Enumerating the positives would seem unnecessary, and they are many. With the ability to follow directions and use a few tools, the internet makes it possible for me to fix pretty much every appliance in my house and most things on my car. Parts made of unobtanium that used to take weeks or even months to locate can now frequently be found in a few hours, and in hand in a few days. Aging parents and grandparents can see and hear their kids and grandkids faces and voices in real time every day, if they wish, regardless of geographic separation. It's a HUGE list of positives.
The negatives fall into two main issues in my view.. the increasing and overwhelming addiction/reliance on staring at a screen almost constantly, which has now replaced civil, caring, polite human-to-human interaction as the primary means of communication in our species, and the inability to do almost anything at all with government or corporate surveillance. Our recent visit to San Antonio put all of that into glaringly sharp, depressing focus.
We went to the zoo one day. I'm conflicted about zoos in the first place, but as zoos go this one was done about as well as possible. My wife asked me what my favorite animal was, to which I replied, "I like them all, but the humans were my least favorite." Everyone was oblivious to the people around them, walking into each other, talking loudly on their cell phones, kids screaming and shoving adults out of the way, adults behaving just as poorly, everyone staring at their cell phones, interested only in getting pictures of themselves in various settings rather than taking the time to actually SEE those settings, read about the animals, learn SOMETHING.. nope... ME, ME, ME, and the heck with anyone and anything around them. Made me sick. Even sicker was the behavior at the Missions we hiked to. More of the same... regardless of your religious practices, or lack thereof, at least have the decenty to realize that the Mission Concepcion is a place of great reverence to many people, has been since the 1700s, and is still an active place of worship. The loud off-color jokes, suggestive glam-selfies in front of historic depictions of Christ.... unbelievable. What does this have to do with the internet? Cell phones and the focus on "Me" completely fed by the internet in general and social media in particular.
OK... that's the "dehumanization/lack of civility" rant. Here's the other one...
Littered about downtown San Antonio are about 12,000 "scooters." "Littered" is exactly the correct word; these things are lying in the middle of sidewalks, in front of restaurants, bars, shops, walkways, streets, some standing up, some lying down. Every where you look, you trip over these things. To rent them, sort of like Uber/Lyft (more on that in a sec), you download an app, scan a code on a scooter, pay, and away you go. In doing that, you've now given a company your name, home address, location, and your track on the scooter. We took a bus once, and were still able to pay cash. That was nice... but we needed to text at the bus stop to get the schedule. Using Uber/Lyft requires similar concessions to protection of privacy. Neither my wife nor I have smart phones, but it really is getting increasingly difficult to travel without one. Every form of transportation and accommodation wants you to download an app to receive "valuable information," "Updates on your travel," etc. Yes, we still manage to get around and have a great time, but a smart phone definitely make it easier, and NOT having one is making things increasingly difficult. Why? Are companies doing this for OUR benefit, or for their bottom line (which I have no objection to.... capitalism is fine with me), or.... are we being increasingly observed and controlled? Yeah, I know that sounds tinfoilish, but seriously... there is more than a little truth to that. As a person who grew up planning trips on paper maps, looking up numbers in phone books, dialing businesses to find out schedules, purchase tickets, pay cash for hotel rooms and everything else..... this new world really feels like something out of an Orwell book. It's convenient..... and I don't like it.
Sooo.. yeah. I use the internet everyday, I can get things done faster, and I love the fact that I can find out pretty much anything at any time. As a communications medium, I absolutely hate it, and I don't like the fact that it's fast becoming the ONLY way to do business and that every bit of business and activity in your life is observable by pretty much anyone with the desire to observe it.
If I HAD to vote yea or nay, I'd have to go with nay. As a society, it's a net loss due to the dehumanization of people.