Extreme Sites Outpace Extreme Readers
BY Nancy Scola | Monday, April 19 2010
"Ideological segregation on the Internet is low in absolute terms," finds a new study from University of Chicago economists Matthew Genzlow and Jesse Shapiro on the political polarization of the Internet compared to other media.
An intriguing part of the reason why the Internet might not actually skew as far towards partisanship as we might assume: the easily-evident supply of very tilted sites online isn't finding a demand.
"Extreme sites are more common than extreme readers," the pair conclude.