Impakter
  • Environment
    • Biodiversity
    • Climate Change
    • Circular Economy
    • Energy
  • FINANCE
    • ESG News
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Business
  • TECH
    • Start-up
    • AI & Machine Learning
    • Green Tech
  • Industry News
    • Entertainment
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Health
    • Politics & Foreign Affairs
    • Philanthropy
    • Science
    • Sport
  • Editorial Series
    • SDGs Series
    • Shape Your Future
    • Sustainable Cities
      • Copenhagen
      • San Francisco
      • Seattle
      • Sydney
  • About us
    • Company
    • Team
    • Global Leaders
    • Partners
    • Write for Impakter
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Impakter logo
No Result
View All Result
Polarisation

Our Online World Is Getting Angrier, Is It by Circumstance or Design?

Just like politics, our worldview is becoming less about what we think and more about what we feel. There’s a reason for that

Sebastian F. K. Svegaard - Researcher at the Queensland University of TechnologybySebastian F. K. Svegaard - Researcher at the Queensland University of Technology
February 29, 2024
in Editors' Picks, Society
0

Our world appears to be angrier.

We seem to disagree more with each other, especially online. When Facebook had its own whistleblower in 2021, one of the things she said was that “publishers are saying, ‘Oh, if I do more angry, polarising, divisive content, I get more money.’ Facebook has set up a system of incentives that is pulling people apart.”

The Cambridge Analytica scandal showed how social media manipulation worked for political ends almost 10 years ago and while social media firms have changed since then, and are more aware of the worry of manipulation, we, the users, still experience the world as an angrier, more polarised place.

It continues, to X (formerly Twitter) making money from advertising next to tweets that media analysis firm NewsGuard claimed were from users “advancing false or egregiously misleading claims about the [Israel-Palestinian] conflict.”

There has been much theorising that so-called filter bubbles were the cause of our polarisation. The theory went that the algorithms running our media feeds were serving us only content we agreed with.

This has been shown to be wrong. Some now believe that it is our constant exposure to things we fundamentally disagree with that is making us disagree even more.

If we look at history, this time of anger and polarisation is likely not unique.

Surely in times of great upheaval, extreme anger and polarisation also happened – for example during the French Revolution.

However, what is certainly new is our level of exposure to polarising opinions and events, and this exposure happens in large parts on social media, where we spend so much of our time and, increasingly, get our news.

On TikTok, #wartok is full of images from wars in Palestine and Ukraine. Competing accounts supporting either side in any conflict can draw in a lot of money.

There is, in other words, money in emotions, because emotions mean engagement, which means clicks, and clicks mean advertising revenue and the potential for direct donations as well for some content creators.

But let’s be frank, even successful creators make small money compared to the media companies that host and profit from their work.

Emotions in humans are powerful and difficult to explain.

On one hand, everyone has emotions, and we understand them on some level, but they are deeply personal and hard to quantify.

Research in emotions falls within vastly different categories, from the psychological and medical to the sociological and language-based, and often overlap.

Some research, particularly from social sciences and humanities, try to understand what emotions do, how they are used to achieve specific ends either directly or indirectly in communication.

The need to understand emotion

It is increasingly vital to understand emotions as part of communication in a world where so much information comes through multimedia primarily video formats, because emotions can be accessed in any layer of the information.

There is something about video and image that makes us respond differently to written content.

Perhaps it’s the way visuals grasp us in an instant, or perhaps the several layers of information we need to process. Social media prefers visuals now with the pivot to video or, as internet commentator Ryan Broderick aptly put it, we live in a “video first internet” now.

To fully understand video content, it is necessary to think about the visuals AND the words AND the audio. Video and the direct human-to-human contact it provides is powerful.

When we see someone talking to us in a video, we see their face, their eyes, their expressions. It feels as if we are close. We might build a kind of relationship with content creators we watch a lot – just as with other celebrities – as we get to know them by watching them.

Music in audio-visual content can also vastly change how we perceive something, and is a gateway to our emotions.

The same techniques that make us root for someone in a film or feel empathy for their situation can be used in any kind of audio-visual format – everything from your neighbour’s funny cat video to political candidates arguing for why you should vote for them.

One thing emotions can be used for, particularly for political ends, is to create what is known as affective polarisation.

Polarisation, a buzzword at the moment, describes a distancing or increasing divide between people with differing views. Affective polarisation is mostly used to mean a creation of an in-and out-group through emotional means, or a “them” and an “us” of some kind.

A not directly political version of this could be supporters of opposing sports teams, who resort to not simply disparaging the performance of the opposing team, but also resorting to name-calling that dehumanises or casts them as “less than.”

Using similar tactics in politics can be very effective too – this is for example when we see politicians and supporters attack their opponent on grounds of personal character or morals as an extension of their viewpoints. On our social media feeds, this may look like people focusing more on disliking people than disagreeing with ideas.


Related Articles: Scrolling Into Stress: How Climate Fears Hit Youth | How TikTok Violated EU’s Privacy Laws | Toxic Positivity: Modern Society’s Ultimate Avoidance Mechanism | How TikTok Lost Europe’s Trust | Towards a Manifesto For Restrainability | Going Beyond Fact-Checking to Tackle Conspiracies

A fascinating aspect of affective polarisation is one, which our research points to: all kinds of emotions can be used to this end.

Anger is effective in driving engagement online, and is therefore easily pushed to more of us as it is shared and responded to across social media.

But many emotions can be used.

Making us laugh with someone can make them relatable as a political candidate. Think of former UK PM Boris Johnson and his ability to play to humour, or how humour can be used against someone by making them a laughing stock.

Even love can be used to polarise us.

Scholar Sara Ahmed illustrates in her work how love can be used to justify hate. Her example is that of white supremacists’ use of love of nation and “race” to justify hating people of a different skin colour.

