Why the net is useless
for REAL information
Kill trees, roll tape
The Internet is the better way to distribute information.
So why does traditional media dominate?
By Tom Yager
Early advocates of a pervasive online culture cast the stereotype of mainstream media
outlets as closed-minded, slow, dictatorial, William Randolph Hearst-style machines bent
on shutting out differing viewpoints and smaller voices. More sober minds saw traditional
media less as an enemy of free expression than a horse and buggy. However, advancing
technology is only an enabler of societal evolution. By itself, technology does not
spawn evolution on a societal level. That requires need and availability.
There is no question that the Internet has addressed the technical limitations of
traditional media. You couldn’t remake a newspaper, radio station, magazine, or TV station
into a wide open information source that is updated every microsecond. Methods of gathering
and delivering information via scheduled publication and broadcast can’t match the immediacy
and inclusiveness of the Internet. With traditional media, all news is old, very few voices
are heard and every outlet can be said to have an agenda. If these are the problems, the
Internet holds the solutions. But there are still those matters of need and availability.
For the great majority of Americans, information and opinion are delivered the same way
they have been since the 1950s. People still listen to the radio in the shower and on the
drive to and from work. They read the paper with breakfast and on the train, eat dinner with
the TV news on, and divide the sections of the Sunday paper among pajama-clad companions.
Some people enjoy the process of interactively selecting and prioritizing the information
sources they use. In the main, the process of staying informed is passive. TV and radio are
media we consume while our hands are busy with other things, when interaction with our
information sources would be impractical or intrusive.
Because I work in print media, it would be tacky to trumpet the advantages unique
to magazines, except for one advantage that I haven’t seen mentioned elsewhere: You
can finish reading a magazine. If it weren’t for the ability to read Newsweek and the
few other magazines that I read cover to cover, I’d be online day and night. Traditional
media snips the fuse on the three-click phenomenon: Clicking through three hyperlinks
will often take you someplace that causes you to forget what you hit the Internet to
study. Publications, TV, and radio broadcasts need replacing because their content is
finite, but at least when you’re finished reading, watching or listening, you get back
to your work or your life.
The case for a faster and more inclusive, more interactive means of staying informed
and informing others is easy to make among with readily available access to the necessary
technology. Most people can afford a television. Anyone who can read can have a newspaper
waiting at their door. In contrast, people have no control over access to broadband Internet,
and, unfairly, the most informative content is tailored for broadband users. Using the Net
is painful at 256Kbps or less. Dial-up is the Internet ghetto. What kind of connectivity you
get is decided by telcos, cable companies, landlords, and income.
The Internet is the right vehicle for carrying information to the masses, but traditional
media, as technologically backward and restrictive as it is, can’t die out until the masses
value immediacy and interactivity to the point of need, and everyone can get access to the
Net for the price of a subscription to the local paper.