Internet activism (also known as hacktivism, web activism, online activism, digital campaigning, digital activism, online organizing, electronic advocacy, c'e-campaigning, and e-activism) is the use of electronic communication technologies such as social media, e-mail, and podcasts for various forms of activism to enable faster and more effective communication by citizen movements, the delivery of particular information to large and specific audiences as well as coordination. Internet technologies are used for cause-related fundraising, community building, lobbying, and organizing.
A digital activism campaign is "an
organized public effort, making collective claims on a target authority,
in which civic initiators or supporters use digital media." Research has started to address specifically how activist/advocacy groups in the U.S. and Canada are using social media to achieve digital activism objectives.
Types
Sandor Vegh divides online activism into three main categories: Awareness/advocacy, organization/mobilization, and action/reaction.
There are other ways of classifying types of online activism, such as
by the degree of reliance on the Internet. Thus, Internet sleuthing or
hacking could be viewed as purely online forms of activism, whereas the
Occupy Wall Street movement was only partially online.
The Internet is a key resource for independent activists, or
E-activists, particularly those whose message may run counter to the
mainstream. "Especially when a serious violation of human rights occurs, the Internet is essential in reporting the atrocity to the outside world." Listservs like BurmaNet and Freedom News Group help distribute news that would otherwise be inaccessible in these countries.
Internet activists also pass on E-petitions to be sent to the
government and public and private organizations to protest against and
urge for positive policy change in areas from the arms trade to animal testing.
Many non-profits and charities use these methods, emailing petitions to
those on their email list and asking people to pass them on. The
Internet also enables organizations such as NGOs to communicate with individuals in an inexpensive and timely manner. Gatherings and protests can be organized with the input of the organizers and the participants. Lobbying is also made easier via the Internet, thanks to mass e-mail
and its ability to broadcast a message widely at little cost. Vegh's
concept of organization/mobilization, for example, can refer to
activities taking place solely online, solely offline but organized
online, or a combination of online and offline. Mainstream social-networking sites, most noticeably Facebook.com,
are also making e-activist tools available to their users. An active
participatory culture is enabled by the communities on social networking
sites because they permit communication between groups that are
otherwise unable to communicate. In the article "Why We Argue about
Virtual Community: A Case Study of the Phish.net Fan Community," Nessim
Watson stresses the necessity of communication in online communities. He
even goes as far as to say that "Without ongoing communication among
its participants, a community dissolves". The constant ability to
communicate with members of the community enriches online community
experiences and redefines the word community.
In addition, denial-of-Service attacks, the taking over and vandalizing of a website, uploading Trojan horses, and sending out e-mail bombs (mass e-mailings) are also examples of Internet activism.
Hashtag activism
Hashtag activism is the use of hashtags for fighting or supporting a cause through the usage of social media outlets. Its use has been associated with the 2014 Chibok kidnapping, with hopes that it would help keep the story in the news and raise international attention. The hashtag itself has received 2 million retweets.
One example of the powerful rise of hashtag activism can be seen
in the black feminist movement's use of hashtags to convey their cause.
The famous hashtag "IamJada" was an internet backlash to the mocking
"#Jadapose" that went viral, ensuing after a sixteen-year-old girl Jada
Smith was photographed following her gang rape In this instance, a hashtag was employed to convey a powerful anti-rape message.
TikTok activism
TikTok's
platform has been increasingly used for rising up social issues through
creative short videos, especially after an allegedly make-up tutorial
turned into a call to action on China's treatment of Muslim Uighurs.
The tutorial was banned for 50 minutes on November 26, 2019. Eric Han,
the heads of TikTok's US content-moderation team, claimed the banning
was due to a “human moderation error”. The Chinese owners declared the
app does not remove content based on sensitivities to China.
TikTok also partnered up with UN Women in a campaign fighting women
violence in India which kicked off on November 25, 2019. The campaign
can be found under the hashtag #KaunsiBadiBaatHai and features short videos with positive and negative examples of men interacting with women.
