https://reason.com/2023/11/02/brickbat-the-crime-of-reporting/
"An Iranian court has sentenced two journalists to more than a decade in prison for their coverage of the death Mahsa Amini. Amini died last year in the custody of the morality police after being arrested for violating the nation's Islamic dress code."
https://reclaimthenet.org/visitors-to-the-eu-will-soon-face-fingerprinting-and-facial-scans
"The new rules state that visitors will be subjected to both face and fingerprint scans aside from surrendering other biometric data. It’s disconcerting that this data will be reserved within the European Commission’s Common Identity Repository (CIR), a database accessed by numerous agencies, including law enforcement."
"The implications of this regulation change could be even more disconcerting from a privacy perspective. Critics and advocates of digital privacy have sounded the alarm on not just the possible misuse of this extensive data pool by governments, but also the potential exposure to hacking threats, be they criminal outfits or invasive foreign governments. There’s also the risk of rogue insiders dealing with this sensitive information."
https://reason.com/2023/11/02/a-missouri-cop-shot-a-familys-dog-and-threw-its-body-in-a-ditch/
"In August, a Missouri family's dog, Parker, wandered away from the family home during a violent storm. When the neighbor who found the dog called the police for help, instead of returning Parker to his family, an officer shot him and threw his body in a ditch."
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/nov/03/online-vitriol-could-undo-decades-political-progress-dutch-deputy-pm While I'm particularly sympathetic to her, as they've pushed for some good policy, such as opposing the chat control:
"anonymous accounts" Curbing the use of anonymous accounts would be quite problematic for the freedom of expression. Also, I don't think this actually worked out when they tried it in South Korea.
"doxing" Maybe, something could be done about doxxing?
"hate speech" Ugh, the problem is that the particular argument which people use for this is one which tends to also be used elsewhere (and that is both bad for expression and often inappropriate as well).
I think you'd be better off breaking up Facebook into several smaller social networks. It would be very politically difficult but it doesn't involve fiddling around with matters of content.
The problem of mainstream social media (and why half-baked fixes don't really work).
The problem is scale. Scale. I don't mean millions of users. Or tens of millions. I mean these sites with over a hundred million users. They become a bigger than life staple of the political consciousness (and also attract the sort of problems you might run into in politics, particularly the nastier side of politics).
It is also prone to context collapse. Truth is, we operate in different contexts all the time. Present ourselves differently in different scenarios. Mainstream social media pumps in a load of information and collapses everything down into the same one arena. There also isn't much breathing room without "taking a side".
Even imperfections of the moderation, inability to get correct information to inform such moderation. Scale. Also, due to scale, every mistake is now political and a million eyes will scrutinize it (sometimes, in an uninformed manner, as guess what, the hearsay also spreads at scale).
Ridiculous conspiracy theories? Again, the problem is scale. We've always had conspiracies.
They're also all in the same pot. Right up against one another. Not much breathing room.
Though, does this still count as infinite scrolling? I think a page based design definitely wouldn't.
If large social networks get forced to forgo infinite scrolling, I wonder what you'd get, a "load more" button?
That'll be a bit painful for them, as if you know UX, then you'll know that users are not patient and 100ms delays in loading times already have a (small but cumulative) impact on Amazon sales.
New LLM paper highlighting quite how weird and ridiculous these things are https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.11760
Adding "it's important to my career" can produce better results, across every model they tested!
https://truthout.org/articles/anti-lgbtq-group-wants-supreme-court-to-repeal-wa-ban-on-conversion-therapy/ If you remember, there is a loophole to conversion therapy bans, which one religiously motivated quack in Utah was using (while abusing others as well). That isn't okay either.
"Hosting provider Uberspace has taken down the website of YouTube-ripping software, youtube-dl. The removal is the result of a German court order in a copyright infringement lawsuit, filed by Sony, Warner and Universal. While Uberspace didn't host the open source software, it was held responsible for the website linking to the software hosted on developer platform GitHub."
https://torrentfreak.com/lead-youtube-content-id-scammer-sentenced-to-46-months-230821/
"After masquerading as legitimate music rightsholders, two men fraudulently extracted over $23 million in revenue from YouTube's Content ID system. The men were indicted in 2021 and subsequently entered guilty pleas. An Arizona court has now sentenced Webster Batista Fernandez, who reportedly initiated the scheme, to 46 months in prison."
https://torrentfreak.com/disclosure-of-pirates-identities-compatible-with-eu-privacy-laws-230929/ I don't think this sort of surveillance is worth it to fight something as petty as copyright infringement.
https://nichegamer.com/kick-streamer-johnny-somali-criminally-charged-in-japan/
"On the 2nd, the Osaka District Public Prosecutors Office charged Ismael Ramsey Khalid (24), a.k.a. Johnny Somali, a U.S. citizen who caused a nuisance at a restaurant in Minami, Osaka, with forceful obstruction of business. Indicted."
"The streamer was most recently arrested when he trespassed on a construction site. Somali became infamous on the internet after he allegedly harassed women in Japan and taunted Japanese citizens"
https://therecord.media/eu-urged-to-drop-law-website-authentication-certificates
"A similar joint letter has been sent by industry organizations — including the Linux Foundation, Cloudflare, and Mozilla — telling the EU lawmakers that the proposed regulations are a “dangerous intervention” that risk breaking the fragile system of trust that underpins the use of cryptographic certificates on the web."
"Such cases of abuse have been documented, most infamously in the DigiNotar case when the Dutch certificate authority was hacked allowing the attackers to intercept communications between Google and Iranian Google users. Similar cases have affected companies including Comodo and GlobalSign, as the cybersecurity researchers write."
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.