It’s Time to Defund Social Media

https://www.wired.com/story/its-time-to-defund-social-media


First, it would minimize the incentive to be an asshole. If you’re not rewarding people with clicks and likes for antagonistic behaviors, there’s less reason for them to keep doing it. This is a dynamic as old as trolldom. As long as something generates capital—whether economic or social—there’s no reason to stop. In fact, one’s livelihood might depend on keeping it up, and doing it even worse the next time.

Second, foregrounding the good-faith majority short-circuits the amplification feedback loops that normalize harm. I made this argument back in April in response to the anti-quarantine protests: when you frame a fringe movement as a mainstream one, it has a funny tendency to become exactly that. In the case of masks, propagating the anti-maskers’ arguments, even to condemn them, risks spreading those arguments to even more people who might be sympathetic. At the very least, it muddies the issue—if so many people are fighting about masks, does that mean there’s something here to fight about?

Another structural cause of our informational woes is embedded in straightforward-seeming ways to fix them. One of the most common is the assumption that calling attention to a harm will help to mitigate it; this is sometimes referred to as the “sunlight disinfects” model of media. All we need to do is show that the bad thing is happening—that Karen is at it again—and let the marketplace of ideas, that great Costco in the sky, handle the rest. People will use their critical thinking skills to compare being a Karen with not being a Karen, and the result will be fewer Karens. The problem is, the people most likely to arrive at this conclusion are the ones who already agree. Sharing mask freakout videos, or other content spotlighting anti-maskers, still amplifies their messages, however, looping us right back to all the ways the attention economy incentivizes the tyranny of the loudest. Such a system isn’t just good for Karens; it was built for Karens.

Fact-checking is another idea that sounds good on paper but is quite tricky in practice. Many approach the spread of false or misleading information as a case of people not having all the facts. If we only said the facts more loudly, we could stop the flow of bad information. In reality, the people who see masks as an encroachment on their rights, who think the threat of the virus has been overblown, or that Anthony Fauci is actually Bill Gates in a George Soros mask, don’t arrive at those conclusions because they’re low-information rubes. They’re often steeped in information. That information, however, is filtered through what Ryan Milner and I call deep memetic frames: sense-making apparatuses that structure how people see the world, and the ways that they respond to it.

As Milner and I illustrate throughout our book, fact checks aimed at deep memetic frames rarely have the intended effect—you can trace this from the Satanic Panics of the 1980s and 1990s to QAnon. The precise reasons why are complicated; research around the efficacy of fact checking is, let’s say, mixed. What is clear is that throwing facts at falsehood doesn’t magically change hearts and minds. If it did, we wouldn’t be in this mess.

So what’s the best way forward? How do we avoid pushing an already terrible situation to an even worse place? The answer is fundamental structural change. We need to reimagine what our networks can and should be. We need to put justice over profits. We need to defund social media. Individual people can’t do that on their own, of course. Even journalists are limited in the effects they can personally have; everyone’s a dollar sign to someone up the chain. Still, by identifying the systems we’re all embedded within and considering how those systems are fundamentally part of our problems, we can make choices—about the things we publicize, who we share them with, how we choose to frame them—that, at the very least, actively resist information dysfunction, rather than greasing its wheels.

Photographs: Duncan Andison/Getty images; Brendan O’Sullivan/Getty Images; Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images

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July 21, 2020 at 07:09AM

SpaceX pulls off its first double fairing catch after a Falcon 9 launch

https://www.engadget.com/space-x-falcon-9-005622474.html

Part of the SpaceX mission has been to create reusable rockets that make spaceflight cheaper, and it has become routine to see the company’s booster rockets return safely to Earth. With today’s launch SpaceX set a new milestone by catching both halves of the nosecone fairing, according to a tweet from CEO Elon Musk.

He’s previously said the parts are worth about $6 million, and while the company has reused some after they landed in the sea or a ship caught one half, it’s potentially cheaper to get them back undamaged if both fall into a net.

