You don’t proffer any hypothesis as to either (1) why the opinion of “extroverts” is preferable in this context to that of “introverts”, or perhaps more importantly, (2) why you conclude that people who use social media are intrinsically more extroverted than those that do not. This has, at least, not been my experience, and I’ve been on Twitter since 2008. It’s not that introverts are more likely to be on social media, but rather that there doesn’t seem to be any particular correlation. Some extroverts don’t care much about social media, while some introverts find screaming into the void to be less threatening than in-person interaction.
You don’t proffer any hypothesis as to either (1) why the opinion of “extroverts” is preferable in this context to that of “introverts”, or perhaps more importantly, (2) why you conclude that people who use social media are intrinsically more extroverted than those that do not. This has, at least, not been my experience, and I’ve been on Twitter since 2008. It’s not that introverts are more likely to be on social media, but rather that there doesn’t seem to be any particular correlation. Some extroverts don’t care much about social media, while some introverts find screaming into the void to be less threatening than in-person interaction.
— Chipotle