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carlosjobimyesterday at 11:46 AM4 repliesview on HN

The TV will have maybe 5 stories, each told in one way only.

The Internet (including TikTok) will have nearly unlimited stories, told in unlimited ways.

I remember very well when just a few powerful people were allowed to decide what the public would be allowed to know and not know. They could suppress huge stories and leave the public in the dark. For example Chernobyl. They still try that today in print media and television, but have become a pathetic laughing stock now that information is free.

Somebody getting news from TikTok will probably be better informed than somebody relying only on print or TV.


Replies

oytisyesterday at 4:28 PM

An infinite stream of all possible information, true and false is exactly as useful as no information at all - and social media are getting pretty close to this ideal

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abustamamyesterday at 5:49 PM

> The Internet (including TikTok) will have nearly unlimited stories, told in unlimited ways.

Mainstream TV channels have their biases but "unlimited" doesn't actually mean anything if the content you're getting served is whatever the algorithm thinks will engage you, which is usually something that already aligns with your world view, or something that doesn't but is designed to outrage. Most average folks who browse the internet aren't looking past the sensational headlines they see in their Apple or Google curated news feeds.

embedding-shapeyesterday at 2:32 PM

> Somebody getting news from TikTok will probably be better informed than somebody relying only on print or TV.

Possible, but also quite unlikely. From the people who post "news" on TikTok, I wonder how many spent at least 30-60 minutes on verifying what they're about to post? There is an endless sea of "influencers" who want to be first with posting something, that "validate what you're about to report" doesn't even enter the arena before they've posted their snippet. And if it's retracted, count on the video just silently disappearing.

Contrast that with TV and print that at least have some sort of validation, although imperfect, with editors and what not, that review things before they're published. Now of course, US media is a really shit example of proper journalism, as they've all fallen into basically doing "content creation", but if you look at other newspapers and news channels around the world, you'll see that proper journalism is still done, and the people pushing videos on TikTok usually do "content creation" very differently from TV and paper, with very different understanding of what they're actually contributing to.

NoMoreNicksLeftyesterday at 10:02 PM

>Somebody getting news from TikTok will probably be better informed than somebody relying only on print or TV.

Imagine talking about how the "internet has unlimited stories" and then following up with "people who use TikTok are better informed".

If you're getting the information by listening to one of those jackasses in their sing-song presenter voices... you're not getting information at all. You're functionally illiterate and hyponotized by someone who learned to exploit Youtube-style algorithms.