Development processes
Exploring
the dynamics of online activism for expressing resistance to a powerful
organization, a study developed a critical mass approach to online
activism.
The results were integrated in a four-year longitudinal process model
that explains how online activism started, generated societal outcomes,
and changed over time. The model suggests that online activism helped
organize collective actions and amplify the conditions for revolutionary
movements to form. Yet, it provoked elites’ reactions such as Internet
filtering and surveillance, which do not only promote self-censorship
and generate digital divide, but contribute to the ultimate decline of
activism over time. The process model suggests a complex interplay among
stakeholders’ interests, opportunities for activism, costs and outcomes
that are neither foreseen nor entirely predictable. The authors
challenge universal access to the Internet as a convenient and cost-free
forum for practicing social activism by organizational stakeholders
(customers, employees, outside parties). In fact, the technology
enablers of social activism also enable its filtering and repression and
thus more extreme states of information asymmetry may result in which
powerful elites preserve their status and impose a greater digital
divide.
In one study, a discussion of a developmental model of political
mobilization is discussed. By citizens joining groups and creating
discussion, they are beginning their first stage of involvement.
Progressively, it is hoped that they will begin signing petitions online
and graduating to offline contact as long as the organization provides
the citizen with escalating steps of involvement (Vitak et al., 2011).
The issue of the mass media's centrality has been highly
contested, with some people arguing that it promoted the voices of
marginalized groups while others believe it sends forth the messages of
the majority alone, leaving minority groups to have their voices robbed.
Examples of early activism
One of the earliest known uses of the Internet as a medium for activism was that around Lotus MarketPlace. On April 10, 1990, Lotus announced a direct-mail marketing database
product that was to contain name, address, and spending habit
information on 120 million individual U.S. citizens. While much of the
same data was already available, privacy advocates worried about the
availability of this data within one database. Furthermore, the data
would be on CD-ROM, and so would remain fixed until a new CD-ROM was issued.
In response, a mass e-mail and E-bulletin-board campaign was started, which included information on contacting Lotus and form letters. Larry Seiler, a New England-based
computer professional, posted a message that was widely reposted on
newsgroups and via e-mail: "It will contain a LOT of personal
information about YOU, which anyone in the country can access by just
buying the discs. It seems to me (and to a lot of other people, too)
that this will be a little too much like big brother,
and it seems like a good idea to get out while there is still
time."Over 30,000 people contacted Lotus and asked for their names to be
removed from the database. On January 23, 1991, Lotus announced that it had cancelled MarketPlace.
In 1993, a survey article about online activism around the world, from Croatia to the United States, appeared in The Nation magazine, with several activists being quoted about their projects and views.
The earliest example of mass emailing as a rudimentary form of DDoS occurred on Guy Fawkes Day 1994, when the Intervasion of the UK began email-bombing John Major's cabinet and UK parliamentary servers in protest against the Criminal Justice Bill, which outlawed outdoor rave festivals and "music with a repetitive beat."
In 1995–1998, Z magazine offered courses online through Left
Online University, with lessons on "Using the Internet for Electronic
Activism."
The practice of cyber-dissidence
and activism per se, that is, in its modern-day form, may have been
inaugurated by Dr. Daniel Mengara, a Gabonese scholar and activist
living in political exile in New Jersey in the United States. In 1998,
he created a Website in French whose name Bongo Doit Partir (Bongo Must Go)
was clearly indicative of its purpose: it encouraged a revolution
against the then 29-year-old regime of Omar Bongo in Gabon. The original
URL, http://www.globalwebco.net/bdp/, began to redirect to http://www.bdpgabon.org
in the year 2000. Inaugurating what was to become common current-day
practice in the politically involved blogosphere, this movement's
attempt at rallying the Gabonese around revolutionary ideals and actions
has ultimately been vindicated by the 2011 Tunisian and Egyption
revolutions, where the Internet has proven to be an effective tool for
instigating successful critique, opposition, and revolution against
dictators. In July 2003, Amnesty International reported the arrest of
five Gabonese known-to-be members of the cyber-dissident group Bongo Doit Partir. The five members were detained for three months.
