Betul juga Pak Ardi,

Transparansi relasi dan komunikasi via jejaring elektronik (interconnected 
relationship and telecom) memang budaya dan produk neo-lib yang telah cukup 
berjasa membebaskan kita dari "perbudakan surat menyurat di atas 
kertas/kayu/prasasti" .. Jadi faham "kebebasan untuk membebaskan" (libertate 
pro libertate) yang bisa diakomodir secara kolektif adalah "pihak2 mana yang 
wajib/berhak untuk membebaskan/dibebaskan" dari "perbudakan 
hypokrasi-demagogy-hysteria publik" terhadap informasi2 yang saling 
berinteraksi dan berinterdepensi antar umat manusia dunia yang berjumlah antara 
5-6 miliar homo sapiens ini ..

" E-HumanistiCapitalism " masih menunggu untuk dimodali, dikembangkan, 
diberdayakan bersama secara kolektif .. dalam alam kebebasan berbasis 30 HAM 
bagi seluruh warga dunia ..

Salam E-NKRI!

HM

Sent from my AXIS Worry Free BlackBerry® smartphone

-----Original Message-----
From: "Ardi Sutedja K." <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, 11 Nov 2009 16:26:06 
To: <[email protected]>; <[email protected]>
Subject: [APWKomitel] Web, Cellphone users are not isolated from reality!

Web, cellphone users are not isolated from reality
By Greg Toppo, USA TODAY

It's
easy – and tempting – to believe that cellphones and the Internet are
making Americans more isolated as they filter out those around them and
focus on lighted screens, distant Facebook friends and LOL conversations.

But a new survey finds that this may not be true.
In
fact, Americans who use such technologies have larger and more diverse
"core discussion networks" than those who don't – and their networks
also appear to be more diverse.
Though the
study from the Pew Internet & American Life Project finds evidence
that using social networking sites such as Facebook and LinkedIn
can indeed substitute for a measure of neighborhood involvement,
Internet users in general are just as likely as others to visit with
neighbors. Cellphone users, bloggers and those who use the Internet
frequently at work are actually more likely to belong to a local
volunteer group as well.
"It really adds a
whole new social setting," says sociologist Keith Hampton of the
University of Pennsylvania and one of the authors of the study.
But
the survey also finds that although Facebook users know their neighbors
as well as others, they're less likely to see them as companions or to
rely on them for help in caring for themselves or a family member.
The
survey is the first to examine how using cellphones and the Internet
changes how people interact – and it suggests that Internet use doesn't
keep people from public places such as parks, restaurants, libraries
and cafes. Actually, the technology is associated with more widespread
use of these places, though Hampton says it's unclear whether Internet
use widens people's social circles or whether people with already-wide
social circles simply tend to use the Internet more.
Either
way, the findings may serve as a sort of salve to those who worry about
growing social isolation in the USA. A widely read 2006 study by
researchers at the University of Arizona and Duke University
found that the proportion of Americans who have "no one with whom they
discuss important matters" nearly tripled from 1985 to 2004. It also
found that the average person's social network had shrunk by about
one-third, from three people to two.
The Pew
study, which posed the same questions, confirms the shrinking network
but shows people who use cellphones and the Internet actually buck the
trend.
For instance, respondents who have a
cellphone have a "core discussion network" that is 12% bigger than
those who don't. Those who use the Internet for instant messaging or to
share photos have a network that's 9% bigger – and they're more likely
to discuss important matters with people who aren't family.
The
findings clearly stand in contrast to the notion that technology "might
cause people to retreat from life," says Lee Rainie, who directs the
Pew Internet project. Spending time with online social networks, he
says, gives people "new powers to extend themselves and extend their
interests."



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