Social media platforms have become so ubiquitous and pervasive in the modern world that a simple tweet, a message or a post in public forums can create real news and cause a snowball effect. They have become the public square of discourse, so much so that the current US President managed to virtually bypass the legacy media and directly address a large portion of the electorate and get voted in. But at one point or another, there has been something that probably drove you crazy.
Whether its a nasty message from some creep on Tinder or a questionable tweet from the president, many people have thought about just closing their account and quitting altogether. According to Harris Poll data published by recode, some Americans wish certain online platforms would just go away for good.
2,000 Americans were polled on feelings about a selection of different online platforms and the research uncovered a high level of negativity. Take Twitter for example. 46 percent of respondents said they want to “kill it and let it die” while 43 percent want to “fuel it to keep it alive”. Even though 42 percent were not aware of dating app Tinder, 43 percent who are aware of it want it killed while 15 percent want to keep it alive.
Facebook has over two billion monthly active users and in the U.S. at least, 32 percent want to kill it while 64 percent want it kept alive. Other applications are far less popular and workplace chat program Slack is an interesting example. Only 28 percent of Americans are familiar with it and out of that, 29 percent want it axed while only 8 percent want it kept alive.
source: statista
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