Skip to main content

Time Magazine still anoints ‘internet influencers,’ but it’s not 1999 anymore

TIME Top 25 Influencers Chrissy Teigen
Chrissy Teigan Mike Coppola/Getty Images
Time magazine has posted its third annual list of the 25 most influential people on the internet. It’s of course a ridiculous idea, yet it’s telling because, as a totally subjective construction, it reveals what Time Magazine — a mass-market medium — wants us to think the internet is about.

#1 is Chrissy TeigenTime likes her because she’s a mass-media star who has lots of Internet followers but who has remained “relatable” and “real.” The message is that the Internet lets us be more of who we are than the old media did. The internet is a channel for authenticity. Something like that. Also, who doesn’t love Chrissy Teigen?

Recommended Videos

#2 takes us from mainstream goody to meanstream baddy: Matt DrudgeTime tars him with the Trump brush and mentions one particular piece of irresponsible reporting. See, the Internet also lets bad information prosper. Lesson: Time does responsible, even-handed journalism.

The net lets us reveal — and be — more of who we are.

#3 is J.K. Rowling because the internet lets the famous use their celebrity to take on meanstream baddies like Drudge. See, there’s your fair and balanced right there! Also, please refer back to #1: The net lets us reveal — and be — more of who we are.

#4 is Carter Wilkinson, who asked people to retweet a tweet 18 million times so Wendy’s would give him free chicken nuggets for a year — a powerful impressions per nugget ratio for Wendy’s. We failed Carter, but he got his nuggets anyway after breaking the world’s record for retweets. So, apparently the internet lets The Little Folk become celebrities for doing what the Little Folk do. Lesson: The Net is trivial, but fun! (By the way, do you have to be a vegetarian to find the idea of eating “nuggets” about as repulsive as eating “clumps”?

#5 is Yao Chen, the politically-outspoken Chinese actress. Lesson: The internet is about peace and freedom, everybody! Also, mean governments threaten it.

Time goes heavy on the positives (Steve Pruitt, who has made over two million edits to Wikipedia; Jonathan Sun who is funny and kind on Twitter) and very light on the flat-out, moustache-twirling malefactors who could easily have painted the internet as a den of vipers hidden inside a gingerbread house papered with porn. Plus, Time‘s list is diverse. The message overall is that the net lets the mainstream be more authentic, and lets authentic voices emerge from out of the crowd. In these dreary days of reflexive internet bashing, we should be grateful for that as the list’s take-away. Time‘s list makes nice with the internet as if it were 1999, and I say huzzah!

Time Top 25 Influencers old PC

But, there is also something unfortunately 1999-ish about any Top 25 list for the internet. Back then, the mainstream media still viewed the internet primarily through their own mass-market publishing lens. That made it look like a zero-cost broadcast medium: Anyone could become a singer with a massive following, an internationally-known journalist, a political figure to be reckoned with. That was and is true, but it misses what is genuinely revolutionary about the net: It supplements the old model of one-to-many broadcasting with many-to-many networks of human conversation and interaction.

Since 1999, the Internet has encroached ever more seriously on the mass market. It increasingly is where the traditional media make their primary home, and where big time stars are born. Any “Most Influential” internet list inevitably reinforces the idea that the Internet’s significance is as a one-to-many broadcasting platform. But suppose the internet’s influence on us has less to do with how people become famous than with how we find and engage with one another? The social effects may be harder to see because they are the ocean we swim in, but that also makes them more significant.

In fact, the internet is, well, a network, yet Time notices only individuals.

A true list of the web’s biggest influencers should include those who build the platforms and services of engagement. It should include those who defend the open Internet against the commercial services that want to control it for their own selfish reasons. It should include the organizations that try to keep us informed, skeptical, and more open to new ideas than the old media and our own base inclinations do. In fact, the internet is, well, a network, yet Time notices only individuals. Where are the communities, the networks, the crowds that make places like Tumblr support groupsColor of ChangeStackoverflowand GlobalVoices important in our lives in different ways?

