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Virtual reality: danger ahead?

Last time I checked I had 457 friends. Adding up my Facebook, MySpace and Hi5 contacts seems to make me one of the social butterflies. Who needs dressing up nicely and hanging around in posh places when with a click of a mouse I can get all my friends drunk thanks to Facebook’s booze mail?

For those who have been for the past couple of months alienated from Planet Earth the abovementioned are online directories that have been connecting people through online social networks. These virtual friends can be found through common interests or else can act as a reinforcement of existing friendships.

These websites allow you to create a profile, upload a picture and connect to "friends" across the campus and country. I’m using the words friends in quotation marks because, let's face it, I cannot be that likeable. There is no possible way I, or anyone else, have more than 400 friends!

If you haven't signed up for Facebook yet, I suggest you don't. It's about as addictive as the caffeine all students down during the exam period. Admittedly, I was never that much of a Facebook but during the hours attempting to cram in legal jargon I got hooked. Judging by the number of messages left on my Funwall, seems like all my fellow University mates were.

It is hard to find a forum for communication that hasn’t been permanently altered by the digital age. Whilst my parents, who once had to plead for me to hang up the telephone, now find me glued to the computer screen, carrying on two or three instant messaging conversations at once. Social networking has survived being a fad and has instead become an institution in itself. No longer can I worry about keeping in touch with my best friends from home.

Worse still, I am fed up of receiving ‘friend requests’ from upcoming general election candidates, bar owners et al. What about Gmail? Don’t get me started. The email notifier has become my worst nightmare. Gone are the days when we could leave work at home or at the office. Now my colleagues can text, call or email me and remind me about the upcoming deadlines and there is no escape.

Internet has now officially enslaved us. Be it high up on board a plane or on board a ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean a notebook, which thanks to modern technology can be lighter than a big bottle of water, can be carried around.

Virtual reality's real and potential benefits are clear. Less clear, though, are its possible side effects on individuals and society itself. As with any novel technology, virtual worlds bring new opportunities and new problems. The death toll of 13 was revealed some days ago in South Wales after fears were raised that a recent string of seven suicides may have links to social networking websites.

In the end, of course, the technology will be what we make it. It could be a lifesaving godsend, or as our education system reformers are trying to portray it, a groundbreaking educational tool. Moreover, it could be a mindless, energy-sapping diversion and a playground for immorality. Chances are, until we stop seeing the real and virtual realms as distinct and conflicting, it will be all these things.

Daniela Bartolo is a second year Bachelor of Laws student and Insite’s International Officer.

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Comments

Antionella Micallef (on 31/1/08)
'Switching off' might not be such an easy option, it is actually much harder to escape technology than you would imagine. Most jobs require you to be internet savvy and a regular email user. Some companies and even politicians are using facebook as a marketing strategy, students are required to check their online accounts for new information and updates and receive emails about cancelled lectures, they even apply for courses online. So sure you could switch off your laptop and phone, but you may find yourself alienated from your surroundings, less uptodate and perhaps out of a job!
Edward Mizzi (on 27/1/08)
One cannot enforce their idea that techonology is a creeping evil by generalising on the fact that people nowadays tend to glue themselves to their computer screen and escaping from this "evil" is futile.
Far from it. When the automobile was invented, people died and survivors complained, it's a cycle which we have to deal with. So what if facebook, hi5 or any other web-based program for that matter seems to be inching its way into your life and gradually taking over? don't join... simple. There is no ground breaking science to the equation.
I am not in any way bringing anyone down here I am simply saying that to read an email one has to open it, to answer the phone you have to press a button, to reply to an instant message you have to type. where is this 'slavery to technology' cliché we so often mindlessly drag on about? we are endowed with the choice to press that button to answer the phone, if you do not want to answer then don't, the same applies to everything else. We are not slaves, on the contrary, we are masters. ofcourse none of us have 400 or more friends, we may know 400 people but can they all be called friends? but, again, so what if you have all those "virtual" people saved on some little website embedded in a universe? those people are there because you want them to be so don't do somehting and then complain once it's dawned on you that you have lost control of the situation. This by no means applies to Ms. Daniela Bartolo specifically, rather it is a general comment.
Evelyn Wilkinson (on 26/1/08)
Sigh.

Daniela Bartolo, you're right. And Jean Bartolo, you're right too.

But Daniela Azzopardi is more right than Jean Azzopardi because that damned power button has a mysterious lure.
Jean Azzopardi (on 25/1/08)
I quote :Internet has now officially enslaved us. Be it high up on board a plane or on board a ship in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean a notebook, which thanks to modern technology can be lighter than a big bottle of water, can be carried around.

There is a solution, you know. Switch off your laptop.

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