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What is Social Media?

Social media refers to internet-based platforms and applications that allow users to create, share, and exchange content while participating in virtual communities.1

While traditional media (like TV or newspapers) is a “one-to-many” broadcast, social media is a “many-to-many” dialogic system, meaning anyone can be both a consumer and a creator.2


Core Elements of Social Media

For a platform to be considered social media in 2026, it typically features these four pillars:

  1. User-Generated Content (UGC): The platform’s value comes from what users post (videos, text, photos, reviews), not from content created by the company itself.3
  2. User Profiles: Digital identities that track a user’s history, interests, and connections.4
  3. Algorithmic Feeds: Automated systems that decide what you see next based on your behavior, engagement, and preferences.5
  4. Interactivity: Features like “likes,” comments, shares, and real-time messaging that facilitate two-way conversations.6

Major Categories & Examples

Social media has evolved into specialized “neighborhoods” based on how people want to interact:

CategoryPrimary FunctionKey Platforms (2026)
Social NetworkingPersonal & professional connectionsFacebook, LinkedIn, Threads
Media SharingVisual storytelling and entertainmentInstagram, TikTok, YouTube, Snapchat
Discussion ForumsCommunity-led Q&A and deep-divesReddit, Quora, Discord
MessagingPrivate or group-based chatWhatsApp, Signal, WeChat
Niche NetworksShared hobbies or activitiesStrava (fitness), Goodreads (books), Behance (design)

Impact on Society and Business

Social media has fundamentally changed how the world operates:7

  • Democratization of Information: Anyone with a smartphone can report news or start a global movement (e.g., viral activism).8
  • Social Commerce: Platforms are now “end-to-end” shopping ecosystems.9 Features like TikTok Shop and Instagram Checkout allow users to buy products without ever leaving the app.10
  • Customer Support: Public-facing platforms have replaced phone lines as the primary way for customers to voice complaints or get help in real-time.
  • The “Attention Economy”: Platforms compete for user time using psychological triggers (notifications, infinite scrolls), leading to ongoing debates about mental health and the “right to disconnect.”