Another well-known example of early Internet activism took place in 1998, when the Mexican rebel group EZLN used decentralized communications, such as cell phones, to network with developed world activists and help create the anti-globalization group Peoples Global Action (PGA) to protest the World Trade Organization (WTO) in Geneva. The PGA continued to call for "global days of action" and rally support of other anti-globalization groups in this way.
Later, a worldwide network of Internet activist sites, under the umbrella name of Indymedia, was created "for the purpose of providing grassroots coverage of the WTO protests in Seattle" in 1999. Dorothy Kidd quotes Sheri Herndon in a July 2001 telephone interview about the role of the Internet in the anti-WTO
protests: "The timing was right, there was a space, the platform was
created, the Internet was being used, we could bypass the corporate
media, we were using open publishing, we were using multimedia platforms. So those hadn't been available, and then there was the beginning of the anti-globalization movement in the United States."
In the UK, in 1999, the Government introduced a new employment
tax called IR35. One of the first online trade associations was created
to campaign against it. Within weeks they had raised £100,000 off the
Internet from individuals who had never even met. They became a fully
formed trade association called the Professional Contractors Group,
which two years later had 14,000 members all paying £100 each to join.
They presented the first ever e-petition to Parliament and organized one
of the first flash mobs when using their database, to their surprise
and others, 1,000 came in their call to lobby Parliament. They later
raised £500,000 from the Internet to fund an unsuccessful High Court
challenge against the tax, though ultimately they secured some
concessions. Their first external affairs director, Philip Ross, has
written a history of the campaign.
The engagement in the practice of strategic voting was another
development that came with Internet activism. People coordinated their
vote pairing by entering their contact information into an online
database, thereby reducing cost completely.
Kony 2012, a short film released on March 5, 2012.
The film's purpose was to promote the charity's "Stop Kony" movement to
make African cult and militia leader, indicted war criminal and the
International Criminal Court fugitive Joseph Kony globally known in
order to have him arrested by the end of 2012, when the campaign expired. The film spread virally. A poll suggested that more than half of young adult Americans heard about Kony 2012 in the days following the video's release. It was included among the top international events of 2012 by PBS and called the most viral video ever by TIME. The campaign resulted in a resolution by the United States Senate and contributed to the decision to send troops by the African Union.
Selected Internet activists
- Julian Assange – WikiLeaks
- Daniel Domscheit-Berg – OpenLeaks – Formerly WikiLeaks
- Jimmy Wales – Wikipedia
- Pierre Omidyar – Omidyar Network
- Xiao Qiang – China Digital Times
- Aaron Swartz – Reddit, Creative Commons, Open Library, Demand Progress
- Wael Ghonim - We are all Khaled Said
- Jeremy Hammond - Hacktivist, alleged Anonymous participant
- Cory Doctorow
- Alaa Abdel Fattah
- Jillian York
- Yoani Sanchez
- Courtney C. Radsch
- Don Rittner
- Taren Stinebrickner-Kauffman
- Raif Badawi
- th3j35t3r
The possibilities of online activism
Internet
activism has had the effect of causing increased collective action
among people, as found by Postmes and Brunsting (2002), who discovered a
tendency among internet users to rely on internalized group memberships
and social identities in order to achieve social involvement online.
The Internet is "tailor-made for a populist, insurgent movement," says Joe Trippi, who managed the Howard Dean campaign. In his campaign memoir, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, Trippi notes that:
[The Internet's] roots in the open-source ARPAnet, its hacker culture, and its decentralized, scattered architecture make it difficult for big, establishment candidates, companies and media to gain control of it. And the establishment loathes what it can't control. This independence is by design, and the Internet community values above almost anything the distance it has from the slow, homogeneous stream of American commerce and culture. Progressive candidates and companies with forward-looking vision have an advantage on the Internet, too. Television is, by its nature, a nostalgic medium. Look at Ronald Reagan's campaign ads in the 1980s – they were masterpieces of nostalgia promising a return to America's past glory and prosperity. The Internet, on the other hand, is a forward-thinking and forward-moving medium, embracing change and pushing the envelope of technology and communication.
