Unless we're just talking about very general attitudes towards social interaction over the internet. Is that what we're talking about?
That's what I'm asking about. The suggestion that has been made to me repeatedly is that "kids today" (their term, not mine!) do not have a general attitude about social interaction over the internet that is more negative than their general attitude about face-to-face social interaction. I am not talking about how they use the internet socially, which I recognize is multifaceted and highly nuanced (as it is for adults as well). I am talking about cultural-level schema for understanding online socializing in the most general terms -- or to use Joshua's term, is the stigmatization of online interaction not present in the "shared ideology" of young people? Though that's the level at which I'm inquiring, I'm enjoying reading these more fine-grained analyses.