Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Twitter Social Networks United States Politics

Twitter Will Turn Off Some Features To Fight Election Misinformation (nytimes.com) 97

Twitter, risking the ire of its best-known user, President Trump, said on Friday that it would turn off several of its routine features in an attempt to control the spread of misinformation in the final weeks before the presidential election. From a report: The first notable change, Twitter said, will essentially give users a timeout before they can hit the button to retweet a post from another account. A prompt will nudge them to add their own comment or context before sharing the original post. Twitter will also disable the system that suggests posts on the basis of someone's interests and the activity of accounts they follow. In their timelines, users will see only content from accounts they follow and ads. And if users try to share content that Twitter has flagged as false, a notice will warn them that they are about to share inaccurate information.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Twitter Will Turn Off Some Features To Fight Election Misinformation

Comments Filter:
  • Trump is going to lose because he doesn't appeal to women. (Unless he can pull an amazing last debate out of his pocket which seems unlikely.)
    • Re:Doesn't matter (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:08PM (#60588884) Journal
      Assuming the election is legitimate: Trump will lose, and not just because of Democrat and Independent voters; there are plenty of Republican voters who have had it demonstrated repeatedly to them that Trump was a mistake. To be fair to them, it's not like they had much of choice in 2016, at least not in November: the Republican party couldn't come up with anyone better, and that's not saying much, and speaking as someone who at the time was an Independent, it's not like anyone really wanted to vote for Hillary Clinton, either, she's untrustworthy as well, just in different ways. So let's face it, kids: the 2016 election was a dumpster fire all the way around. But as previously stated, there are plenty of Republican voters who have seen that Trump is overall at least the worst President this country has had in this generation, and they can't stomach another 4 years of his bullshit. They'll either hold their noses and vote for Joe Biden, or they'll vote for some third-party or write-in candidate, or they just won't vote for POTUS at all. Trump will be out. Trumps' zealot base supporters will threaten civil war but that's not going to happen; there'll be riots, I'm sure. But Trump will leave, even if the U.S. Marshall service has to escort him and his entourage off Whitehouse grounds. Republicans will bide their time until 2024 and try to get a real GOP candidate back into the Whitehouse. Just cross your fingers that it isn't Mike Pence, that's about the only thing that would be worse than Trump.

      That's all assuming the election is legitimate. We've all seen signs that Trump and his sycophants are trying to cheat the process and steal the election through various voter suppression tactics. Sadly, I have to admit that it's possible his machinations could be successful, resulting in a totally fraudulent election. In which case we might just end up with a civil war. I'm just hoping there are still enough people in positions of responsibility, who have the integrity to uphold the Constitution, to prevent those efforts from succeeding. We can't allow someone like Donald Trump to continue taking a steaming dump on the Constitution.

      As a sidebar to this, Congress needs to NOT confirm that crazy-eyed religious nutjob to the Supreme Court. That, in and of itself, is a politicization of our judicial system, and that should not be allowed. You want to talk about Trump not getting the womens' vote? That creature he nominated is like some Bizzarro Earth parody of RBG, diametrically opposed to everything RBG stood for.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Yeechang Lee ( 3429 )

        So the only way Trump wins, acording to you, is if the election is "illegitimate". Any election Trump wins is illegitimate, and any election he loses is legitimate. Got it.

        • At least TRY to put aside your confirmation bias and your overall bias, please? You think I'm making this shit up out of wholecloth? Just 'propaganda'? Get real.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Also must be an interesting world you have there inside your head, where you just plain ignore things right in front of your face that don't agree with your worldview, and only acknowledge and embrace the things that do. Or are you so deep in denial that you're going to claim that all the audio quotes of Trump talking about how he won't accept losing, will 'do something about it', his thinly-veiled efforts at voter suppression, trying to strong-arm the USPS into not supporting vote-by-mail, and so on, are a
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Xenographic ( 557057 )

            Look in the mirror, man, you're the one saying "Assuming the election is legitimate: Trump will lose"

            You've already precomitted to declaring that there's only one valid outcome of this election, so how can you even call anyone else out?

      • Republicans will bide their time until 2024 and try to get a real GOP candidate back into the Whitehouse

        It will be Ivanka Trump.

      • I'm not in the US, but honestly: Is the choice in 2020 any better than it was in 2016?

        In 2016: Trump was...Trump. Hillary was a slimey crook, and had obvious health problems.

        In 2020: Trump is...Trump. Biden gropes young girls in public, and has obvious signs of senility.

