Bloch faculty duo earn $200K grant toward effort to disrupt social media echo chambers
April 5, 2024 | Hunter Miesner
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Click here to read the original story.
[divide]
In the digital realm where algorithms reign supreme, Alex Krause Matlack and Bryan C. Boots from the UMKC Henry W. Bloch School of Management aim to create a tool that disrupts the social media landscape, thanks to a $200,000 grant from the Internet Society Foundation.

Alex Krause Matlack speaks during a First Tuesdays event in October 2023 at UMKC; Startland News photo
Social media is a double-edged sword. It has the power to bring people together and the power to keep people together in echo chambers. These digital environments expose users to information that reinforces their pre-existing views, effectively trapping people in an algorithmic cycle that filters out any opposing information.
“We’re doing this to ensure that we ‘build the right tool’, not just ‘build the tool right,’” said Boots, an associate teaching professor at the Bloch School and managing director of the Regnier Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation.
Thanks to Matlack, Boots and their collaborators, this problem may have a solution.
“We aim to create a free, open-source tool that will empower everyday users of social media to increase the diversity of information and posts in their social media feed,” Boots said.
Matlack and Boots are in the research phase of their grant, working on several smaller projects aimed at helping them learn how and why people use social media.
“We’re doing this to ensure that we ‘build the right tool,’ not just ‘build the tool right,’” Boots said.
Click here to read more about the Internet Society Foundation’s grant winners.
Matlack and Boots were also awarded additional funding from the Bloch School to participate in the faculty exchange program between UMKC and the University of the Western Cape (UWC) in South Africa. This opportunity allowed them to collaborate with Oghenerhe G. Salubi from the Department of Library and Information Science at UWC.
“This has allowed us to broaden our research to better understand how online social network usage is in Africa, particularly, South Africa,” said Matlack, who serves as director of Entrepreneurship Scholars at UMKC.
As Matlack and Boots near the development phase of their grant, the pair hopes their work will initiate broader and continuous research efforts that examine the effects of the internet and social media on society.
The Internet Society Foundation is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation with a mission to promote the development and accessibility of the internet globally by funding initiatives with a similar focus.
Featured Business
2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
River Market’s iconic ‘Trolley Tom’ reopening with grab-and-go deli menu, specialty cocktails
A new grab-and-go eatery is rolling into River Market, filling a hole left when Donutology shuttered operations inside “Trolley Tom” — the circa 1947 Kansas City streetcar permanently parked at 426 Delaware in the popular retail and entertainment district. Car No. 551 is scheduled to open by mid-September with deli offerings and and drinks by…
KC on top: Hat maker’s best-seller spotted on ‘GMA,’ ‘Ted Lasso’ as brand shapes its national profile
Sandlot Goods wears the spotlight well, said Thomas McIntyre, noting each high-profile media close up of its signature dad hat is another step toward establishing Kansas City’s only hat manufacturer as a national brand. After being featured on the “Made In America Christmas” segment of ABC World News Tonight with David Muir, Sandlot was again…
Rooftop Cinema Club premieres its open-air movie theater experience in KC’s Crossroads
Pink dusk views of the Kansas horizon and a cityscape bathed in sunset only added to the silver screen experience for midweek movie-goers trying out the newly opened Rooftop Cinema Club in Kansas City’s Crossroads Arts District. “Just the ambiance and what they did with the design is really cute,” said Emily Hendricks of Kansas…
Kauffman targets $250K grant toward vacant storefront revitalization as World Cup looms
Funding from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation is expected to help Kansas City prepare for an influx of visitors cheering on competitors at the 2026 FIFA World Cup — activating vacant storefronts in key areas with retail, artist, and community-focused pop-ups, city leaders said this week. The KCMO-centered initiative — first announced in June and patterned…