Wednesday, December 13, 2017

The Internet! It's a Trap!

Indeed, the Internet can be a trap, especially when it comes to people that were born in the 2.0 years, without a prior knowledge of how the world used to look like when Google was just an utopic nightmare. As a journalist and academic in the training, I remember the good old days when I had to go to the library to read books early in the morning for preparing the background of an article. Or, when I had to use my paper files for checking facts and figures about a specific topic.
My life today is much easier and writing an article takes significantly less time, but on the other other hand, without a prior mental preparation about what really counts and what are the most reliable sources of information. I remember the horrific reaction of an academic friend of mine fighting to convince his students that Wikipedia is NEVER a source of academic reference for an academic paper or article. And the examples can continue.
Ashesh Mukherjee is using an academic tone and analysis for listing the most important challenges of our everyday life and development represented by the Internet perspective. What I highly appreciated was the balanced style and analytic skills, after having the misfortune of dealing with way too many academic books in German by German authors where the Internet was ostracized and considered an obvious casus belli for many society and educational ills. 
In reality, the online life might be a cause of distress and existential problems, but especially when most of the problems are already there. For instance, if someone already suffer of a serious mental disability he or she will rather suffer when using Internet unguided for doing, for example, unlimited online shopping. There are many people who instead of going to a reliable source of authority of information, are using an informal mediums because they have their own fears and obsessions in relation with thouse sources. And the examples can continue.
The Internet Trap is a reliable source of information for anyone looking to better understand the impact of 2.0 in our everyday life, without panic and hysterical approaches, but through an analytic and realistic approach. A recommended read to any academic researcher in contemporary issues and, especially, online realms.

Rating: 4 stars
Disclaimer: Book offered by the publisher in exchange for an honest review

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