        Y'all could pick random names out of a phone book, and get better candidates. I'm honestly not sure who's going to win in 2020 - I expect a lot of people to change their minds at the last minute, in both directions. It's a coin toss, who's g

        • Thank for demonstrating the very misinformation Twitter is talking about.

          Funny how you never mentioned the con artist being both a slimy crook and having obvious health problems, nor that fact the con artist has both assaulted and raped women and has clear signs of early onset dementia.

          Funny how that works.

        • Nobody asked you.
      • Right, Trump's the one cheating, and not the Democrats including Obama who was briefed by Brennan himself about intelligence at the highest levels that Hillary was creating the false Russian narrative.

      • Re:Doesn't matter (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @04:15PM (#60589542)

        The Republican primaries had a lot of people who were better. Maybe all the always-trumpers label them RINOs, but they were indeed true blue Republicans in name and deed. Sheesh, even people I really dislike would have been so much better, like Ted Cruz. Trump even insulted Ted's wife but when Trump won the primary Ted turned around and kissed Trump's ass. Every one of those so-called RINOs would have appointed conservative judges just like Trump did, but they would have done that without being a joke that causes us to be laughed at by the rest of the world. They would have done that without whistfully praising Putin and Kim and Duterte for being strong leaders.

        Trump won essentially due to a revolt from a core set of conservative voters against the Republican party. And this is sort of a remnant of the Reform Party in a lot of ways if you follow the spiralling history there. And we're stuck in that because of our winner-takes-all elections which essentially forces us to have only two viable parties, which means that each party has a diverse set of wings all upset at the fact that they have to get along with each other.

      • Which party was pushing for mass mail voting while also pressing for the removal of voter ID laws? What party in Pennsylvania removes the signature match requirement? Which party said mail in voting was fine, only to be proven wrong now with multiple stories of ballots being thrown out, ballots being stolen, ballots being harvested, and general mishaps causing ballots to either be faulty or not arrive at all?

        Hint: It wasnâ(TM)t the Republicans.

  • Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by apcullen ( 2504324 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:30PM (#60588770)

    And if users try to share content that Twitter has flagged as false, a notice will warn them that they are about to share inaccurate information.

    Why would you ever allow someone to share something that's been flagged as false? I mean, shouldn't the behavior be that you get an error message saying sorry this is false and you're not allowed to spread falsehoods? And shouldn't that be the behavior all the time not just right around the election?

    • I agree. And it's not as if the warning is going to do anything to stop them or change their mind. Those that believe such false claims aren't going to change their mind because Twitter tells them it's fake. They'll simply see that as the liberal media trying to silence them and they'll double down on sharing such false information.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        Actually I've seen more false information in the form of misleading fact checking lately. The fact checks beat down some similar sounding strawman. Half the time they contain blatant biased opinion that has no business on a fact check things like 'technically this bit is true but this guy is a hypocrite because.." or "he is unlikely to mean it because of this or that [supposedly contradictory thing he said or did another time]." With a false conclusion. That isn't fact checking, that is opinion.

        Did you know

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          You showed a half dozen or more types of bias in your statement, which was exactly the point of my original comment. Confirmation Bias and a number of other biases cause people (yourself clearly included) to believe things that support their own views, regardless of the truth.
          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            Yes, I've shown examples of bias. You've simply stated some exist without supporting your statement whatsoever, proving nothing. Truth is found indepedent of bias through a combination of logical support, facts, and evidenciary support. You've presented none of that and have failed to undermine any of the support I provided.

            My comment just presents a string of known falsehoods spreading on the internet and generic examples of faulty logic I've been finding in fact checks, intentionally abstracted from any s

            • What infuriates me the most is that the mainstream national media was exposed under Bush Jr. for what it was...a propaganda machine willing to spread lies for those it aligned with politically...and people have forgotten that, now believing everything they see about Trump from CNN and the like.

              I can remember how the media helped sell the pointless war in Iraq, how they continued to lie during it, and then eventually getting caught in their lies and being exposed...I donâ(TM)t understand how people can

        • I've too have been disappointed and saddened by the supposed independent media and fact based fact checkers.
          Even previously reputable sources like NPR and APNews are letting bias and slanted reporting and unnecessary colorful/biased adjectives and interpretation destroy the trust in free press.
          If you cannot report the news without obvious prejudice, then I'm not sure you deserve free press protection or access.

    • Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by magzteel ( 5013587 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:37PM (#60588798)

      And if users try to share content that Twitter has flagged as false, a notice will warn them that they are about to share inaccurate information.

      Why would you ever allow someone to share something that's been flagged as false?

      I mean, shouldn't the behavior be that you get an error message saying sorry this is false and you're not allowed to spread falsehoods? And shouldn't that be the behavior all the time not just right around the election?

      Who decided it was false? Usually some hired "fact-checker" with their own bias and agenda.
      Here's an account of a recent incident involving John Stossel
      https://www.dailynews.com/2020... [dailynews.com]

      • Re: Why? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by t4eXanadu ( 143668 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:55PM (#60588844)

        "Usually" and yet you give one example. That's not usual, that is unusual.

        This is how peer-review works in science, essentially (although the reviewers ideally have no conflicts of interest). It's not fool-proof, nothing involving human review ever is.

        Ideally, fact-checking would be done by an independent body, but who appoints them, and are they compensated for it? Regardless if those issues, it's patently better to have some kind of checking, rather than none at all.

        • "Usually" and yet you give one example. That's not usual, that is unusual.

          Really? How did you arrive at this "fact-check" conclusion?
          An objective opinion would be "Based on this example we know it occurs, we don't know to what extent".

          I think you just demonstrated the problem with fact-checking.

        • it's too easy to make your own accounts who will screw with the review process and there's too much money and power at stake doing that.

          So it's like buying crap. Don't trust the reviews, look for sources of information you can trust that have commented on it. And if you get burnt remember and adjust accordingly.
      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater@gmaLISPil.com minus language> on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:09PM (#60588890) Homepage

        Who decided it was false? Usually some hired "fact-checker" with their own bias and agenda.

        Translation: Who decided it was false? Usually some hired fact checker who actually fact checks and won't let nutjobs spread lies and propaganda. That sucks. Nutjobs should be allowed to spread lies and propaganda!"

        The simple fact is this: He spread a video containing misleading information. He even admits he spread a video containing misinformation. Fact checking worked completely as designed - by catching a nutjob knowingly spreading misinformation and flagging it.

        • Who decided it was false? Usually some hired "fact-checker" with their own bias and agenda.

          Translation: Who decided it was false? Usually some hired fact checker who actually fact checks and won't let nutjobs spread lies and propaganda. That sucks. Nutjobs should be allowed to spread lies and propaganda!"

          The simple fact is this: He spread a video containing misleading information. He even admits he spread a video containing misinformation. Fact checking worked completely as designed - by catching a nutjob knowingly spreading misinformation and flagging it.

          You are focusing on "he" and "a video". This is about a policy that applies across the board.
          It is naïve to believe that hired special interest group fact-checkers are unbiased.

          • You are under the mistaken impression that users are paying twitter to deliver messages to other people. They aren't. Users are posting things on twitter and twitter is promoting that content to other users to make money. If that content turns out to be false, Twitter is committing fraud. (Whether they are legally prosecuted for it or not.) The fact-checkers are there to protect twitter. That is their bias. If that bias is not what people want in a service, the "free market" will create another servic

          • You are focusing on "he" and "a video". This is about a policy that applies across the board.

            I'm focusing on the example you presented - which is an example of the system working exactly as designed. It stopped misleading material from being spread.

            It is naÃve to believe that hired special interest group fact-checkers are unbiased.

            You didn't present an example of bias. You presented an example of misleading material being flagged.

            That's what you're having a hard time grasping, it's not bias t

            • You are focusing on "he" and "a video". This is about a policy that applies across the board.

              I'm focusing on the example you presented - which is an example of the system working exactly as designed. It stopped misleading material from being spread.

              It is naÃve to believe that hired special interest group fact-checkers are unbiased.

              You didn't present an example of bias. You presented an example of misleading material being flagged.

              That's what you're having a hard time grasping, it's not bias to mark misleading material as being misleading. That's what fact checkers are supposed to do.

              You didn't read the article then. He spoke to two of the three "fact checkers" and they both said they hadn't seen the video.
              When he showed it to them they said it was fine.
              Then subsequently, perhaps after having a group meeting at the office, they changed their minds.

              This isn't right.

      • Who decided it was false? Usually some hired "fact-checker" with their own bias and agenda.

