A Quote by Brian Stelter

The Internet creates more space for extremism, and the echo chamber effect accelerates the process. — © Brian Stelter
The Internet creates more space for extremism, and the echo chamber effect accelerates the process.
The difference between an echo chamber and a filter bubble in my mind is an echo chamber you choose to in with likeminded people, a filter bubble chooses you and you don't really see it.
All this is a blessing and a curse. It's a blessing because it helps people establish what they value; they understand the sort of ideas they identify with. The curse is that they aren't challenged in their views. The Internet becomes an echo chamber. Users don't see the counterarguments.
If war explodes in Sudan, it could have a destabilizing effect that creates more space for terrorist activity that could eventually be directed at our homeland.
What passes for real debate in Washington often seems more like an echo chamber, with politicians talking at politicians.
When the media goes state and becomes nothing more than an echo chamber for the government, the task of sharing truth falls to the original keepers of liberty: the American people.
Tyranny sets up its own echo-chamber.
Each full, deep inhale creates more space in your body and mind. Each long, exhale moves you directly into that space. The deeper you breathe, the more opens up. It's like opening a door and walking through with each breath. The fuller your breaths the more and more doors open on up, leaving you with the space to walk on in!
To exist in an echo chamber and only talk to people with whom we agree is fruitless.
A work of art is an echo chamber which repeats what people say about it.
A thinking partner who isn't an echo chamber... How many of us dare to have such collaborators?
The campaign of character assassination waged [against President Clinton] by the right was a singular, unprecedented effort. Nothing like it exists on the left. What I object to on the right is the obsessive hatred, the bigotry, and the personal savaging of their opponents, all achieved through an echo chamber of talk radio, the Internet and Rupert Murdoch's media outlets. That kind of well-funded disinformation campaign has no analog on the left.
I do sometimes feel like I function within an echo chamber and I'm just kind of preaching to the choir.
The polls and the pundits and the media seem to talk to each other. It's sort of like an echo chamber.
As an author, you're really grateful for the people who are supporting you, but on some other level, that can be a dangerous echo chamber.
What I find is that many times when I work with chance, with indeterminacy, I am more open to experience, less prone to a fixed process, and I think it creates a very important challenge. It creates a way of writing that is, in a way, flatter or smooth, a surface conducive to release, to movement. And in this way, the form of writing gets delightfully melded with the process of the writing.
Content isn't just a brand or message that you develop yourself and then throw out into the echo chamber. It's a mirror.
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