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15.1.3: Sharing information online

  • Page ID
    261567
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    Because we are, of course, increasingly engaged in the online world, we can practice information hygiene to help create a better information ecosystem (also see module 13). This is where social media can be used for a very positive effect, by encouraging and facilitating civic, political, and social responsibility and action, and by amplifying voices to facilitate inclusivity and diversity both on- and offline (see module 9, social media). We can contribute to the greater good by carefully evaluating information we encounter and by taking time to analyze and reflect on the source of the information before deciding to share it online.

    If we do decide to share information on social media or elsewhere, an especially effective tool is hashtags (#). Hashtags refer to a type of metadata tag used on social media to identify, locate, and promote particular topics. Metadata is data about data, and is an important part of organizing large amounts of information for easier access (see module 2). We’ve seen a lot of examples of the good that hashtagging can do in promoting awareness and social change for the #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter movements on social media, for example. Bringing attention to sexual violence has led to criminal convictions of high-profile sex abusers and the beginnings of cultural change around the world. Black Lives Matter is a movement, and now an international organization, dedicated to breaking down systemic racism and improving the lives of Black people, that began as a hashtag on social media in response to the acquittal of Trayvon Martin’s murderer.


    This page titled 15.1.3: Sharing information online is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Sarah Klein.

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