We don’t have video of the fairing recovery itself yet (the picture above is from a test), but you can see the successful catch of one half after a launch last year, as well as video of the Falcon 9’s first stage making its safe landing on a drone ship.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

July 20, 2020 at 08:06PM

South Korea’s self-isolation app had a serious security flaw

https://www.engadget.com/south-korea-covid-19-quarantine-app-security-flaw-140546257.html

South Korea is one of several countries that used a comprehensive test, trace and isolate plan to dramatically reduce instances of COVID-19. Unfortunately, a New York Times report claims that one of the key pillars of its strategy, a mobile app designed to monitor at-home quarantines for people arriving in the country, was seriously insecure. A security researcher found a flaw in the app that would have allowed hackers to access private information. In addition, hackers would have been able to rig the app to make someone look like they were making unauthorized trips outside their home.

Security researcher Frédéric Rechtenstein, who lives in Seoul, was using the app to monitor his own 14-day isolation period after traveling. Out of curiosity, he began investigating the app, finding that the user IDs were not randomly generated and therefore guessable, enabling him to access this private information. In addition, the app’s code stored the encryption key (which was “1234567890123456” within its code, making it even easier for a motivated hacker to decrypt any data they wished to access.

The Times says that Korean officials have apologized for the breach, with Jung Chan-hyun saying that the issue was down to the speed of the app’s implementation. The app’s developers, Winitech, said that staffers lacked proper security training to make the app as secure as necessary. Winitech MD Hong Seong-bok added that the government’s onerous feature requests, like adding more surveillance features, slowed down the team’s work on finding bugs and fixing them. 

It’s believed that the holes in the app, were fixed in an update to both Android and iOS version last week. Officials added that there had been no claim, or evidence, that anyone had actually breached the system before the developers were alerted. 

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

July 21, 2020 at 09:12AM

South Korea’s largest web company pulls its data centers from Hong Kong

https://www.engadget.com/naver-hong-kong-security-law-120547523.html

Naver is the latest technology company that has decided to leave Hong Kong in the wake of China’s tightening grip on the region. The Financial Times reports that the South Korean company behind (messaging app) Line is pulling its data centers from Hong Kong. The facilities will be relocated to Singapore, with Naver saying that the new Hong Kong National Security Law was a contributing factor in the decision. 

For technology companies, Hong Kong has become a useful base of operations in Asia, with proximity to China without its onerous governance. A new law, however, will potentially empower China with the ability to access, seize, control and censor data held on servers in the region. Consequently, a number of big tech companies are reconsidering how best to handle the change in circumstances. 

That includes TikTok, which is pulling out of Hong Kong in response to the law, while Facebook (and WhatsApp) said it will “pause” responses to data requests. Google, Telegram and Twitter, too, have said that they will temporarily stop working with local law enforcement. And a Bloomberg report says that a number of technology companies are currently reconsidering their facilities based in the area. 

Hong Kong became a British colony in 1842, which was handed back to China in 1997 under a treaty known as the Joint Declaration. The document said that, until 2047, China would respect the region’s laws and economic systems — better known as the “fifty-year rule.” Since then, China has serially attempted to undermine Hong Kong’s semi-autonomous rule, leading to a number of independence movements. 

In 2020, the country erupted again with protests — stemming from an earlier conflict around an extradition law. Officials opted to pass a new national security bill, which criminalized numerous forms of protected speech, including advocating for independence and criticizing China’s government. It also enables China to extradite people to the mainland for trial, raising concerns about human rights violations — much like those metered out to the country’s Uighur population.

Companies that fail to co-operate with Chinese officials, for instance by handing over individuals private data, could be met with serious fines or prison sentences. It’s likely that a number of companies will have to withdraw their facilities from the territory or risk financial or personal ruin. 

Hong Kong’s tech scene more generally may also suffer from a brain drain as technology workers leave the region to escape the law. The UK, which has condemned China’s actions, has offered around 2.6 million residents the right to live and work there with a path to citizenship within six years. 

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

July 21, 2020 at 07:12AM

I Accidentally Became A Meme: Success Kid 13 Years Later [Video]

https://www.geeksaresexy.net/2020/07/18/i-accidentally-became-a-meme-success-kid-13-years-later-video/

Sam and his parents recount how a family photo led to one of the biggest memes on the internet and changed their lives forever.

[BuzzFeedVideo | Via Neatorama]

The post I Accidentally Became A Meme: Success Kid 13 Years Later [Video] appeared first on Geeks are Sexy Technology News.

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July 18, 2020 at 05:00AM