How to Talk to People - How to Live in a Digital City
Episode Date: May 20, 2024While the vibrance, innovation, and cacophony of online life can feel completely unlike anything humanity has ever created before, its newness isn’t wholly unprecedented. Humans reckoned with many s...imilar challenges to life as they knew it while navigating a different kind of social web: the city. In this episode, Danah Boyd, a partner researcher at Microsoft Research and Distinguished Visiting Professor at Georgetown University, explains how the sociological work conducted during a time of rapid urbanization in the United States reveals a lot about human behavior and what we need to feel safe, secure, and inspired. Music by Forever Sunset (“Spring Dance”), baegel (“Cyber Wham”), Etienne Roussel (“Twilight”), Dip Diet (“Sidelined”), Ben Elson (“Darkwave”), and Rob Smierciak (“Whistle Jazz”). Write to us at howtopodcast@theatlantic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I've lived in a few different cities and each one seems to have its own rules, you know,
its own way of functioning.
I grew up in a city dominated by cars, which is pretty different from a walkable city.
Oftentimes what you find is when you're in a walking city, you do have a different experience
of what it means to actually walk among people and you're not just in your car, isolated,
listening to the radio or whatever.
And you're actually kind of face to face with people,
but you're also trying to be polite and not stare
and not make too much eye contact.
But you know, if someone does make passing eye contact
with you, you have a little smile.
There's all those little things that you're trying
to figure out and navigate,
which is different than city car culture.
Oh, it's so interesting thinking about the differences too between a walkable city, like
you said, or a car city and the way those different infrastructures really do affect
the cultural codes between people and the ways that we interact with each other.
I'm Andrea Valdez. I'm an editor at The Atlantic.
And I'm Megan Garber, a writer at The Atlantic.
This is How to Know What's Real.
Megan, do you ever feel like you're just actually living online?
Oh, say more about that.
I work from home, so a lot of my work relationships, they happen online,
through Zoom, through Slack, through GChat, email.
And then when I log off, I go to veg out or watch television. And I often have my phone in my face.
Yeah.
I don't know if I'm sure I'm not alone in that.
You're not. And I do have hobbies. I have't know if I'm sure I'm not alone in that. You're not.
And I do have hobbies. I have a social life, I promise. But even though I, of course, hang out with my friends in real life, a lot of our interactions are via text. So I have all these group texts. Each of my group chats has kind of its own little personality. Just feels like there's screens, screens, screens. And it's interesting too because of those apps you're talking about,
I have my own versions of them and I think most of us do.
And I've been thinking a lot about how even though the web feels expansive,
we can basically also design our own unique little spaces within it.
That's true.
Yeah. And that environment, even though it's not strictly a place, can feel to me like this
almost ever-growing city where you have all these people trying to navigate the same space
at the same time.
And there are so many things in the city that are great, that are also great about the internet.
You have, you know, all that sort of ferment, all this culture, like exposure to people
who are different from you,
who you probably otherwise wouldn't be exposed to
and wouldn't be able to interact with.
So it's so wonderful in that way,
but I think there are so many new challenges
to navigate to.
I mean, one of the fascinating things about cities,
of course, is scale, right?
Not just the scale of buildings, although that's often part of it, but the number of
people.
When it comes to a city, you never expect to know everybody, and that's okay.
And there's something beautiful about walking down a busy street and not to necessarily
get to know everybody intimately, right?
But just to smile at the you know, the different fashion
or the different ways of moving about the world, this way of acknowledging that humanity
is bigger than your own little part of it.
So, Andrea, to think more about that idea of the internet as a place, I talked with
Dana Boyd, who's a partner researcher at Microsoft Research
and also a distinguished visiting professor at Georgetown University.
She studies the intersection of technology and society and thinks really deeply about
how people build communities in digital spaces.
And we talked about what the history of cities can tell us about the way we live online.
When we go online, you know, there's joy in interacting
with the people we know, but there's also pleasure to,
you know, what I think of as that digital street, right?
