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Social media shouldn’t divide society, says former US President Barack Obama

Thinking long term: Britain’s Prince Harry conducting an interview with former U.S. President Barack Obama.   | Photo Credit: The Obama Foundation

Former President Obama stresses that leaders need to create a common space on the Internet

Former U.S. President Barack Obama said the way people communicate via social media risked splintering society and leaders had to ensure the Internet did not cocoon users within their own biases. “All of us in leadership have to find ways in which we can recreate a common space on the Internet,” Mr. Obama said in an interview conducted by Britain’s Prince Harry, broadcast on BBC radio on Wednesday.
“One of the dangers of the Internet is that people can have entirely different realities, they can be just cocooned in information that reinforces their current biases.”
Mr. Obama has previously warned that social media platforms can lead people to make snap judgments about complex decisions although he has refrained from criticising his successor Donald Trump who regularly uses Twitter.
Mr. Obama said in the interview broadcast on Wednesday that social media should promote diverse views in a way that “doesn’t lead to a Balkanisation of our society” and moving online communities offline helped people to see that many issues were not as simple as they might seem in a chatroom. “It’s also by the way harder to be as obnoxious and cruel in person as people can be anonymously on the Internet,” he said.
Mr. Obama spoke to Prince Harry in an interview conducted by the Prince as a guest editor for BBC radio’s daily morning news show and focused on their shared interest in promoting causes. The interview took place in September. It was recorded in Toronto, Canada, in September on the sidelines of the Invictus Games, the athletic tournament created by Prince Harry for wounded former soldiers.

Wedding invite?

Prince Harry was asked by the BBC whether he would invite the Obamas to his wedding next year with U.S. actress Meghan Markle. “I don’t know about that,” Harry said. “We haven’t put the invites or the guest list together. Who knows whether they are going to be invited or not. I wouldn’t want to ruin that surprise.”
The Sun newspaper said on Tuesday that British government officials had urged Prince Harry not to invite the Obamas to his wedding for fear of angering Mr. Trump.
In the BBC interview, Mr. Obama spoke of being able to take a longer-term view on issues such as climate change.
“Take some of the tragedies that have happened recently, with hurricanes devastating first Houston and parts of Florida and now Puerto Rico,” he said. “Today those aren’t my direct responsibilities but I can focus over the next 20 years in making sure that we don’t have more hurricanes and natural disasters that are accelerated as a consequence of climate change and the ability to focus long term I think is a great luxury.”
Despite admitting concern over the future of the U.S., Mr. Obama, who did not mention his successor by name, said he felt a sense of “serenity” on leaving the White House.
The Prince opened the discussion by saying: “This is the first interview you’ve said ‘yes’ to doing since you handed over the reins”, to which Mr. Obama replied: “that’s true”.





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