Use in political campaigns
When discussing the 2004 U.S. presidential election candidates, Carol Darr, director of the Institute for Politics, Democracy & the Internet at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.,
said of the candidates which benefited from use of the Internet to
attract supporters: "They are all charismatic, outspoken mavericks and
insurgents. Given that the Internet is interactive and requires an
affirmative action on the part of the users, as opposed to a passive
response from TV users, it is not surprising that the candidate has to
be someone people want to touch and interact with."
A more decentralized approach to campaigning arose, in contrast
to a top-down, message-focused approach usually conducted in the
mainstream. "The mantra has always been, 'Keep your message consistent.
Keep your message consistent,'" said John Hlinko, who has participated
in Internet campaigns for MoveOn.org and the electoral primary campaign of Wesley Clark. "That was all well and good in the past. Now it's a recipe for disaster ... You can choose to have a Stalinist
structure that's really doctrinaire and that's really opposed to
grassroots. Or you can say, 'Go forth. Do what you're going to do.' As
long as we're running in the same direction, it's much better to give
some freedom."
Two-thirds of Internet users under the age of 30 have a SNS, and
during the 2008 election, half of them used a SNS site for candidate
information (Hirzalla, 2010).
Non-traditional activism
The Internet has become the catalyst for protests such as Occupy Wall Street and the Arab Spring as those involved have increasingly relied on social media to organize and stay connected.
In Myanmar, online news paper Freedom News Group has leaked some government corruption and fuel to protests.
In 2017, the Sleeping Giants cyberactivist group, among others, launched a boycott campaign against controversial, conservative webpage Breitbart News, getting more than 2,000 organizations to remove it from ad buys.
Corporate activism
Corporations
are also using Internet activist techniques to increase support for
their causes. According to Christopher Palmeri with BusinessWeek
Online, companies launch sites with the intent to positively influence
their own public image, to provide negative pressure on competitors, to
influence opinion within select groups, and to push for policy changes.
The clothing manufacturer, American Apparel is an example: The company hosts a website called Legalize LA that advocates immigration reform via blog, online advertising, links to news stories and educational materials. Protest groups have responded by posting YouTube videos and establishing a boycott website.
Corporate methods of information dissemination is labelled "astroturfing," as opposed to "grassroots activism," due to the funding for such movements being largely private. More recent examples include the right-wing FreedomWorks.org
which organized the "Taxpayer March on Washington" on September 12,
2009 and the Coalition to Protect Patients' Rights, which opposes
universal health care in the U.S.
Religious activism
Cybersectarianism
is a new organizational form which involves: "highly dispersed small
groups of practitioners that may remain largely anonymous within the
larger social context and operate in relative secrecy, while still
linked remotely to a larger network of believers who share a set of
practices and texts, and often a common devotion to a particular leader.
Overseas supporters provide funding and support; domestic
practitioners distribute tracts, participate in acts of resistance, and
share information on the internal situation with outsiders.
Collectively, members and practitioners of such sects construct viable
virtual communities of faith, exchanging personal testimonies and
engaging in collective study via email, on-line chat rooms and web-based
message boards."
Political activism
White Nationalism
In 1998, former KKK Grand Wizard David Duke
wrote on his website, “I believe that the internet will begin a chain
reaction of racial enlightenment that will shake the world by the speed
of its intellectual conquest.” White nationalists quickly saw the potential of the Internet as a platform to effectively disseminate their message to a mass audience.
This exploitation of technological innovations is not a novel concept for this group. In the early 20th century, with the emergence of film technology, the KKK created their own film companies and produced films like The Toll of Justice (1923)
to spread their message. Then, a century later, with the rise of
digital technologies, the KKK adapted to the changing media landscape to
become a digital movement. They not only adapted to the digital age,
but also found vulnerabilities through which they could most quickly and
efficiently insert their ideologies. Examples of this included strategic domain names and hidden propaganda content.
