-
Maybe Rethink the Cult of Virality?
TechCrunch has a story seemingly sympathetic to Facebook’s plight, which has this graf in it: Because Facebook and some other platforms reward engagement, news outlets are incentivized to frame stories as sensationally as possible. While long-running partisan outlets may be held accountable for exaggeration, newer outlets built specifically to take advantage of virality on networks Continue reading
-
Banning Ads Is Nice, but the Problem Is Facebook’s Underlying Model
So Facebook will ban fake news sites from their ads network, as will Google, which shows you exactly how hard it would have been to do this six months ago. But in any case, problem solved, right? Unfortunately, no. Fake sites that get traffic can get on other ad networks, or go the malware route, or Continue reading
-
The “They Had Their Minds Made Up Anyway” Excuse
BGR graciously linked my post from the weekend, a post showing that the scale at which fake news stories trend on Facebook can dwarf traditional news in terms of shares. (Thanks, BGR!) However, they end with this paragraph, which I’d like to reply to: On a related note, it stands to reason that most individuals prone Continue reading
-
Facebook and Twitter Are Probably Making Google a Liar as Well
Kevin Drum points out that if you search on Google to find out whether Hillary won the popular vote (she did) that one of the top results lies, right in the headline. How does 70news, a right wing site fond of claiming Trump protests are being funded by prominent Jewish banker George Soros, get to Continue reading
-
Despite Zuckerberg’s Protests, Fake News Does Better on Facebook Than Real News. Here’s Data to Prove It.
(An investigation in which we decide to use Facebook’s social graph API to see whether fake news or real news is more viral). UPDATE: Since posting, there has been some discussion about this post’s use of the phrase “top stories from local newspapers”. A clarification on how that phrase is used has been appended at Continue reading
-
Facebook Broke Democracy, but the Fix Is Harder Than People Realize.
You know, I’ve always complained about the use of “broke” when applied to things like democracy. How simple, right? But over the past few days I’ve not been in my normal nuanced mood. I’ve said, in fifteen different ways over the past year, that our stream-based model of social media was making us dumber. But Continue reading
-
Notes on How Social Media Broke Our Democracy
I could not sleep last night at all. So I organized my notes I’ve been taking over the last year on the problem of doing politics in advertising funded stream-based systems. I know this election was about so much more than that (so much more), and our problems are so much deeper. But I remain Continue reading
-
I’m Writing a Book On the Disinfotopia of Current Social Media
I’ve decided to write a book before the year is out. I’ve decided this because I think the most pressing current issue for Open Pedagogy practitioners in the U.S. right now is how we address a social media environment that seems to be bringing out many of our worst demons, and I think several years Continue reading
-
Here’s My Problem With Hypothes.is
Here’s my problem with Hypothesis, the annotation tool. I think it’s also an opportunity. A friend shares a list of “100 biggest Clinton Wikileaks Revelations” on Facebook. As expected, it’s just a mess of fuzzy thinking and misinformation, tied weakly to links to emails. I think — hey, here’s a good opportunity for Hypothesis. Maybe Continue reading
-
Neoliberalism and Textbooks (I promise this is better than it sounds)
There is a lesser known argument about neoliberalism which sees neoliberalism not as a power grab by the elite, but as a form of statecraft which allowed politicians to distance themselves from hard decisions. From Matt Stoller’s summary of Greta Krippner’s Capitalizing on Crisis: The argument popularized by Inside Job filmmaker Charles Ferguson and Roosevelt Institute fellow Continue reading