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Echo Chambers Quotes

There are 103 quotes

"Our online feeds and recommendations can quickly funnel us into echo chambers in which unqualified opinion is magnified over facts."
"This sort of bias in online content is how echo chambers form."
"I read a really interesting paper recently... It was an academic paper detailing the differences between Echo Chambers and epistemic Bubbles."
"You have to engage because what we have is people just sitting in their echo chambers and just spin."
"If you surround yourself with people that are all like-minded with you, that think exactly the same way, you might not have that opportunity to grow as much."
"The feedback loop force feeds you on a diet of only political views you agree with and may unintentionally skew your worldview and limit your understanding of the world behind your bubble."
"Echo chambers tend to create a belief that your opinion is a reflection of reality rather than just a subjective interpretation of reality."
"It's like, hey, you know, try to get that discourse going versus creating an echo chamber."
"Other peoples' opinions... blindly regurgitating."
"Stop treating the world like an echo chamber."
"Just a reminder that you can't win with conspiracy theorists who live in Echo Chambers."
"Censorship by big tech and others doesn't change people's opinions, but it does make them more likely to talk only to those with whom they already agree."
"Echo Chambers are super dangerous... you have to consciously choose to think for yourself... it's hard to analyze things on your own."
"I don't like Echo Chambers and regardless of you if you're on the woke side or the anti-woke side."
"You're basically shutting down one side and then you're gonna create an echo chamber on the left within society."
"Some people only talk to people who share the same exact views."
"Enjoy your digital echo chamber," said on Instagram in a text post.
"Comparing multiple sources is almost essential if you are going to avoid echo chambers in media reporting."
"There's no getting out of here alive unless we really begin to get out of the echo chamber."
"It becomes problematic for me to suggest that socialization within an echo chamber or an ideological bubble is beneficial."
"You can start to just exist in this online echo chamber or bubble where all the news is bad news and everyone is constantly Doom and Gloom."
"If we cut out flat-earthers or dismiss them all as delusional, then the only people they've got left to talk to are other flat-earthers."
"The Internet's allowed you to create your own tribe - the first time it's allowed you to really purify your echo chamber."
"Twitter is a platform where people want to be in the muck in the mire, they want to be hidden under the stairs, locked away in their cupboard hearing only what they're told."
"They're talking to an echo chamber that is amplifying the extremes and to be honest the right is too that ends up producing far less cooperation and common ground."
"If you're agreeing with somebody a hundred percent of the time and that's the only person or channel or whatever that you're listening to, you need to get out of your bubble."
"We cannot isolate ourselves to our own platform because we'll only be talking to ourselves."
"Break the echo-chamber... check out other channels and see what they have to say."
"I personally like to break my own echo chamber."
"Social media rewards extreme voices and creates echo chambers."
"They put those targeted groups of people into feedback loops, echo chambers with their own comments."
"Social media algorithms funnel refuse back into the mouths of people in a human centipede of ideology."
"Mass hysteria is distinct from other types of collective delusions. It's when you cement yourself into your own cognitive dissonance, it's when you lock the door on your own echo chamber and you only listen to your group and your leader."
"Escape echo chambers for better understanding."
"Political echo chambers usually don't end well."
"It's a recipe for echo chambers; it's very, very disturbing."
"We can just construct delightful comfortable cocoon-like echo chambers for ourselves."
"Filter bubbles may lead to the creation of insular bubbles where people are only recommended information that already conforms to their pre-existing beliefs."
"And because the algorithms mostly show us things we are likely to like and agree with we often find ourselves in so-called filter bubbles, surrounded by voices we already know we agree with, and often unable to hear from those we don’t."
"Twitter gives me access to all of these differing views that are outside of the bubble that social media is trying to push people into."
"The problem with echo chambers is that you can be totally wrong and you'll always think you're totally right."
"People form echo chambers that become more or less impermeable."
"They have created their own universe in their own echo chambers where that communication fires back and forth."
"Much like this is the same dynamic that happens with sort of political Twitter, which is you are exposed to a lot of people who think just like you and you are also exposed to people who have the extreme opposite view."
"Ground news offers us a way to step outside of our Echo Chambers and gives you the most context possible to actually understand what's behind the headlines."
"Echo chambers trap you in a linear form of thinking."
"Don't keep going into that echo chamber. Let's just focus on information that has to get out." - Navigating media and information consumption.
"Political polarization and capitalism has caused people to fall in these Echo Chambers."
"It's the perfect way to smash Down the Walls of the echo chamber and get the news from multiple perspectives."
"Anyone who is willing just to put themselves in an echo chamber, no matter what their beliefs are... they will never challenge those beliefs or be exposed to people who challenge those beliefs."
"People who hold rare views online create echo chambers, drifting further down the path."
"The unfortunate side effect of the Internet is that it tends to cluster people with similar opinions together."
"The echo chamber is a real problem, much more than the availability to speak freely and to access information freely which, let's not forget, is a fundamental right."
"While it’s nice to get tailored search results from a user perspective, it’s terrible from a macro perspective. This leads to a society that’s never exposed to differing viewpoints and opinions and the creation of massive echo chambers."
"...the biggest problem probably with social media is that we now effectively live in echo chambers where we only basically hear our own perspectives being fed back to us on a loop."
"As human beings we kind of like to surround ourselves with people who agree with us, don't we?"
"So, by being cautious about where we put our attention, where we invest our time and our energy, which, you know, we're investing a lot of time and energy when we give something our attention online, um, by being aware of that, we can try to combat these echo chambers."
"When we work from home, it's much easier to create our own echo chambers either on purpose or inadvertently."
"Social media creates echo chambers where discourse is limited to like-minded groups."
"Nobody goes on Twitter to have their mind changed."
"It feels like online right now there's a lot of echo chambers that eventually just stack up this negativity even if they aren't really trying to and counteracting that with positivity I think it's just the best course of action."
"How do we become more engaged, more active, but also the biggest challenge in front of us is how do we go beyond our echo chambers?"
"We need to go beyond our echo chambers."
"Echo chambers are a structure where insiders are taught to distrust outsiders."
"It's important to be informed about news echo chambers instead of being in the dark of media narratives."
"The economy of social media dictates... creating these echo chambers."
"Social media is a way of finding other people quickly who believe what you already believe and therefore encourages herding."
"If you digitize those biases and you build algorithms to exploit them, then what ends up happening is you create echo chambers."
"Whereas Twitter, at least in my echo chamber of Twitter, right? And I know all echo chambers on Twitter are different. Twitter leans a little bit towards, more towards being interesting, philosophical, unique."
"This is why echo chambers are dangerous, not just because they don't hear other people's opinions from the source, but because the constant propaganda reinforces bias so strongly that cult opinion becomes common sense."
"We live in a lot of echo chambers today, and I think the public square is the place to actually see what ultimately is the truth."
"Social media... everybody can find an echo chamber which validates their opinions."