people,
and with these resources people tend to gravitate towards the opinions on which
their foundations were formed. People will seek out the knowledge that they
want to hear and band together to form a cult of similar minded web surfers. Seife
wants us as a society to understand how we can benefit from the helpful aspects
of the internet, while simultaneously trying to fight against human nature and prevent
from being intellectually isolated. The internet itself is a never ending
library filled with valuable information that can be accessed in seconds and
we, the users, unintentionally dictate what we see. This is beneficial to
society because we can automatically have access to the information we want,
however it can also prevent us from seeing the other side of the coin and only
be narrow minded. That is the thin line that society now a days has to learn to
balance on. Are we going to be robots to the information that is funneled into
our computer screens, or are we going to be self-thinkers and be able to
process factual information even if we do not want to see it?
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