Abstract:
The rise of the Social media has been phenomenal in India in the recent decade, giving rise to
various ways and patterns of news consumption, across media platforms for readers and
audiences. Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and blogs have become popular platforms for news
sharing among people. Several studies also indicate that mainstream media journalists are
increasingly engaging with Social media where news breaks first and intense debates and
deliberations on important events takes place consequentially. The popularity of Social media
is such in India that people across all age groups are beginning to view it as a source of news.
At the moment, Facebook and, to a lesser extent, Twitter, dominate this intersection of social
media and news. Facebook has made several moves to shift the content of a user‘s News
Feed towards hard news — towards providing the RSS-like news experience people never
knew they wanted. Facebook started with juicing the popularity of breaking stories by its
favorite publishers inside the News Feed and Paper, its news app, but today, the company is
taking its news efforts one step further. Facebook is announcing Newswire, an official
Facebook page you can follow that aggregates the best original content posted on the site. If
you‘d like, you can even follow the channel on Twitter — which is precisely the service
Newswire seems designed to compete with. With technology evolving at such a rapid rate,
with a strong impact on Journalism and consumption of news, It is important to examine the
role of social media news consumption among the users of social media. Although social
networking sites have primarily been seen as social tools connecting friends and family, news
organizations have discovered the value of these sites to make stories go "viral" and get more
traffic to their own sites. So users who may have signed up for Facebook primarily to connect
with others could inadvertently see news content posted by friends in their network or
subscribing to news feeds. The potential result? On one end -- unintended exposure to news
and diversity of viewpoints -- and at the other end -- exposure to like-minded viewpoints
resulting in an ever increasing cycle of selective exposure. How do different social
networking websites stack up when it comes to news? How many people engage with news
across multiple social sites? And what are their news consumption habits on traditional
platforms? This study examines and analyzes the characteristics of news consumers and the
size of their population across social networking sites. The study is based on a survey
conducted among the users of Social Media in South India and aims to analyse how people
consume news on Social Media.