Archive for 2016

THAT WAS FAST: Senate Commerce Committee Launches Inquiry Into Facebook’s News Curation.

Related: Could Facebook Swing An Election?

UPDATE: More here.

“If Facebook presents its trending topics section as the result of a neutral, objective algorithm, but it is in fact subjective and filtered to support or suppress particular political viewpoints, Facebook’s assertion that it maintains a ‘platform for people and perspectives from across the political spectrum’ misleads the public,” Senate Commerce Committee chairman John Thune, R-S.D., wrote in a Tuesday letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. . . .

“Facebook must answer these serious allegations and hold those responsible to account if there has been political bias in the dissemination of trending news,” Thune said in a statement accompanying the letter. “Any attempt by a neutral and inclusive social media platform to censor or manipulate political discussion is an abuse of trust and inconsistent with the values of an open Internet.”

Yes. It may also be fraud, or an abuse of market power.

IS THE U.S. GOVERNMENT NOW TRACKING ‘RIGHT-WING EXTREMISTS?’ “This question comes up because I’ve been informed that someone certainly is keeping tabs on me,” Robert Spencer writes.

Read the whole thing.

WELL, THIS IS INTERESTING: Peter Thiel is backing Trump. In fact he’s a delegate.

My thoughts: (1) This is probably a bit costly for him socially, given where Silicon Valley stands, so he probably wouldn’t do it unless he thinks Trump has a strong chance of winning; and (2) Thiel has access to a lot of data and data-crunching that the rest of us don’t.

DISPATCHES FROM THE EDUCATION APOCALYPSE: “Is Islamophobia accelerating global warming?”, as presented by the MIT “Ecology and Justice Forum In Global Studies And Languages.”

Related! “For the 2014-2015 academic year, the average cost of tuition and fees at MIT, located just outside of Boston, was $45,016. To cover room and board, students can expect to pony up another $13,224. That amounts to a hefty $58,240 annually, even before factoring books and personal expenses into the equation.”

globalislamophobiawarming

WHY A LIBERAL JOURNALIST BROUGHT THE HOUSE DOWN ON OBAMA FABULIST BEN RHODES:

The most punishing thing Rhodes said in his long-form confession to manipulating and subverting the press is that the journalists he encounters today “literally know nothing.” We need to look at the full quote to appreciate the importance of this to [David Samuels, age 49, described modestly by the New York Times as “an elite narrative journalist.”] Here is Rhodes:

All these newspapers used to have foreign bureaus. Now they don’t. They call us to explain to them what’s happening in Moscow and Cairo. Most of the outlets are reporting on world events from Washington. The average reporter we talk to is 27 years old, and their only reporting experience consists of being around political campaigns. That’s a sea change. They literally know nothing. (emphasis added)

Now let us look at another quote, this one from Samuels himself in an interview given in 2012.

I believe the catastrophe has already happened. The magazine world I entered almost 20 years ago was a rich, commercially-viable world. For a reasonably broad audience of people it was a fun way to spend two hours in the afternoon. That world is gone. The Washington Post hires 26-year-old bloggers to fill the pages that were filled by reporters who had bureaus in Nairobi that were paid for by their newspapers. That entire substructure has now been blown up. (emphasis added)

Rhodes’ insight is, in other words, almost verbatim the complaint Samuels was raising four years ago. Samuels described this shift, rightly, as a “catastrophe.” When he heard Rhodes say the same thing, it was an opportunity to force America to look at the harm done American journalism’s collapse.

In writing his piece on Rhodes, naturally Samuels knew the revelations would punish the administration. But that doesn’t seem to be his principal concern; he was loyal, first, to his profession.

Or what little is left of it:

 

BECAUSE IT’S JUST MSNBC WITH BETTER VISUALS: ESPN Hires LGBT Activist Abby Wambach After Firing Curt Schilling:

Wambach led the U.S. women’s national team to a World Cup victory in 2016. She holds the all-time record for goals scored in international competition.

In addition to being arrested for DUI, Wambach also admitted using cocaine and marijuana while she was a member of the U.S. women’s national team. She is vocal advocate for LGBT causes off the field.

ESPN has sought keep politics off the airwaves in the past. It in not known whether Wambach will continue to be a campaign surrogate for Hillary Clinton after assuming her role as soccer analyst for the sports network.

Heh, indeed. ESPN is owned by Disney, which also owns the House of Stephanopoulos.

ADRIANA COHEN: Facebook’s Hypocrisy. “Up until now, Facebook users have been led to believe that ‘Trending News’ stories landed there ‘organic­ally,’ buoyed by massive public discourse. Now we’ve learned they’ve been actively squelching political speech much like the state-run 
media operations in totalitarian North Korea and China do.”

If the right were set up for lefty style lawfare, Facebook would already be faced with lawsuits on behalf of consumers, and fraud/antitrust investigations by Republican state attorneys general.

AGE OF MISINFORMATION: Meet Your New Media Overlords.

The standard history of the media revolution goes something like this: At midcentury, the national media landscape was monopolized by three major television networks and two major magazines. A handful of centrist media executives has tremendous power over the flow of information; it took effort to access news and commentary too far to either side of the political spectrum. Then came cable, which put pressure on the old monopolies and facilitated the rise of some insurgent political outlets. In the 1990s, thanks to the creation of the internet and the rise of blogging, subversive political materials became easier to access, and legacy media gatekeepers lost still more control over what stories were newsworthy and what opinions were acceptable. Finally, social media outlets like Twitter and Facebook completed the democratization of media—giving ordinary people a platform, disrupting the press establishment, and transferring power for regulating the flow of information from media elites to the masses.

But has it really worked out that way? A new report from Gizmodo alleges that Facebook’s “trending” function (a list of popular news items featured prominently on hundreds of millions of users’ home pages) is not generated by an impartial algorithm, but by a handful of young Facebook employees—and, moreover, that those employees systematically manipulated the results to exclude right-leaning news. . . .

Facebook is sure to take issue with the story (it declined to comment for Gizmodo). But even if certain details are credibly called into question, the report highlights the tremendous power that internet and social media companies have achieved over the distribution of information—more than the television networks of yore could have ever dreamed of—and the ways they could tilt public opinion if they chose to do so. It may be that instead of dethroning the information gatekeepers, new media has simply transferred power from middle-aged WASPs in stuffy New York City network newsrooms to a more diverse, and younger, set of elites in posh Silicon Valley open offices. These new elites have their own set of interests and priorities—for the most part, socially liberal and meritocratic, rather than centrist and institutionalist. But they are not, by any means, “impartial,” or equally open to all viewpoints.

Still, the competitive forces that once empowered the new media overlords will also probably constrain them. After all, this story was broken a news outlet that itself couldn’t have existed before the information revolution. It has over a million views, and seems likely to force Facebook to issue some sort of response. And if this type of story keeps surfacing, and a critical mass of people start doubting the integrity of social platforms, entrepreneurs can raise funds and build competitor platforms. But many of Silicon Valley’s giants at this juncture are probably too entrenched for this too happen too quickly.

Should we expect antitrust and consumer-fraud investigations (since Facebook apparently lied about its activity) from Republican state attorneys general?

Related: Could Facebook Swing An Election?