        A social media platform should not be in the business of vetting "truth". Too many issues are too complex. Even if the "fact checkers" were actually neutral and conscientious, they cannot possibly do the job they are assigned. Either they they have to check a zillion tweets/posts/videos to earn their salary, meaning checks are so superficial as to be meaningless. Or they are part of some group that doesn't care so muc

    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      Why would you ever presume to prevent someone from sharing something? Also, truth is relative and twitter is not arbiter of what is and is not truth. Since that is exactly the kind of gatekeeper role they are attempting to play in order to manipulate elections alongside the other major tech companies they want to create the appearance of taking actions consistent with that role.

      • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:53PM (#60588836) Journal

        Also, truth is relative...

        Categorically false. What you believe might be relative, but truth is whatever reality that actually exists independent of what people believe about it.

        It may very well be the case that nobody knows or even necessarily believes what might actually be true about a given situation, but that does not remotely change the veracity of it, and the truth may yet eventually still be discovered later.

        Objective truth absolutely exists.

        Disagreement about truth is actually just a disagreement about belief, and does not ever change what actually happened.

        • Also, truth is relative...

          Categorically false. What you believe might be relative, but truth is whatever reality that actually exists independent of what people believe about it.

          Person A says " It is 70 degrees F outside."
          Person B says "It is warm outside"
          Person C says "It is chilly outside"

          All of these statements are true, even if person B says person C's statement is false.

          • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:51PM (#60589096) Journal

            Only A's statement could be objectively true, as the notions of "warm" and "chilly" are themselves a subjective assessment lacking any objective qualification.

            It is meaningless to assert that a statement made that is using subjective terminology is true or false.

            This does not mean that truth is relative.

            • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

              Truth is even more relative than that. Instrument A says it is 70 F outside. Instrument B says it is 72 F outside, Instrument C says it is 71 F outside. There is relative truth even in objective external measurement. They could even be the same instrument! We have protocols that all amount to arriving at consensus for precisely this reason, even then consensus smooths out variation and increases reliability more so than make a result more or less true. You should look at how references for time and NTP work

              • Re:Why? (Score:5, Informative)

                by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:21PM (#60589224) Journal
                Errors in measurement that are within the tolerance of the device which was used to make the measurement do not mean that the measurement is false, only that it imprecise.
                • by PPH ( 736903 )

                  I have a high quality, guaranteed accurate thermometer with me. Right here in my back pocket.

                  • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

                    OMG you should sell it! NIST will be so happy to have a reference that they can use to calibrate THEIR reference and the EU will be absolutely thrilled when they can then use that to fix any discrepancy with their own reference.

                • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

                  Defining a tolerance is (to quote me in the post you replied to) an example of "protocols that all amount to arriving at consensus." How do you set the tolerance on your reference? You figure out within what margin you get a consistent result (consensus) and agreement with other trusted sources (consensus).

          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            Truth is even more relative than that. Instrument A says it is 70 F outside. Instrument B says it is 72 F outside, Instrument C says it is 71 F outside. There is relative truth even in objective external measurement. They could even be the same instrument! We have protocols that all amount to arriving at consensus for precisely this reason, even then consensus smooths out variation and increases reliability more so than make a result more or less true and the consensus achieved is rarely absolute. History i

          • Person A is stating a truth.

            Persons B and C are stating opinions.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Your pedantry over the reality of physical events isn't wrong, just irrelevant to the masses who discuss subjectives, interpretations, speculatives, opinions, etc

          eg "X was responsible for Y", "A was B"s fault", "C sucks", "D isn't doing enough about E", "F is planning to G"

          Yes, ten people died in an industrial accident. No one's discussing the objective reality of that number being eleven. They'll be eager to discuss the corporation's statement saying "Those workers didn't do enough safety checks". Not beca

          • Your pedantry over the reality of physical events isn't wrong, just irrelevant to the masses who discuss subjectives, interpretations, speculatives, opinions, etc

            eg "X was responsible for Y", "A was B"s fault", "C sucks", "D isn't doing enough about E", "F is planning to G"

            Yes, ten people died in an industrial accident. No one's discussing the objective reality of that number being eleven. They'll be eager to discuss the corporation's statement saying "Those workers didn't do enough safety checks". Not because they're discussing the objective reality of what the statement's words were, that's an objective record, they're discussing what it *means*. Human meaning is less black and white, our concerns are primarily a world of ascribing.

            "Ten/eleven people died" is not relative. It can have a veracity measurement.
            "Ten people died because of X" is relative. Even people who WERE there (and we sure as fuck weren't, nor the talking heads) will need to hesitate before spouting about veracity.

