I read a Reuter’s article titled “KutcherPleads for Media Honesty Amid Cheating Reports.” The article discussed a video that Ashton Kutcher taped and released on social media regarding his alleged affair.
In the article Kutcher claims: “The threshold to have literature printed and distributed -- the cost structure went down to zero dollars. Thereby, there is no gatekeeper of the truth. We are our own editors, and we are our own publishers. We are our own printers. Thereby people can bastardize the truth in any way, shape or form they want and spread that around the world.”
Hmm…that sounds familiar. In my last blog I noted that “More and more people are getting their ‘news’ off of the internet from armchair journalists who practice the First Amendment but aren’t held accountable to any standards.”
Mr. Kutcher, are you reading my blog?
It seems that Kutcher and I are on the same wavelength. And yet we are both actively using the internet as a place to air our own opinions.
Kutcher is an avid user of social media who made news in 2009 during a race to beat CNN to one million Twitter followers. He and his wife, Demi Moore, use Twitter and other social media devices regularly to communicate to fans and each other. Today Kutcher boasts over 8 million followers while Moore has over 4 million.
So is it hypocritical that he would use social media to air a message that essentially condemns people like him who use the internet to communicate to the masses? Is it hypocritical that I would use a blog to air my own opinions about the misuse of social media?
Maybe if you are looking at it from a narrow point of view.
But perhaps it is because we are users of social media that we care how it is used and abused. We utilize the accessibility of the medium but also believe in taking some responsibility as online authors. Like anything else in this world it comes down to the intent of the user.
A level of responsibility isn’t just limited to the internet it is necessary for many forms of technology we enjoy today. Most parents will tell you that they are thankful for cell phones and texting capabilities to contact and keep tabs on their children but also worry about the misuse of these same tools. They want their children to have access to the internet for research but keep a keen eye on the sites visited and worry about the potential for cyberbullying.
Say what you will about Kutcher and the spotlight he has put on himself by building his celebrity through the social media. But he isn’t wrong. Technology, internet and the social media are powerful tools; we need to take responsibility to be our own editors when we use it.
So I thank you Mr. Kutcher for rallying behind my message. And thanks for reading my blog!