Today, white nationalists' efforts to push their principles on
the Web combined with tech companies' belief in the Internet as
"raceless" motivate white nationalists to continue to exploit algorithms and influence digital spaces such as Twitter. As algorithms work in a self-reinforcing manner, they worsen the psychological effects of confirmation bias.
They provide search results that confirm one's beliefs and biases and,
further, connect one to communities of like-minded people. This works in
favor of white nationalists; for example, search engines’ autocomplete
features suggest racist notions, and make White supremacist sites
readily accessible to users.
Environmental activism
One of the earliest books on activism was Don Rittner's
"Ecolinking - Everyone's Guide to Online Environmental Information,"
Published by Peachpit Press in 1992. Rittner, an environmental activist
from upstate New York, spent more than 20 years researching and saving
the Albany Pine Barrens. He was a beta tester for America Online and
ran their Environmental Forum for the company from 1988 to when it
launched in 1990. He took his early environmental knowledge and
computer savvy and wrote what was called the bible of the online
environmental community. It showed new Net users how to get online,
find environmental information, connect to environmentalists around the
world, and how to use those resources to save the planet.
Sexual assault activism
Activism
against sexual assault can be led on the internet, where individuals
may feel comfortable talking about controversial topics. One such
movements is the #NotGuilty movement. This movement began in April 2015
with Ione Wells.
She shared a "letter to her attacker" in her college paper. The letter
described how she was sexually assaulted and how she chose to respond
and build from that point in her life. At the end of the letter she
urged readers to send a letter back describing their own sexual assault
experience with the hashtag #notguilty. She received so many letters
from locals that she decided to create a website, this caused global
attention and inspired many to share their stories. The Me Too movement is a similar movement that started in Hollywood. Tarana Burke created the phrase to "empower women through empathy" and Alyssa Milano helped spread the use of the phrase.
This phrase was first used to demonstrate the amount of sexual assault
that happens to young actresses and actors in Hollywood. It soon spread
to apply to all forms of sexual assault, especially in the work place.
These movements were intended to create an outlet for men and women to
share their experiences with those with similar views without blame or
guilt. They brought widespread attention to sexual assault and caused
much controversy about changes that should be made accordingly.
Criticism around movements such as these centers on concerns about
whether or not participants are being dishonest for their own gain or
are misinterpreting acts of kindness.
Impact on everyday political discussions
According
to some observers, the Internet may have considerable potential to
reach and engage opinion leaders who influence the thinking and behavior
of others. According to the Institute for Politics, Democracy & the
Internet, what they call "Online Political Citizens" (OPCs) are "seven
times more likely than average citizens to serve as opinion leaders
among their friends, relatives and colleagues… Normally, 10% of
Americans qualify as Influentials. Our study found that 69% of Online
Political Citizens are Influentials."
Information communication technologies
Information
communication technologies (ICTs) make communication and information
readily available and efficient. There are millions of Facebook
accounts, Twitter users and websites, and one can educate oneself on
nearly any subject. While this is for the most part a positive thing, it
can also be dangerous. For example, people can read up on the latest
news events relatively easily and quickly; however, there is danger in
the fact that apathy or fatigue can quickly arise when people are
inundated with so many messages, or that the loudest voice on a subject
can often be the most extreme one, distorting public perception on the
issue.
These social networks which occupy ICTs are simply modern forms of political instruments which pre-date the technological era.
People can now go to online forums or Twitter instead of town hall
meetings. People can essentially mobilize worldwide through the
Internet. Women can create transnational alliances and lobby for rights
within their respective countries; they can give each other tips and
share up-to-date information. This information becomes "hyper textual",
available in downloadable formats with easy access for all.
The UN organizations also use "hyper textual" formats. They can post
information about upcoming summits, they can post newsletters on what
occurred at these meetings, and links to videos can be shared; all of
this information can be downloaded at the click of a button.
