My take on why Facebook is not preventing another Cambridge Analytica by banning NYU ad researchers. It’s just being a terrible, horrible, no good company by smearing independent accountability efforts. techpolicy.press/facebook-is-ea…
The piece is a take-down of any insinuation that Fb is just following orders to prevent more Cambridge Analytica scandals. FTC order does not apply according to experts. Deeply cynical to deliberately associate a clandestine unlawful app with NYU’s tools. techpolicy.press/facebook-is-ea…
Facebook wants you to confuse an app that exploited Facebook’s flaws with an app that could’ve held Facebook more accountable. Don’t fall for it. techpolicy.press/facebook-is-ea…
Only parallel to Cambridge Analytica here with NYU Ad Observer is that the enforcement of #DataRights to empower us to access *all of our data* is more crucial than most folks realize. If we had these rights, we wouldn’t need these browser extensions! techpolicy.press/facebook-is-ea…
A key lesson learned from 2016 is that advertisers get all the privacy while voters get none. The NYU team challenged that orthodoxy and were silenced thru selective enforcement of an absurd interpretation of the FTC order. Facebook hasn’t changed folks. techpolicy.press/facebook-is-ea…
Another take today from @MarechalPhD:
“Facebook is an ad tech company. That’s how we should regulate it.”
Fun fact/Easter Egg about this tidbit in my piece: I learned about Bridgetree by scrolling thru public docs released from Brittany Kaiser’s hard drive (of Cambridge Analytica) relevant to the campaign law case against the company. apnews.com/article/electi…
UPDATE: FTC COMMENTS ON FACEBOOK’S TERRIBLE ACTIONS AGAINST NYU AD OBVS TEAM ftc.gov/news-events/bl…
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So I had this fun summer side project going where I meticulously thread 100 works of my all time favorite architect, 1 per day, and then fleeted the highlights with a bit of a storyline but I won’t finish all 100 houses on the schedule by the time fleets get the teardown on Aug 3
One theme of the threads are sleuthing out the important houses of record in satellite data that have since been torn down to make way for mcmansions and such. These houses are as ephemeral as fleeting fleets in the grand scheme of things.
But it turns out that Twitter HQ was disappointed that existing users employed the fleets feature to promote their own tweets (guilty as charged) instead of fleets yielding their intended business purpose to attract new Twitter users afraid of tweeting because they are durable.
They covered up Cambridge Analytica until forced to confront it because it was a GOP donor funded op.
They covered up Putin’s op because “company before country”
They do cover ups because they get away with it. There is no accountability. There is only public relations.
We are reminded of a factual error in the book #AnUgluTruth: Facebook learned about Cambridge Analytica before the Guardian report. This is public knowledge sourced from the Washington DC AG’s lawsuit against FB RE: CA.
Redactions newly revealed in this thread. Manafort’s lies about KILIMNICK ran much deeper than previously known. Incredible abuse to have pardoned the henchmen. Failures of Mueller, distortions by Barr, and cowardice of Senate Rs leading us down the path toward the insurrection.
“No collusion” but Manafort appears to have conspired with Putin’s spy to share voter data, campaign strategy, and Ukraine policy and lied about it, and was pardoned for lying about it.
In hindsight, Barr was diabolical in his redactions of the Mueller Report. Delay in getting redactions revealed by court allowed public and especially press to mistake the collusion question as resolved. Concealing the Cambridge Analytica question was a part of this clever scheme
Cryptocriminology: “Last year was a banner year for ransomware groups, according to a task-force of security experts and law enforcement agencies which estimated that victims paid about $350 million in ransom last year, a 311% increase over 2019.” bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
Thread on the criminality-at-scale intrinsically enabled by decentralized finance and digital currencies easily corrupted despite a religious belief in maths.
☑️Right to Know, Transfer, Delete
☑️Right to sue
☑️Duty of care
☑️Cambridge Analytica Bankruptcy loophole closed
☑️anti-Algorithmic bias
☑️Data broker registry
☑️unambiguous, fair-and-square opt-in, revocable, anti-dark pattern, anti-discriminatory consent UX requirements
…
New York needs to lead the nation,
set the highest standards, and strive for GDPR adequacy to maintain lawful and protected flows of data internationally. Splinternet is the alternative so tech lobbyists *must* support #NewYorkPrivacyAct to prove they’re serious about adequacy.