The Dream of Taking Back Control
For years, the algorithm has been the villain of our digital lives. It’s the unseen force blamed for everything from political polarisation and misinformation to simply making us feel bad by showing us posts engineered to provoke a strong reaction. These
complex systems are designed to maximise engagement, often by feeding us content that triggers outrage or reinforces what we already believe. In response, the demand for algorithm-free, chronological feeds has grown louder. The promise is seductive: a return to a simpler time where you, and only you, decide what you see by choosing who to follow. It feels like the ultimate act of reclaiming digital agency, a way to build a more authentic and less manipulated online experience.
The Architect of Our Own Echo Chamber
The problem is that when we are handed the architectural drawings to our own information world, we tend to build walls, not windows. The primary obstacle isn't technology, but human psychology. We are all susceptible to confirmation bias, the natural tendency to seek out, interpret, and remember information that confirms our existing beliefs. When we manually curate our feeds, we are not neutral librarians seeking diverse perspectives. More often, we are seeking reinforcement. We follow people who think like us, sources that validate our worldview, and mute or block those who challenge it. This behaviour isn't malicious; it's a cognitive shortcut to make sense of an overwhelming amount of information and to protect our sense of identity. But in doing so, we risk constructing an echo chamber that is potentially even more rigid and insulating than one created by an algorithm.
From a Filter Bubble to a Self-Made Fortress
It's useful to distinguish between a 'filter bubble' and an 'echo chamber'. A filter bubble, a term coined by Eli Pariser, is often created by an algorithm that selectively guesses what you would like to see, creating a state of intellectual isolation. You are a passive victim of the code. An echo chamber, however, is a space you actively help build. By choosing to follow only like-minded accounts, you are self-selecting into a community where your beliefs are repeated and amplified, while dissenting views are absent. Research suggests that these self-created environments can be incredibly powerful. While a clumsy algorithm might occasionally surface something unexpected, a perfectly curated manual feed can become an impenetrable fortress of agreement, making it harder to encounter different viewpoints and increasing the impression that your own perspective is the only valid one.
The Unseen Cost of Full Manual Control
While taking control feels empowering, it comes with hidden costs. Firstly, effective manual curation requires significant, ongoing effort to find and vet new and diverse sources. Secondly, it eliminates the potential for serendipity—the accidental discovery of a new idea, artist, or perspective that you weren't actively looking for. A well-designed (though admittedly rare) algorithm could, in theory, introduce you to challenging or novel content outside your immediate circle. Human curation, by contrast, is often driven by what we already know and who we already trust. This can lead to a feed that is comforting and familiar, but also static and intellectually limiting. Studies have even found that in some cases, certain algorithms can increase exposure to different views by encouraging connections to more distant individuals, an effect that is lost in a tightly-knit, self-curated network. The freedom from the machine may also be a freedom from unexpected growth.
