The ability to just see other people living their lives
in ways that you're just
like, wow, that's different and I'm intrigued. And I used to love this living in New York.
Every morning I would go in to the guy at the deli and I never knew his name, he never
knew my name, but we would nod and we would smile. I wouldn't even have to order because
he knew what I was going to order. And then we would make small talk about something random.
And it was, it was, there was something comfortable about that,
where we didn't have to become best friends,
but it was still a recognition of humanity.
And those moments where, you know,
we move relationships in different phases in our lives,
in different ways, but we still have this recognition
of humanity of strangers, I think is a really important part
and that's something that's core to the city.
I'm so interested in how people adjust their behavior,
not just in relation to their physical settings,
but also in response to the types of people
they're interacting with.
But also those rules can be so hard to discern, right?
Because they're often really
unspoken and tacit. Thinking again about the city, after the shift towards mass urbanization,
a bunch of social scientists got interested in that question too and turned those unspoken
rules into a really fascinating field of study. I'm thinking about one in particular. So could
you talk a little bit about Irving Goffman?
Irving Goffman was a sociologist. He was really interested in micro dynamics within the social
world. And one of my favorites of his was this recognition of civil inattention. And
that's this idea that, you know, you're sitting in a cafe, it's very crowded, or a restaurant,
and you can hear the conversation next to you. And you listen in and you sort of pay attention,
but you're performing as though you're not paying attention.
But at the same time, they know they're in a public space.
They know that somebody is likely to be able to overhear them.
And there's, you know, these ways in which you broker that.
Sometimes people perform to be overheard.
And the civil-live-in-attention concept was really important
because it was a recognition
that you had this sense of publicness, but you also had this, you know, recognition of
what was an appropriate norm and behavior.
Yeah. We know in a city it's so obvious that we can't build authentic deep relationships
with everyone whose paths we cross. But I think online,
that idea and that obviousness doesn't always translate. But I think there's something
very clarifying about that idea of civil inattention that Goffman talked about. And I wonder, are
there other thinkers that we could look to, to learn more about the city?
Stanley Milgram was really interested in a notion of the familiar stranger.
He's best known for some of his post-World War II experiments of, you know,
would you torment and torture somebody? And of course these are very
controversial experiments. But he really just wanted to understand different
aspects of what, you know, made social life
social life.
Yeah.
And he's doing it in the mid-20th century.
So he's also, not only is he responding to World War II, but he's responding to mass
urbanization.
And so he's looking at, like, what is this thing called the city, you know, from different
perspectives of the people interacting it. But he also did this really great study where he had his students go to certain public transit
stops.
And you start to realize that, you know, same people got the 702 train every day or whatever.
And so there was a level of recognition and familiarity with them.
What happens when you take people out of that context and reach a point where
you're like, oh, I know you. And the further away that context is, the more you're like,
I really know you. Right? If you run into that person, you know, say in Europe, when
you normally would just see them sort of on the streets in New York City, you'd be like,
we're going to be best friends. Right? Because we have so much in common compared to our
current context.
Oh, that's so interesting.
And it's fascinating too that Milgram is such a touch point,
because just like you said, I think most of us do associate him
with his experiments with cruelty.
And it's interesting to think about the double edges of familiarity
and strangeness that he was exploring, and how that can beget
community or, on the other hand, be taken to another extreme.
Andrea, I think part of the reason I'm so interested in drawing parallels between the
social patterns of cities and the internet is that we have this really rich history of mass urbanization
that we can point to.
And one that was not that long ago, right?
Yeah.
You know, in the last four or five decades, there's just been a huge move to cities.
More than half of our global population lives in cities.
That's around four billion people.
Wow. Wow.
Yeah, so a lot of them are just adjusting to the changes
that Goffman and Milgram studied.
Right, yeah.
And while that's a huge switch, it's even more drastic
when we look at how many people have access to the web.
So there's 5.4 billion people
who now have access to the digital world.