The UN and many other actors are presenting this information in an
attempt to get a certain message out in the cyber sphere and
consequently steer public perception on an issue.
With all this information so readily available, there is a rising
trend of "slacktivism" or "clicktivism". While it is positive that
information can be distributed so quickly and efficiently all around the
world, there is negativity in the fact that people often take this
information for granted, or quickly forget about it once they have seen
it flash across our computer screens.
Viral campaigns are great for sparking initial interest and
conversation, but they are not as effective in the long term—people
begin to think that clicking "like" on something is enough of a
contribution, or that posting information about a current hot topic on
their Facebook page or Twitter feed means that they have made a
difference.
Fundraising capability
The
Internet has also made it easier for small donors to play a meaningful
role in financing political campaigns. Previously, small-donor
fundraising was prohibitively expensive, as costs of printing and
postage ate up most of the money raised. Groups like MoveOn,
however, have found that they can raise large amounts of money from
small donors at minimal cost, with credit card transaction fees
constituting their biggest expense. "For the first time, you have a door
into the political process that isn't marked 'big money,' " says Darr.
"That changes everything.
The Internet also allows ordinary people to contribute materially
to Humanitarian relief projects designed to intervene in situations of
global disaster or tragedy, as in the case of the "Hope for Haiti Now" telethon event, which was launched three days after the 2010 Haiti Earthquake.
The telethon and its broadcast became an effective vehicle to present a
plea for support and to collect contributions quickly, facilitating a
relationship between entertainment and humanitarian fundraising that has
developed in response to historical and economic market conditions.
Ethical Considerations
With internet
technology vastly changing existing and introducing new mechanisms by
which to attain, share and employ information, internet activism raises
ethical issues for consideration. Proponents contend internet activism
serves as an outlet for social progress but only if personal and
professional ethics are employed.
Supporters of online activism claim new information and communications
technologies help increase the political power of activist groups that
would otherwise have less resources. Proponents along this line of
thinking claim the most effective use of online activism is its use in
conjunction with more traditional or historical activism activities.
Conversely, critics worry about facts and beliefs becoming indistinct
in online campaigns and about "sectors of online activism [being] more
self-interested than socially interested."
These critics warn against the manipulation commonplace to online
activism for private or personal interests such as exploiting charities
for monetary gain, influencing voters in the political arena and
inflating self-importance or effectiveness. In this sense, the ethical
implication is that activism becomes descriptive rather than
transformative of society.
One of these reviewers suggests seven pitfalls to beware of in
internet activism: "self-promotion at the expense of the movement...
unsolicited bulk email... Hacktivism... violating copyright... nagging... violating privacy... and being scary." Many of the ethical criticisms against the prevalence of online
activism are further discussed in the criticisms section of this
article.
Criticism
Demographic issues
Critics argue that Internet activism faces the same challenges as other aspects of the digital divide, particularly the global digital divide. Some say it gives disproportionate representation to those with greater access or technological ability.
Groups that may be disadvantaged by the move to activist activity
online are those that have limited access to technologies, or lack the technological literacy
to engage meaningfully online; these include ethnic and racial
minorities, those of lower socioeconomic status, those with lower levels
of education, and the elderly. Issues like racism and sexism are issues
that internet activists reportedly deal with.
A study looked at the impact of Social Networking Sites (SNS) on
various demographics and their political activity. Not surprisingly
college students used SNS for political activity the most but this was
followed by a more unlikely group, those that had not completed high
school. In addition the probability for non-White citizens to consume
political information was shown to be higher than that of Whites. These
two outcomes go in the face of normal predictors of political activity.
Despite these surprising findings older generations, men and whites
showed the highest levels of political mobilization. Acts of political
mobilization, such as fundraising, volunteering, protesting require the
most continued interest, resources and knowledge (Nam, 2010).
Real debate?