Different political leaders do this in different ways. It largely appears to be a personality thing, but they all use emotions as one way to convince constituents.

For example, Brazilian ex-president Jair Bolsonaro often used contempt for his opponent during his 2022 campaign, while then-Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison in his campaign showed a lot of satisfaction with what his government had achieved as a way to argue he should be re-elected.

But even positive emotions are, in some way, meant to inspire something like anger – or at least distancing – from others. Sometimes legitimately so. There are actions and opinions that many people find disagreeable for good reason – but sometimes also to stir up emotions that are a motivator for political action.

Research shows that some amount of polarisation and disagreement can be positive in democracies, that such factors engage more people in politics and voting.

When we disagree, we use democratic tools to solve those disagreements. However, in more extreme, destructive cases, affective polarisation can lead to people seeing those with opposing views as less than human. At this point, it becomes harder for democracy to continue to function.

The best we can all do in cases where political content makes us feel something, is to take a moment to reflect on why we are feeling this way.

Do we really feel angry, or sad, or touched, or did we get drawn in by effective communication? Is it legitimate disagreement or are we being manipulated?

** **

This article was originally published by 360info™. Dr Svegaard’s research receives funding from the Australian Research Council through Laureate Fellowship FL210100051 Dynamics of Partisanship and Polarisation in Online Public Debate.


Editor’s Note: The opinions expressed here by the authors are their own, not those of Impakter.com — Featured Photo Credit: Michael Joiner, 360info.

Tags: AngerCambridge AnalyticaOnline angerOnline WorldSocial media
Previous Post

S&P Launches Biodiversity-Focused Benchmarks

Next Post

Environmental Crime Directive Given More Teeth to Protect Wildlife

Related Posts

High-Engagement Campaigns
Business

Why Social Explainer Videos Are Key for High-Engagement Campaigns

A social explainer video should be on the checklist of every brand wanting to connect with the audience. Its digestible...

byHannah Fischer-Lauder
December 22, 2025
Australia Social Media Age Ban
Business

What Australia’s Social Media Age Ban Really Means

Young people in Australia are on the verge of a profound shift in their digital lives. The Online Safety Amendment...

byDaniel Angus - Professor at the Queensland University of Technology & Director of its Digital Media Research Centre
December 18, 2025
Content writing service
Business

How Big Brands Use Digital Marketing to Stay Visible and Win More Customers

Major corporations didn’t grow into giants overnight. They learned how to stay visible, how to stay relevant, and how to...

byHannah Fischer-Lauder
December 12, 2025
influencer doing a makeup tutorial
Lifestyle

Turbulent Economic Times Are Reshaping the Influencer World

In an unlikely corner of the internet, between glossy skincare reviews and postcard-perfect summer getaways, the signs of a cooling...

byHannah Fischer-Lauder
November 6, 2025
Europe far-right
Society

Europe’s Far-Right Find Happy Hunting Grounds in Social Media

In the digital age, social media has become a powerful tool for connection, expression and community-building, helping reduce isolation and giving...

byAlessandra Pugnana - Research Analyst at the Italian Team for Security, Terroristic Issues & Managing Emergencies (ITSTIME)
November 5, 2025
ESG news regarding EU to cut Russian oil and gas by 2027, social media tops TV for US news, Basel sets voluntary climate risk rules for banks, SBTi drafts net-zero rules for automotive sector
Business

EU to Cut Ties With Russian Oil and Gas by 2027

Today’s ESG Updates EU to cut Russian oil and gas by 2027: New gas contracts banned from 2026 as the...

byPeter Vigh
June 17, 2025
social media fact-checking
Business

Why Social Media Fact-Checking Promised Too Much

Fact-checking has gone out of fashion, at least for much of the social media "broligarchy" — that billionaire tech group typified by...

byWill Grant - Associate Professor at the Australian National Universityand1 others
February 14, 2025
prebunking
Society

Can ‘Prebunking’ Outpace Fake News?

The recent decision by Meta to scale back its reliance on third-party fact-checkers has reignited debates about the future of combating...

byPatrizia Catellani - Professor of Social Psychology at the Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Milan
January 22, 2025
Next Post
Environmental crime directive

Environmental Crime Directive Given More Teeth to Protect Wildlife

Recent News

U.S. Withdrawal Puts International Framework on Shaky Ground

U.S. Withdrawal Puts International Framework on Shaky Ground

January 12, 2026
President Donald Trump delivers remarks at a press conference at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, following Operation Absolute Resolve in Venezuela

Regime Change in Venezuela and the Crisis of Global Order

January 12, 2026
ESG News regarding U.S. lifting more sanctions on Venezuela, Egypt securing $1.8 billion renewable energy deals, U.S. pushing G7 allies to reduce reliance on China for critical minerals, richest 1% exceeding annual carbon share in just 10 days.

U.S. Considers Lifting More Venezuela Sanctions

January 12, 2026
  • ESG News
  • Sustainable Finance
  • Business

© 2025 Impakter.com owned by Klimado GmbH

No Result
View All Result
  • Environment
    • Biodiversity
    • Climate Change
    • Circular Economy
    • Energy
  • FINANCE
    • ESG News
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Business
  • TECH
    • Start-up
    • AI & Machine Learning
    • Green Tech
  • Industry News
    • Entertainment
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Health
    • Politics & Foreign Affairs
    • Philanthropy
    • Science
    • Sport
  • Editorial Series
    • SDGs Series
    • Shape Your Future
    • Sustainable Cities
      • Copenhagen
      • San Francisco
      • Seattle
      • Sydney
  • About us
    • Company
    • Team
    • Global Leaders
    • Partners
    • Write for Impakter
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Impakter.com owned by Klimado GmbH