From the Arab Spring to British summer riots from the War on Terror to The X Factor from social networking sites to online electioneering the significance of new media technologies seems clear. This study offers an analysis of the impact of such interactive media on contemporary politics & society. It explores how new media technologies give their users a sense of empowerment & questions whether these technologies really directly empower their users at all. For example when viewers cast their votes in reality television shows is that really a form of democratic participation? Does Facebook actually enhance the quality of its users friendships & increase their social capital? Does the video game player develop the liberating agency the game appears to promise? Do online forms of politics essentially increase levels of democratic involvement? Will Wikipedia truly teach us anything? Can Web 2.0 ever set us free? Drawing upon interviews with figures from politics & the media this book examines the possibilities which underlie these technologies & questions some of the key assumptions which we have made about them.