            Your example is good, because fact-checkers will subjectively decide that attributing the deaths to a cause they agree with is the truth, and anything else is misinformation.

          • Yes yes yes, we get it - objective facts don't matter because feelings are more important. Except, you're not allowed to even have your own feelings because Twitter will deny you that right.

            Which is why we're in this stupid situation we're in today.

          • Re:Why? (Score:4, Insightful)

            by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Friday October 09, 2020 @03:05PM (#60589156) Journal

            "Ten people died because of X" is relative.

            One can examine the chain of causality to determine whether this is the case or not.

            If X did not happen in the first place, then clearly the statement is false.

            So you first need to determine if X ever happened in the first place.

            If X did happen, then you can examine the chain of causation in the events that led to their death to determine if X somehow indirectly caused those people to die where, and especially to determine that if X had not occurred, then the people would not have died if all other things which were not caused by X had been equal. After the analysis, if you find that they would have died independently of X, then it is objectively incorrect to say that X caused their death, even if X happened and they died.

            Objective reality even on matters of assigning blame exists. At most the case might be that we don't know what the truth is, but that doesn't mean that it isn't there.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          It may very well be the case that nobody knows or even necessarily believes what might actually be true about a given situation,

          And therein lies the rub. Flagging true/false involves the personal beliefs and perceptions of the people doing the flagging. If we want to descent into philosophical pedantry, how do we know that anything is true [youtube.com]?

          • by mark-t ( 151149 )

            There are some things that we can irrefutably say are true....Descartes infamous "I think, therefore I am" comes to mind as what in my own view might be the pinnacle of such.

            Also, we can (usually) reasonably accept the reality around us as provided by our senses. While obviously, senses can still be deceived, I am referring to the general case here. Barring relatively rare mental disorders, the information relayed to our conscious minds generally reflects a sufficient approximation of reality that it c

        • Found the Philosophy Major!

          • by mark-t ( 151149 )
            CS Major, actually... took a couple of philosophy courses for my arts requirement
            • Just joking with you... My son has a MA in Philosophy and that comment sounded a lot like something he would say.

    • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:55PM (#60588848) Homepage

      Not sure about Twitter, but Facebook does warn you if a post is going to be flagged. The reason you’d still want to allow the user the ultimate choice of still continuing to post is because the flagging algorithms quite frankly, suck.

      The other day I wanted to share that thing about whitehousegiftshop selling a “Trump Beat Covid-19” coin. Facebook flagged it because they considered it to be “potentially misleading”, because people might assume it was an officially government authorized minted coin and not just a kitschy collectible created in incredibly poor taste (regardless of who thought it was a good idea to sell).

      Let’s talk about the real elephant in the room when it comes to misinformation: shitty public education. If more people grasped the concept of critical thinking skills, we wouldn’t need social media networks playing nanny over what information we can and cannot share.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Another reason you would want to allow sharing of fake information is to criticise or correct it.

        Anyway you can't really stop it. Often people just screenshot the post anyway so that people can see stuff in closed groups or from accounts they are blocked from following.

      • No, the elephant in the room is that if Facebook knows something is false and still lets an individual "post" it, Facebook has knowingly defrauded others. The whole idea that Facebook or twitter "lets" someone post something is backwards. Facebook and twitter are the ones delivering the message to other people, KNOWING its content SO THAT THEY CAN MAKE MONEY OFF IT. i.e. their own system proves that they make money by coaxing victims onto the platform with fraudulent content.
    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by urusan ( 1755332 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:38PM (#60589038)

      Personally, I think the "soft" way to handle these situations that Twitter had to develop to deal with the sensitive situation of the POTUS spreading misinformation on Twitter is a great improvement over the "hard" way of straight up censorship.

      Think about it, by suppressing dissenting views entirely (even if most of these ideas are terrible or stupid), you drive them underground. Thanks to the scarcity heuristic, rare views seem more valuable to our brains, even when they're not. I mean, why do "they" not want you to know about this stuff? Additionally, if you're getting this information from an underground channel, you aren't going to be getting any counter-viewpoints like you would in an open forum. Once you're hooked by a piece of "secret" special information, then an ideological group can easily pull you in further and work on indoctrinating you further.

      While presenting the counter-viewpoint along with the misinformation does allow the misinformation to spread through normal channels, it shuts down the scarcity heuristic. It's just more information on the giant pile of information. While this could trigger one's availability bias, the availability of the counter-viewpoint will trigger the same bias, preventing one from overcoming the other on bias ground alone.

