New Facebook whistleblower shines light on algorithmic harms. The solution is privacy legislation that makes Facebook’s surveillance driven business model illegal. Congress can and should pass a privacy law strong enough to kill Facebook. #facebookdown#facebookwhistleblower
Last night, the whistleblower behind a series of Wall Street Journal articles about Facebook revealed herself in interviews with 60 minutes and a number of major news outlets. wsj.com/articles/the-f…
Frances Haugen, a former member of Facebook’s civic integrity team, correctly points to algorithmic-amplification-that’s-maximized-for-engagement as being at the root of many of Facebook’s harms.
Notably, this is something that human rights activists and experts have been saying for years, and it’s not just Facebook––other giants like YouTube employ the exact same surveillance capitalist business model.
So the question is, in this watershed moment that could define the future of technology and public policy, what do we as a society do with this information?
Fight for the Future,a leading digital rights group known for organizing the largest online protests in human history in defense of net neutrality & against online surveillance, issued the following statement, which can be attributed to the group’s director, Evan Greer (she/her):
“The Internet is awesome. Facebook is terrible. This is a watershed moment where we need to fight for policy that preserves the democratizing and revolutionary potential of the Internet, while finally putting an end...
to the inherently harmful business model of Silicon Valley’s most powerful companies. We owe thanks to ALL of the whistleblowers and journalists who have helped shine a light on the grim inner workings of Facebook’s surveillance capitalist machine...
The problem with Facebook’s products is not that they host user generated content. It’s that they use machine learning to show us the content that Facebook thinks we want to see (and suppress content that they don’t want us to see or think we don’t want to see)...
... in order to keep us on the platform longer and sell more ads. What Facebook sells is not an online message board where people can express themselves, it’s surveillance-driven algorithmic manipulation that’s maximized for engagement.
Regulating the algorithms that companies like Facebook and YouTube use to recommend content can be difficult––many policies that attempt to do so run afoul of the First Amendment.
Other suggestions, like changing #Section230 of the Communications Decency Act, would do more harm than good, silence the voices of marginalized communities, and could actually solidify Big Tech giants’ monopoly power. theverge.com/2021/1/27/2225…
But here’s what we can do. Congress should pass a Federal data privacy law strong enough to kill Facebook’s current business model entirely.
Outright banning harmful algorithmic amplification is hard, but lawmakers can absolutely make it illegal for Big Tech companies to engage in the mass surveillance and data harvesting practices that power the algorithms they use to recommend and suppress content.
This is where lawmakers should focus their attention coming out of tomorrow’s Senate hearing. In the coming days, Fight for the Future will launch a major new campaign calling for a privacy law strong enough to end surveillance-driven algorithmic recommendation.
As I wrote in a recent Twitter thread, to get the right answers we must ask the right questions.
Which problems are social media platforms merely shining a light on? Which problems are social media platforms actually causing or exacerbating? Of those problems, what is actually causing them?
Is it networked communications as a whole, or is it specific to a business practice like algorithmic manipulation. And finally, which problems are social media platforms (even the problematic ones) potentially addressing or mitigating?
If we don’t ask these questions then we will gravitate towards policy solutions that fail to address the root cause of Big Tech’s harms, or worse, policies that do more harm than good.
There is no single silver bullet solution that will magically fix the Internet. But pushing our elected officials to finally get off their butts and pass a real Federal data privacy law would be a damn good start.” fightforthefuture.org/news/2021-10-0…
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On 9/30 the House will likely vote to pass the #InfrastructureBill, but this isn't the end of the story. #Crypto isn't dead. On the contrary, this is a golden opportunity to form a much bigger, bipartisan coalition in support of a #decentralized internet.
Because of the 40,000+ #DontKillCrypto calls already, both Republicans and Democrats are calling to fix this unworkable legislation. Your rep should join them. You can see if they have + contact them at DontKillCrypto.com/#scoreboard
We're actively updating the scoreboard at DontKillCrypto.com to reflect which representatives support a fix for unworkable legislation. This is the best moment possible to ask your reps to join them. The plan for the next 48 hours is to do a big push.
EVERYONE: Use our scoreboard to see if your rep has made a public commitment. If they haven’t, use our easy tools to contact your rep now. If they reply, let us know at Team@FightForTheFuture.org. Then, make sure your friends and collaborators do the same by the morning of 9/30.
NEW: #Librarians are under attack and we need to make a big stink between now and 10/4. Unless the US Copyright Office hears from enough of us, librarians will be fired and fined up to $30,000 for sharing resources copyright trolls don't like with patrons. fightforthefuture.org/actions/defend…
Our friends at @library_futures have a great writeup on what's going on with the extremely problematic #CASEAct to make this even a thing.
"Increasingly, libraries are under attack from private sector interests that want to replace the library card with a credit card, and this harmful move to limit what resources people are allowed to learn about at their library is the latest dangerous step." - @LiaHolland
THREAD: Imagine if all of these activists & marginalized people could never be financially deplatformed by governments or big banks. That’s the future we’re fighting for w/ #DontKillCrypto — there’s no #Cryptocurrency unless we stand up & demand the things #crypto can get right.
#OnlyFans deplatforming sex workers is only the latest in a long and impressive line of those major corporations have tried to destroy by cutting off their ability to earn or access $$$ cnet.com/news/onlyfans-…
Amnesty International's bank account was frozen by Indian authorities after publishing reports on human rights violations under the Modi government. cbsnews.com/news/india-amn…
This is our first statement on the #JCPAct, a looming disaster for the right to share online.
If you think fake news is bad now, just wait—#JCPA creates a monopolistic pipeline to put Facebook $ into Fox News hands & limit who can share news online.
Rupert Murdoch is drooling.
The #JCPAct speeds up the decline of journalism+rise of disinfo, while pretending to do the opposite. Under it, online platforms would pay big news orgs for linking to them or using their content in some undefined way.
Funneling internet $ to rich propagandists like Murdoch.
The premise of #JCPAct is that News Corp, Fox News, all the biggest peddlers of disinfo in news, need a special law to link up and collude more with Facebook, the biggest peddler of disinfo online—using their power to crush local journalism in the process.
The US government just launched a sneak-attack on our financial privacy rights, proposing a new rule to let the Treasury track cryptocurrency transactions. And if you think this doesn’t affect you just because you don’t own #Bitcoin, think again.
Here’s why ...
1/12
Imagine you buy a new car. And because you bought a new car, your bank has to give the federal government information that allows them to track EVERY PURCHASE YOU’VE MADE IN YOUR ENTIRE LIFE … without a warrant.
That’s what’s going on here.
2/12
FinCEN — a bureau within the US Treasury — has proposed a new rule forcing any banks or money service businesses to keep records on all cryptocurrency transactions over $3,000 going to or from personal wallets … without a warrant.