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There is a point here
There a are a few people who actually do use the web to get exposure to other ideas and communities, but the trend is definitely towards user-speciallization of content. Consumer profiling to target advertising, new filters, and so on.
I have seen, first hand, how on-line "communities" can provide wildly distorted context for assessing a behavior's commonality and acceptability. There is nothing new here, of course, people have been forming and joining cults to accomplish the same thing as long as there have been people. However, the web (and its accompanying filtering technologies) do make it much easier and cheaper to isolate onself for unfamiliar or offensive ideas. Basic economics says that if its cheaper, more people will do it.
Not the end of the world, but something to think about.
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Re: There is a point here
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