Wow.
5.4 billion people living online together, and there's practically no distance separating
us.
So right now, it's like the sparkle and spectacle of the shininess of the internet.
It's started to fade, and we're really aware in this moment of, you know, trash in the
comments and crowds on the timeline and, you know,
misinformation graffiti on the walls.
Misinformation graffiti is going to haunt me.
But also, cities over time did learn how to deal with those problems and to make themselves
into more livable spaces.
But the web is so relatively new that we just
don't have many of those systems in place yet.
Dr. Boyd, when I think about the comparisons between city life and this era of our lives
online, I actually find myself thinking back to early cities, the cities before traffic
lights and indoor plumbing, before all the infrastructure
that was later created to keep people safe and healthy and to keep them from harming
one another actually, whether intentionally or not.
So I wonder, what are some of the strategies you've seen people make use of?
How are people finding the calm or quiet away from the city feeling in digital
spaces?
I mean, let's be clear, a lot of people have checked out.
Yeah.
And it's not unlike, it's like, I've had enough of the city. And they've gone really private.
It's important to recognize that there's ebbs and flows to this. People are like, I want
more public, I want less public.
And that happens in terms of life stage, right?
Where people actually have periods of their lives where, you know, the 20s are sort of
a classic one where a disproportionate number of people in their 20s are like, let me be
in public.
And then, you know, you get these other moments where, you know, classic one is, you know,
after the birth of children, people really go into more intimate circles for a period of time.
And so you see these ebbs and flows that are life stage, they're temporal, they have to
do with, you know, different economic dynamics and we can think of again the parallel to
the city.
There are times where the city is like the place that everybody wants to be and there
are times where the city is narrated as dark and deviant and a terrible place to be.
Retreating is a protective measure.
And that's fine at certain times.
It's emotionally protective.
It keeps us safe.
And sometimes we're in a crisis.
And to be clear, like in the United States right now, we have a mental health crisis that's not just young people.
Those are very healthy times to retreat.
I think Americans tend to assume that if you are a public person in some way, if you have
some level of publicity, that in some ways you get what you deserve, right? Angelina
Jolie, you know, she has to know that she is being watched or could potentially be watched
all the time. And I wonder if that idea is now becoming just more banal and more common.
And one of the things that fascinates me about the city
is that in some sense we are all surveilled
whenever we are moving throughout the city.
And there's, you know, we have these environments
where everyone has their cameras on them.
I could be filmed at any moment.
I wonder what you think about just how we see other people
in that environment where anyone really could be on the receiving end of fame, of publicity.
Right.
And I think this is where we see the shift from being watched to being surveilled.
I think you picked up the right term here, which is that when we go out in the city,
we also allow ourselves to be watched.
I'm going out to see and be seen.
Those are part of the same.
And, you know, in that moment, we expect to be seen, but, you know, we also expect it to go away. We expect a certain ephemerality. And in many ways, a lot of the public internet use for a long time
assumed a level of ephemerality, even if there was the persistence of the particular content.
What we're racing to right now is that there's more and
more awareness of the persistence of a lot of this.
And so you see the rise of tools like Signal, right?
Which part of the joy is not like, I want to use this to do elicit things.
It's like, I want this to go away because it shouldn't be persistent.
It doesn't need to be.
It's a bunch of poop emojis, right?
It's just funny
at the moment. And I think that there's a lot more empathy for the complexity of being
seen.
So Dr. Boyd, I'd love to throw something new into the mix here.
We've so far been talking about what we can learn from the city to understand the digital
settings we operate in.
But I also want to bring up something that might make the metaphor just a little bit
more complicated, which is that digital spaces seem to act at once like big cities and small towns, right?
And I guess what I mean by that is, you know, the stereotype of the small town, and I grew up in a small town,
is, you know, like you sort of can't escape being seen. Everyone's going to know your business all the time.
And so we have these sort of parallel phenomena, right, where you have the scale of the city,
but then you also have the intimacy of the small town.
