These are the most common myths about social media
With social media taking the world by storm, it can be easy to make judgments about its power and influence. These are the facts behind the myths.
Angela Phillips teaches at Goldsmiths, University of London. She is the author of: Journalism in Context (2014), Routledge, co-author of Changing Journalism (2011), Routledge and the author of Good Writing for Journalists (2007) Sage. She launched www.eastlondonlines.co.uk a local, multi-media, news website that is run by Goldsmiths journalism students and has a significant local audience. She has been a journalist for over thirty years, starting in the alternative press of the 1970s and moving on to work for national newspapers, magazines, television and radio. She trained initially as a photographer and worked for several years as a photojournalist before moving into print and online media. More recently, she has moved into the arena of journalism research, working with the Goldsmiths Leverhulme Media Research Centre. She is also the chair of the Ethics Committee of the Coordinating Committee for Media Reform and gave evidence to the Leveson enquiry into the press.