Opinion
"White flight" from social media sites
8:43 AM on 09/02/2009
(AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Sean Kilpatrick)
Whatever ever happened to MySpace? It used to be such a nice online community--until "they" started logging on with their unruly music embeds, flashy backgrounds, and slang-filled comment posts. Luckily, a little ways down the information highway, was Facebook - a nice, clean site inhabited by up-scale college graduates.
If this viewpoint rings with familiarity, it is because we are accustomed to seeing affluent, white Americans leave environments with a rising population of minority residents. Indeed, the history of many American inner-cities is characterized by just such phenomena of "white flight." This comparison begs the question: was there a digital "white flight" from MySpace to Facebook?
According to Danah Boyd, a social researcher at Microsoft Research, the answer is yes. Boyd contends that the spaces we operate in online may be segregated along racial and economic lines.
She explains:
"It wasn't just anyone who left MySpace to go to Facebook. In fact, if we want to get to the crux of what unfolded, we might as well face an uncomfortable reality... What happened was modern day 'white flight'. Whites were more likely to leave MySpace or choose Facebook...MySpace has become the "ghetto" of the digital landscape. The people there are more likely to be brown or black and to have a set of values that terrifies white society..."
While Boyd's conclusions may seem harsh, they should not be ignored. We need only look at the online communities' inaugurations: Facebook began as an exclusive Ivy League, invitation-only networking site while MySpace focused on youth, music and urban culture--without restrictions to membership. And we need only look at Facebook's gain on MySpace to infer a connection.
While some former MySpacers may say they turned to Facebook for the cleaner interface and faster loading times, Boyd's research uncovered another motivation that often goes unspoken. That is, while many MySpace users see switching to Facebook as a personal choice, many Facebook users disparage MySpace with racially coded language and insults about class and intelligence.
Boyds' interviews are telling. Kat, a 14-year-old from Massachusetts, told Boyd, "I'm not really into racism, but I think that MySpace now is more like ghetto or whatever, and Facebook is all...not all the people that have Facebook are mature, but it's supposed to be like 'oh we're more mature'...MySpace is just old."
An online community is constituted by its inhabitants and, as such, reflects the same biases and prejudices of those who populate it. But the Internet also reflects our divisions in a positive way.
Since offline mainstream outlets did not want to discuss issues that were pertinent to black readers, we started our own outlets. The same dynamic shows itself in the digital space, from black-focused hair and beauty blogs to online carnivals dedicated to talking about race from our perspective. The Internet has allowed us opportunities to speak and be heard.
However, despite the Internet's space for issues overlooked by mainstream media, we must remember that online communities reflect and reproduce harmful cultural values just as much as the real world does. The Internet belongs to everyone and, as we work toward racial equality in the real world, we should make sure the same work is being done in the digital world.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
Top Stories
-
UN slams Haitian hospitals for charging patients
PORT-AU-PRINCE (AP) - The United Nations has warned that it will cut off shipments of free medicine beginning immediately to any Haitian hospitals that it finds are charging patients...
more
- Colorado Africans forced out of Wal-Mart jobs, claim discrimination
- Anti-abortion billboards claim black children are an endangered species
- Doctor pleads not guilty in Michael Jackson death case
- Actor Gary Coleman pleads guilty to criminal mischief charge
- First lady fights child obesity: 'That's the legacy I want'
- Bad malaria pills in Africa raise resistance fears
- Obama's decline reflects the perils of democracy
- Sade's return is worth the wait
- Can fried chicken just be fried chicken?
- New jobs numbers, but same old story for black workers
- 'Soul Train' 40 years later: Appealing to Americans on both sides of the track
- Haitian children need a future, not a one way ticket out
- Screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher is 'Precious'
- Lawyer: Michael Jackson's doctor to surrender Friday
- Soul music legend Bill Withers shines in new documentary
- Diversity reigns in Oscar-nominated directors
- Slideshow: The 25 most influential albums by African-Americans
- Jackson family wants harsher charge against doctor
- Obama to GOP: Let's talk about health care - live
- Move over Ray Nagin, New Orleans has new mayor
- NY Gov. meets with fellow Dems amid scandal rumors
- Senate likely to be less diverse after elections
- Justice Thomas: Some questioning of Supreme Court 'irresponsible'
- CA National Guard gets first black, female leader
- 'The Book of Eli': A not-so-new parable of burnt-out beauty
- Obama musical set to open in Germany
- Five things you didn't know about Kwanzaa (but should)
- Kool & the Gang gives rare concert in Havana
- Africans find unlikely education at Ukraine universities
- 'Fela' brings Nigeria to Broadway
- Denver boy, 9, died after state-benefits error denied him asthma medication
- Among black girls, challenges of fighting obesity go beyond diet
- Obese African-Americans at higher risk of stroke
- Cancer victim sheds light on bone marrow donor crisis
- Hepatitis B and C often ignored as health threat to blacks
- KFC pulls Australian ad over US racism complaints
- Questlove explains what 'Soul Train' means for black Americans
- Tea Party movement lacks diversity, but unified in anti-government fervor
- DNA evidence exonerates NY man of 1976 rape
- Texas couple sells everything they own to help Haiti
- Cook defends fried chicken choice for Black History Month menu
- US Baptists charged with kidnapping Haitian children
- Aid groups struggle to get food, water to Haitians
- Mary J. Blige's 'Stronger With Each Tear' is a gem
- The 10 most important black films of the decade
- Alicia Keys' new album proves to be under par
- Happy reading! TheGrio's holiday book wish list
- Invictus: South African story has relevance for America
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Myspace
Flickr
Podcast
Wordpress
Linkedin
Last.fm
Tumblr
Identi.ca
Plurk