How do we navigate that?
And also, to your point, how do we sort of conceive of ideas like justice?
And how do we sort of, you know, create the world that we want to create while also navigating
all of these different tensions at the same time?
A teacher of a school doesn't really ever get to stop being a teacher when they leave
the school in a small town.
They run into their students at the grocery store, they run into their students out in
the park, and that's sort of part of a small town dynamic is that you have to constantly
navigate these just different contexts, and you can't really separate them.
One of the beauties of city living is the ability
to actually keep pretty discreet contexts.
But there's also moments, of course, where contexts collide.
You suddenly run into a colleague at a gay bar
and you're like, whoa, I was not planning
on outing myself at work, right?
These are city-based context collapses.
Well, there's so much easier to happen online, right?
And they show us how this dynamic of the privilege of being able to separate out context and
maintain different voices or different styles or different aspects of our identity in different
places, we don't get the opportunity to do that as easily and we end up more in that
small town teacher experience, which is really hard for people, especially more marginalized people who don't
have to have a professional identity on themselves all the time.
And so think about the ways in which we try to navigate anonymity offline.
Perhaps most famously is Alcoholics Anonymous, right? Which is this way of respecting the idea that in a, even
in a small town, I may know you, I may see you, and this we have delineated to say this
is a separate space because it's for everybody's well-being, that we create this separate space.
But we create these conditions of constant outing online that we don't allow that freedom.
And we see this constant fight because anonymity online is seen as fundamentally bad.
So it's interesting to see how we are navigating these distinctly and how we expect people
to constantly cope with context collapse, you know, whenever they go online.
And that's one of the things people are genuinely struggling with, which is why
you're seeing these different layers of retreat to try to not have to constantly
navigate those collisions.
And are the challenges we're seeing online revealing something about us
culturally?
We want a solution to something that we're feeling the toxicity.
We're acknowledging that there's a lot of cruelty out there,
that there's just things that make us sort of horrified.
And so people do hope that ridding of anonymity would solve it.
My hypothesis is that it won't, but that's not going to stop people from trying.
And just like with the city, there are times where things become darker.
But usually the thing about that form of darkness, that form of toxicity,
whether it's in the city or whether it's online,
is it's reflecting back to us broader social structural issues, right?
We usually have an easier time identifying them in the city.
You know, economic inequality, right?
Different layers of not handling mental
health or poverty, lack of job opportunities, for example. Well, the thing is, is that online,
a lot of the toxicity we are seeing is also due to similar factors, right? But we don't identify
them as much because we're not seeing what, you know, is often called the urban blight issues.
We're seeing it in just in terms of toxicity,
and so we think it's just individual bad actors
rather than systemic degradation.
So one of the things I'm most interested in right now
is how this battle over anonymity plays out.
Yeah. Is it bad for the internet? Is it good for people on the internet? interested in right now is how this battle over anonymity plays out. Mm, yeah.
Is it bad for the internet?
Is it good for people on the internet?
Because, you know, there's a really strong case for both.
Right.
There's, you know, anonymity as permission, but also anonymity as protection.
Yes.
And I personally have used anonymity as protection online.
You know, I've gone into incognito mode on my browser.
I've used anonymous mode in Reddit.
And it's not because I'm searching something nefarious
necessarily.
Really?
No, I'm Googling myself.
No, it's really more because I know that there's cookies
that can follow me.
And so I want to try and cut some of those cookies off
at the pass so I don't have ads that follow me.
I mean, maybe I'm searching something innocuous,
like running shoes, I'll get ads that follow me around
and that's more annoying and maybe a little bit creepy
than anything.
Yes.
But if I search something that's more personal,
like let's say I get a medical diagnosis
and I want to learn more about it,
I don't want ads or information constantly surfacing
that could remind me of something
personal or painful. I don't want to feel like I'm in this informational Bermuda triangle
that I can never escape. You know, there are just some searches that I want to be fleeting
and ephemeral.
