In the 1990s, Frederic Jameson famously said, “It seems to be easier for us today to imagine the thoroughgoing deterioration of the earth and of nature than the breakdown of late capitalism.” He was essentially talking about how this was presented as the natural state of the world, so self-evident that even catastrophic scenarios ranging from nuclear holocaust to climate catastrophe seemed more likely than a society without capitalism. He called this “a cultural inability to imagine the alternative,” a kind of collective blockage of utopian thinking. Today, we are experiencing a special situation in which it is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of social media as we know it.
Social media today favors speed to the point of deregulation, extremism, emotionalism, and images at the expense of text and meaning, but it did not start out that way. When social media first appeared, the narrative was almost messianic, that a technology was coming that would abolish borders, a decisive factor in leaving homo sapiens behind and moving on to homo digitalis. This technology would give a voice to the invisible and make the world more democratic, with pioneers such as Friendster, MySpace, and later Facebook and Twitter, which began by fulfilling some of these wet dreams, but today the situation is different.
The era of that naivety is long gone; now only 7% of users say they trust platforms to convey accurate information, while 67% believe they have a negative impact on society, with this percentage rising to 69% among Gen Z, who are natives to the space and, for the most part, refuse to change their residence. Recently, pop culture, through Netflix’s Adolescence series, which became a global phenomenon, outlined how the toxicity of algorithms can lead young people to misogynistic or reactionary ideologies. not that these are not social problems and do not exist out there — but overexposure and the integration of people into communities where a particular influence is one-sided, consuming such content, trapping themselves in echo chambers without critical approaches that deviate from a narrative for the sake of remaining in these spaces for commercial reasons, is the problem with platforms.
Naturally, data leaks such as Cambridge Analytica and Frances Haugen’s described revelations about Facebook’s promotion of hate have led users to understand that platforms prioritize clicks and screen time over truth or the health of the public sphere. Although social media is marketed as public squares, it is more like commercial malls. Jürgen Habermas had already described the “structural transformation of the public sphere” in the 1960s, pointing out that when public discourse depends on the market, the very relationship between political power and the communicative power of citizens is threatened. Adding to the discussion the extraction of behavioral surplus, a new form of capitalist exploitation that turns every click and scroll into marketable data, the argument becomes even more compelling. While Frances Haugen’s revelations reinforced this criticism, showing that Facebook’s own internal documents confirmed that algorithms reinforce hatred and polarization, not out of malice, but because Facebook makes more money when people consume more content.
The result is a public discourse that appears to be addressed to everyone but is in fact mediated by algorithms that decide what we will see and when, based not on the quality of the discussion but on maximizing the time we spend on the platform, making communication a self-feeding loop, where we see not only events but also others’ reactions to them, creating an illusion of universal consensus or opposition. However, the answer is not to reject social networks outright — the existence of many parallel communities does not in any way mean the collapse of democracy; on the contrary, it is an opportunity to hear voices that were previously excluded from public discourse. The question is how to transform this polyphony into productive conflict that leads to new forms of consensus rather than fragmentation.
It suffices to understand the power of social media and how a digital public sphere, in the public interest, can bring about change, using the example of the Arab Spring. Citizen journalism, which flourished on the streets of Tunis with citizens broadcasting to the whole world via their mobile phones, provided the raw material that channels such as Al-Jazeera broadcast to a mass audience. This complementarity in the intensity of the message from social media to the mainstream media provided small, immediate images and turned them into a narrative that the whole planet could see. However, the incident was nothing more than a historical window that quickly closed, as states upgraded their surveillance tools and the platforms themselves changed their algorithms to limit dialectical and productive radicalism, ultimately favoring hatred and fragmentation.
