I wrote about the proposed Musk-Zuckerberg cage match, and why it gives me reason for ... optimism? techpolicy.press/rescuing-the-f…
The Musk-Zuckerberg spectacle, while stupid, is clarifying — it reveals the extent to which Silicon Valley has abandoned even the veneer of its purported mission of advancing humanity and solving the pressing challenges of our time. techpolicy.press/rescuing-the-f…
What is Secure? An Analysis of Popular Messaging Apps
A deep dive into the design and technical security of encrypted apps conducted by Cooper Quintin, Caroline Sinders, Leila Wylie Wagner, Tim Bernard, Ami Mehta, and me. Read the 86-page report here: techpolicy.press/what-is-secure…
In a world swept up in a wave of autocratization and erosion of rights, encrypted messaging apps are an increasingly popular—and necessary—way to share information, organize and engage with one another, and do business. techpolicy.press/what-is-secure…
But while the promise of secure messaging is private communications and user control over the spread of personal or group information, the reality is often more complicated, particularly in the age of surveillance capitalism. techpolicy.press/what-is-secure…
TikTok’s Confidence-Destroying Bold Glamour Filter is the Logical Product of Platforms Built for Consumerism
Rachel Griffin (@rachel_grfn) sees the beauty filter as the obvious endpoint of the underlying structural dynamics of the social media industry. techpolicy.press/tiktoks-confid…
With reference to @KathyCastorFL's comments in yesterday's #TikTok hearing in the House Energy & Commerce Committee:
"...criticizing TikTok as irresponsible or calling for it to add labels to videos where a filter is used – essentially suggesting that properly-informed users should be capable of resisting the unattainable beauty ideals they’re bombarded with – misses the bigger picture."
1/ I'm sympathetic to some of the angles on this issue that @jawillick explores here; yet I think talking about misinformation as a singular concept can be misleading. There are forms of mis- and disinformation that are very dangerous... washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/…
2/ Is the concern over these issues out of whack with the threat, writ large? Probably. But when you zoom in to particular phenomena, there is plenty to worry about. We have real examples to point to in this country and many others of mis- and disinformation leading to harms.
3/ Better to consider these issues through the lens of power, and to look at how the deliberate deployment of mis- and disinformation serves those in power and those that seek it. There is a lot of work to do to improve democracy; information integrity is only one lane.
1/ I've covered January 6 fairly closely, including helping with the @just_security January 6 Clearinghouse. I've read thousands of pages of documents and watched dozens if not hundreds of hours of footage from that day and the events that led up to it. justsecurity.org/77022/january-…
2/ I've paid close attention to the dynamics in the media and social media ecosystem as they relate to January 6, writing about related research and producing information and reporting on the subject. While what Fox News and others on the right are doing is abhorrent ...
3/ In many ways it is just more of the same. Public perception of January 6 has remained remarkably static since it happened. If you participate in or largely consume a media diet from the MAGA cinematic universe, you've been exposed to these ideas for more than two years.