Wired wisdom : how to age better online
(2025)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
NEW 305.26/HARGITTAI,E

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
New & Popular Genl Nonfic NEW 305.26/HARGITTAI,E Available

Details

PUBLISHED
Chicago : The University of Chicago Press, [2025]
©2025
DESCRIPTION

275 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9780226841397 CIPO000246441, 9780226823454, 0226823458, 0226841391, 9780226841397
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Wired Wisdom -- Adoption: Are Older People Less Likely to Use New Tech? -- Support: How Do Over-Sixties Seek Help? -- Safety and Security: the Greater the Age, the Easier the Target? -- Privacy: What's Worth the Price of Personal Data? -- Misinformation: Why Do Skeptics Spread Fake News? -- Well-Being: Does Tech Increase Loneliness? -- Learning: Can New Tech Teach New Tricks? -- Lessons--for Older Adults, Their Families, Friends, and Society -- Top Ten Takeaways

"By most popular accounts, the older you are, the greater your tech struggles. Scammers target older users, defenseless to theft and privacy invasions. Your older relatives may seem too eager to spread misinformation on social media. And some worry that older adults' time online only increases their loneliness. This eye-opening book on the Internet's fastest-growing demographic paints a much different picture--offering both hope and a necessary call to action. Incorporating original interviews and findings from surveys of thousands of over-sixties online, Wired Wisdom shows many, in fact, use technology in ways that put younger peers to shame. People over sixty are often nimble online--quick to abandon social media platforms that don't meet their needs. Despite being targeted more often, people over sixty may be less likely to fall for scams. And fake news might fool fewer people over sixty, who have more experience evaluating sources and detecting propaganda. Still, some may choose to share stories they know are false for entertainment. And many have surprising preferences for learning and adopting new tech--preferences that their communities fail to meet. These are some of the surprising insights from Internet researchers Eszter Hargittai and John Palfrey's essential book for anyone over sixty and those who support and love them. Together they share the voices of older technology users, primarily in the United States and Europe, and quantitative research about this group's practices and abilities to show what we know (and don't) about over-sixties' privacy, support, safety, and well-being. Ultimately, Hargittai and Palfrey question what it means to age well online, no matter your birthdate, and offer practical advice to support everyone using new technology"--

Additional Credits