      Also, as some other people have pointed out, sometimes people arguing against the misinformation get flagged too. Having their same viewpoint repeated by the system is harmless, while having it censored could cause harm.

      Lastly, if a reasonable minority viewpoint is being suppressed, this system allows it to exist and possibly gain traction, even if it is going to meet resistance from this system. Just because the "party line" is being pushed in your face doesn't mean you'll believe it if the mainstream view is the anti-reality viewpoint. The point shouldn't be to shut down opposing views but rather to make them have to compete on a more rational basis.

      • I agree 100%. That approach worked flawlessly for evolution and climate change.
        • by urusan ( 1755332 )

          Oh yes, of course, because this approach was totally taken in those historical cases, and not totally different things that happened.

          Oh wait, that isn't what happened because this approach is relatively new.

          For evolution/intelligent design/young-Earth creationism, you had religious people pushing for "equal time" in school. This didn't privilege the fact-checked answer of evolution and enshrined creationism in the institution of learning, rather than having it just be something someone said on the Internet.

    • Well arguably it's to fend off accusations of censorship. Given that Trump is going to cry foul no matter what though, and the Trumperds are going to start braying as soon as he does, there doesn't seem much point.
    • More to the point -- if twitter knows something is false they either stop distributing it or they are just as guilty of fraud. It's so nice to hear that twitter will temporarily stop using fraudulent content to promote use of their service. Why was that legal in the first place? These services have used the false impression that they are content agnostic to claim legal protections that they never should have had in the first place. If Twitter "promotes" something into people's timelines, and it turns ou

  • Crony capitalism (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:43PM (#60588816) Homepage

    risking the ire of its best-known user, President...

    Here’s a crazy idea: Maybe the president* shouldn’t be on Twitter. Would it really be so difficult for whitehouse.gov to add their own microblogging service for the POTUS?

    For all this talk about Facebook having a monopoly, that’s nothing compared to the millions of captive audience members Twitter has, because they’re the official platform of the president.

    * and before someone says it, no, I didn’t think Obama should’ve been using Twitter in an official capacity either.

    • Yeah, we'd all download and install the official Trump app so we can listen to him, right?

    • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @02:14PM (#60588924) Journal
      If I were POTUS, there's no way in hell I'd be using so-called 'social media' for anything other than my personal comments on non-governmental, non-policy subjects, i.e. it'd be family things -- and even then I'd be running it past my press secretary first, just to be sure I'm not overlooking something that'll be taken out of context and cause a scandal. More likely than that I'd never touch social media at all and let my press secretary and his/her staff do all my talking to the public on my behalf because that's their job; I tell them what I want to say, they figure out how to say it -- or point out it's a Bad Idea to say at all.
      • Also remember that every word written down over uttered where someone can hear it becomes a part of the record. That's what shows up in a later presidential library, future academics will scour all that social media for hidden meanings and use it for future biographies and history books.

    • Remember when Obama came to office and he was a bit dismayed that they wouldn't let him keep his Blackberry device, as it was deemed not secure enough. He relented and life went on. Trump however never relented over Twitter, he let everyone know that this was not a team effort and that he was the boss and everyone else could be fired at a moment's notice. Norms were discarded.

      Remember how everyone booed and hissed when Bill Clinton asked his wife to help out with the health care plan? Well fast forward

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Friday October 09, 2020 @01:51PM (#60588832) Homepage

    So, disabling these features tone down the worst 'features' of social media:

    - Impulsive Retweeting, the user has no time to think over or verify what they are retweeting
    - Amplification Effect that is not present in other modes of communication (letter to the editor, soap box, ...etc)
    - Information Bubble, the echo chamber, with no exposure to alternate view points

    Without those, social media is far less addictive, and therefore less lucrative for the companies who run it ...

  • Facebook too. Just flip that big red switch to 'OFF' for all of them.
    • Easiest and best solution I've heard to all this bullshit. (Un)social media is the worst. Nasty. Never used it, never will.
      • I was a paid member of Livejournal back in the day. Then, it was just about 'being social', and you included people you knew. Facebook and Twitter ruined all that, twisted it into something it never should have been, and now it's just plain evil. Needs to all go away, is a failed experiment.
  • Oh, what a little cesspool it is. No accountability for anything. Twitter is a service Donald Trump is free to attack people without question, and spread lies like wildfire.

As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein

Working...