Most important, suppose the truly transformative impact of the Net comes from the cumulative effect of billions of acts of kindness, openness, and creativity. Where are the people who provide the comfort and encouragement that make the place better for all of us? Where are the quirky hobbyists, the game modders and writers of fan fiction who make the gifts of culture reflect more of who we really are, the people who burrow deeply into topics most of us have never heard of, the software developers building libraries that liberate onrushes of creativity, the people with terrible ideas that spark great ones, the activists toiling in places that want to crush them, the geeks giving us ways to route around the privateers, the patient explainers, the memers who incite us, the wise-asses who make us laugh?

Of course, of course, of course, the internet is also replete with bullies, scammers, and a-holes of every description, not to mention the winged bots obeying wicked witches from every quadrant of the earth. But I agree with Time that a Top 25 list is not a scientific attempt at rendering an objective accounting, but a chance to calibrate our understanding of the net around what is best about it.

And what’s best about the net are not the Top Few, but our voices mingling with others who are not broadcasting, but are conversing, sharing, and creating.

Topics
David Weinberger
Dr. Weinberger is a senior researcher at the Berkman Center. He has been a philosophy professor, journalist, strategic…
A new Best Buy sale just started – our 11 favorite deals
Presidents Day sales with electonic devices packed in open boxes.

If you've been looking to do some shopping recently but haven't found the best time, you're in luck! Best Buy has just started an excellent weekend sale with many different products, but, to help save you some hassle, we've collected our 11 favorite deals from the bunch, ranging from robot vacuums to gaming laptops. So, without further ado, let's dive right in!
Shark ION Robot RV761 -- $143, was $260

If you're looking to dip your toes into robot vacuums without spending a lot, the Shark ION Robot RV761 falls within the Shark Ion 700 range and has a few nifty features, making it a good starting robot vacuum. For example, it has a triple brush mechanism that makes it great for picking up pet hair and does relatively well on carpeted flooring. It also has its own that allows you to schedule and control it to fit your schedule, and it comes with sensing technology that lets it avoid bumping into things. On the other hand, it doesn't have home mapping, which is great for the privacy-minded, but that does mean the occasional bump does happen. The Shark ION RV761 has about 90 minutes of battery life before it takes itself in for recharging.

Read more
When is Prime Day 2023? Dates confirmed for the shopping event
Best Prime Day 2022 Deals graphic with multiple products.

After weeks of speculation, we finally know when Prime Day 2023 is kicking off. Amazon has announced that the event will start July 11 at 3AM ET and will run through July 12. As always, Prime members can score some fantastic deals from the sale with popular brands like Peloton, Victoria's Secret, YETI, and Sony just some of the names being touted by Amazon as featuring in the big sale. Members will also be able to shop more deals on small business products than ever before too. As always, expect great discounts on Amazon-owned properties like Kindles, Ring doorbells, Amazon Echo units, and so much more. It's the sale we've all been waiting for since Black Friday.

The Prime Day deals promise to drop every 30 minutes during select periods with deep discounts expected. Select discounts on other Amazon-related things are already available such as 20% off in-store purchases at when you spend $50 or more and . It's a small taste of what is no doubt to come with other Amazon properties likely to see discounts.

Read more
Another big sale is happening at the same time as Prime Day
A variety of electronic devices in open boxes.

Target just revealed that Target Circle Week will run from July 9 to July 15, overlapping with Amazon's Prime Day that's scheduled for July 11 to July 12.

The big sale event will be open to members of the retailer's Target Circle loyalty program, who will be able to receive discounts of up to 50% for certain items. If you're not yet a member, don't worry -- you can join at any time, and membership is free. Once you've signed up, you'll be able to earn 1% from every purchase to redeem at a later time, access exclusive deals, and get 5% off for your birthday, among other benefits.

Read more