Keep in mind, I haven't done any research on this topic, so all of this is just me... pontificating, I suppose.
There is a culture in today's society in which the internet is blamed for things - the short attention span of people in my generation, their lack of communicating with others, a greater ignorance of their surroundings, and general "the internet is terrible and does terrible things to the young generation."
The thing is, though, that the internet has done more in terms of good things than it has ever done in terms of bad. The internet creates a wider access to information. I know much more now than I ever would have before the internet, because I can easily access books, journal articles, and even the opinions of scientists on the internet. I am kept in the loop on research without really having to pay a cent.
This extends to things like politics. It's not wonder that the internet age has seen the rise of LGBTQIAAPN+ culture (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans, Queer, Intersex, Asexual, Aromantic, Pansexual, Nonbinary) in just visibility as well as acceptance. The internet is a safe space, where individuals can communicate with one another, discover their identities, and realize that they are normal - that they are not freaks. Women, people of color, the disabled, what have you - all can access the internet and communicate and understand each other.
Friendship, additionally, is no longer a function of convenience. We are not just friends with people who are close to us in location, regardless of what we have in common with them. Long distance relationships are not only feasible, they're practically easy. You can make friends with individuals on the internet who share interests with you - who understand you - who accept you. You can keep in touch with those friends you made in High School, College, that one job in that one city that you have since moved out of, what have you, so much easier. With the touch of a button you can see what your pal is doing in Baltimore, or what your internet friend who is just as in to Night Vale as you is doing off in London. The world is more cosmopolitan, more connected, more understanding.
We are more aware of the political situation in Nepal. We are more aware of opportunities in science in Germany. We know, now, why someone from Brazil would be offended by what you just said. We are understanding each other better. We are becoming closer. We are becoming a global population now more than ever.
It is truly a second Columbian Exchange, and hopefully this one will lead to the prevention of genocide, rather than the initiation of genocide.
And the established status quo - people who benefit from a lack of widespread information, a lack of communication, a lack of connectivity - they hate this.
So they mock us, and ignore us, and call us a generation glued to our phones and not actually talking to other people... when we're the generation who have done that more than any that has come before us.
It will be hilarious if people like me suddenly get people being all “STOP COMPLAINING ABOUT DINOSAURS, IT’S JUST A MOVIE, NOBODY CARES“ over stuff like Jurassic World and The Good Dinosaur when so many on this website actually do value the impact media has on us all and are willing to call out things like racism, ableism, sexism, homophobia and transphobia whenever they see them. People representation isn’t the only thing that matters -representation of current scientific knowledge does too. When the most reliable method of obtaining information and its findings is consistently ignored, we end up with a very misinformed society.