The experience of the echo chamber is easier to create with a computer than with many of the forms of political interaction that preceded it," Sunstein told the New York Times. "The discussion will be about strategy, or horse-race issues or how bad the other candidates are, and it will seem like debate. It's not like this should be censored, but it can increase acrimony, increase extremism and make mutual understanding more difficult.
On the other hand, Scott Duke Harris of the San Jose Mercury News
noted that "the Internet connects [all sides of issues, not just] an
ideologically broad anti-war constituency, from the leftists of ANSWER to the pressed-for-time 'soccer moms' who might prefer MoveOn, and conservative activists as well."
Another concern, according to University of California, Santa
Cruz professor Barbara Epstein, is that the Internet "allows people who
agree with each other to talk to each other and gives them the
impression of being part of a much larger network than is necessarily
the case." She warns that the impersonal nature of communication by
computer may actually undermine the human contact that always has been
crucial to social movements.
Another concern, expressed by author and law professor Cass Sunstein, is that online political discussions lead to "cyberbalkanization"—discussions that lead to fragmentation and polarization
rather than consensus, because the same medium that lets people access a
large number of news sources also enables them to pinpoint the ones
they agree with and ignore the rest.
Moving to offline action
Famed activist Ralph Nader has stated that "the Internet doesn't do a very good job of motivating action", citing that the United States Congress, corporations and the Pentagon do not necessarily "fear the civic use of the Internet." Ethan Zuckerman talks about "slacktivism", claiming that the Internet has devalued certain currencies of activism. Citizens may "like" an activist group on Facebook,
visit a website, or comment on a blog, but fail to engage in political
activism beyond the Internet, such as volunteering or canvassing. This
critique has been criticized as Western-centric, however, because it
discounts the impact this can have in authoritarian or repressive
contexts. Journalist Courtney C. Radsch argued that even this low level of engagement was an important form of activism for Arab youth because it is a form of free speech, and can spark mainstream media coverage. University of North Carolina
professor Zeynep Tufekci has argued that the need to put in significant
organizing time in the pre-Internet era is what gave street protests
their strength.
Slacktivism
Scholars
are divided as to whether the Internet will increase or decrease
political participation, including online activism. Those who suggest
political participation will increase believe the Internet can be used
to recruit and communicate with more users, and offers lower-costs modes
of participation for those who lack the time or motivation to engage
otherwise. Those concerned that the Internet will decrease activism
argue that the Internet occupies free time that can no longer be spent
getting involved in activist groups, or that Internet activism will
replace more substantial, effortful forms of in-person activism.
Malcolm Gladwell
argues that activism through social media and the internet cannot be
successful because they promote a 'lazy' way of activism that doesn't
require people to put in meaningful effort. By for example 'liking' a
protest related post on social media, people feel like they have
contributed to a cause, which makes them less likely to take more
costly, and some would argue more effective, action like joining a
protest.
Clicktivism
Another
criticism is clicktivism. According to techopedia, clicktivism is a
controversial form of digital activism. Proponents believe that applying
advertising principles such as A/B testing increases the impact of a
message by leveraging the Internet to further its reach. Opponents
believe that clicktivism reduces activism to a mere mouse-click,
yielding numbers with little or no real engagement or commitment to the
cause.
Micah M. White
argues, "Political engagement becomes a matter of clicking a few links.
In promoting the illusion that surfing the web can change the world,
clicktivism is to activism as McDonalds is to a slow-cooked meal. It may
look like food, but the life-giving nutrients are long gone."
He argues that political engagement becomes a matter of clicking a few
links and neglects the vital, immeasurable inner-events and personal
epiphanies that great social ruptures are actually made of. It reduces
activism to a mere mouse click. Micah M. White
goes on to argue that "... clicktivism reinforces the fear of standing
out from the crowd and taking a strong position. It discourages calling
for drastic action. And as such, clicktivism will never breed social
revolution. To think that it will is a fallacy. One that is dawning on
us".
State repression
In Net Delusion,
author Evgeny Morozov argues against cyberutopianism. He describes how
the Internet is successfully used against activists and for the sake of
state repression.