Oh, that's such a good point. So anonymity is also kind of permission to evolve, right? And to sort of move through life and yeah,
not have every stage follow you.
Yeah, that's a great way to put it.
But and then I guess I'm thinking too
of sort of the other side of anonymity,
which you know, as a journalist, as you might imagine,
journalists often get a lot of hate mail.
Yes, unfortunately, very common.
So most of the time I will say I just don't engage.
If someone doesn't have anything productive to say, I'm just, I'm not going to go there.
But a couple of times I've gotten these really nasty, just invective-filled notes from people
who are either anonymous or sort of quasi-anonymous, you know, but seem to feel like they are somehow
protected in whatever they're going to tell
me and I will respond to them sometimes.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, and it is actually kind of a fascinating experiment because when I get a response,
which is actually fairly often when I do those replies, people will respond seeming almost
shocked A, that they've gotten a response, B, that there was in fact a human on the other side of that email,
and their tone just changes instantly.
And there have been a couple of times when I've had, you know,
not like completely deep back and forths with these people,
but like where we actually have then gone on to have some kind of exchange,
you know, meaningful exchange based on this terrible email that
started things off.
And I think that it's such a kind of reminder of how little it takes to sort of nudge people
back into humanity.
Just even, you know, in this case, one reply and that's all it took and then everything
changes.
And it's something I think a lot about when it comes to the web overall, and especially
as we're building out the web's infrastructure, is how can we maximize empathy and humanity
really within these digital spaces?
It's tricky because we've created it as these spaces that are controlled and they're economically
managed in particular ways.
Yes, the individuals are co-constructing these systems, absolutely, but they're doing it
within an environment that has been defined for value extraction, not necessarily for pleasure or justice or other values that
we might put forward.
And so I think that there's, like honestly, I think we're at a precipice of like, what
is that future that we're going to move towards?
I don't think that the present is going to stand.
The question is, is it going to get much worse?
Or are we going to find a new path forward that's more constructive?
I think that as an individual, part of it
is start modeling the world you want to live in, right?
And really think through your own actions
and what you're doing collectively.
Because that's the thing about a city,
is that what does it mean to maintain morality?
And not necessarily in a religious sense,
but in a way of recognizing the dignity and humanity
of the collective.
Megan, I know I'm stating the obvious, but cities are simply incredibly nuanced, complex
places.
They've been built up over time.
They have cultural histories that have really shaped them over decades and centuries. So I'm just not sure it's going to be as simple as taking the recipe
of what makes up all the good things about urban life and just transferring them over
to digital life.
Yeah. Yeah. Sadly.
But it is really helpful to think about the internet as an actual place rather than this
enigmatic kind of
other world that people have no agency over. And it's something that actually we
can control and create and shape.
You know, we can approach digital spaces with a little bit more skepticism or
curiosity and sort of always be asking ourselves, why is this place designed in
this particular way? And then especially, how could it be better?
Yeah, you know, it's sometimes it's scary that these norms and these rules, they just
haven't been formed yet.
But I guess the upshot is, is that we still have a chance to create these norms.
And I think along those lines, it's actually really helpful to descale as much as we can,
you know, to think in terms of smaller communities,
smaller groups of people,
the neighborhoods that make the city.
That's all for this episode of How to Know What's Real.
This episode was hosted by Andrea Valdez
and me, Megan Garber.
Our producer is Natalie Brennan.
Our editors are Claudina Bade and Jocelyn Frank.
Fact check by Ena Alvarado.
Our engineer is Rob Smirciak.
Rob also composed some of the music for this show.
The executive producer of audio is Claudina Bade,
and the managing editor of audio is Andrea Valdez.
Next time on How to Know What's Real.
Our brains pay a lot of attention to emotion,
they pay a lot of attention to morality.
When you smoosh them together, then it's the sin of super power
of getting us to just really focus in on that information.
What we can learn about the web's effects on people's brains
and our ability to discern real from fake.
We'll be back with you on Monday.