• SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Turns out all it took was algorithms promoting hate speech, conservative view points and other rage bait.

      • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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        As soon as the algorithm become engagement based, instead of “positive reaction” based,

        ie. algorithms now promote a post by how many reactions it has recieved, even if these reactions are negative, when it used to promote posts based on positive reaction.

        So now ragebait dominates most social media algorithms.

        • SlippiHUD@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, it’s precisely why I stopped using every social media except the fediverse. It was toxic to my mental health.

          I feel safe assuming it’s been similarly toxic to everyone else’s, just some people haven’t zeroed in on that being the problem.

          • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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            1 month ago

            Even Lemmy was like this. Especially with the default comment sort “active”, which promotes comments that lead to arguments. My experience has been better since I switched to “top”.

            I still haven’t found a good post sort that works for me. “Hot” and “Scaled” literally only promote stuff posted in the past two hours. “Top” is kinda sad because you always see posts 1 day old, and “Active” has the negative engagement problem.

            The best solution I’ve found is be on an instance with downvotes disabled and sort by “active” but it isn’t perfect.

            • Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              I just sort by newest over 12/24 hours. I’ve found I tend to argue much less with idiots if I get in and out before the troublemakers show up.

            • NounsAndWords@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              I feel the same way and now typically use “Top 6 Hours”

              …which is a actually how I found this thread.

            • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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              1 month ago

              I just subscribe to communities I like, then sort by “New” to read those “Subscribed” communities. When I run out, I change to “Scaled” and “All”.

            • Orbituary@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Thanks for the tips. I’m going to play around with it. Mine is set to hot currently, but maybe that’s not my cuppa.

            • Num10ck@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              maybe we should be able to blend several of these like i’ll take 20% of top day and 30% of active and 5% controversial… lemmy would grow more of the content was more suitable.

        • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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          algorithms now promote a post by how many reactions it has recieved, even if these reactions are negative

          ESPECIALLY if those reactions are negative. Rage and fear are THE top engagement drivers and engagement means retention means ad impressions means dollars.

          That it also means the end of democracy is immaterial to the billionaire ghouls in charge, of course.

        • Guilherme@lemm.ee
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          26 days ago

          It wouldn’t be hard to enact laws regulating how algorithms are allowed to use views, reactions and downvotes. Metrics like “Controversial” and Reddit’s “Hot” (that sums upvotes and downvotes like they’re all the same) would be forbidden and governments could demand deactivation of metrics, algorithms or even the entire platform.

          Of course such “anti-ragebait” regulations wouldn’t fix the issue but I believe it would significantly mitigate the overall state of nowadays internet.

      • Apytele@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        Also strawman liberal arguments to make living strawmen of privileged but sheltered children who won’t know any better than to make fools of themselves in public forums.

  • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    1 month ago

    People love to talk about how ‘the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of patriots.’

    It’s easy to talk about big dramatic battles.

    The truth is that it’s really a never-ending struggle that requires sweat.

    How many people bother to show up for primary elections? How many are willing to get a petition signed to get a good candidate on the ballot?

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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      I do those things constantly and the fact that other people don’t infuriates me.

      It’s like a group project and I’m doing my part but we still all fail because nobody else gives a damn.

      I hate democracy and people now.

      • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        On one hand I would love to kick the collective ass of all the people who sat the election out.

        On the other, I know that I don’t have the power to change things without them.

        Back in WW2 a lot of people had to accept that the British, the Soviets, and the Americans were the only thing standing between them and the Axis. They had to give up control of their forces and hope for the best.

    • Signtist@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      The quote is that the tree is “refreshed” with blood, which is an important distinction. Also, Jefferson wrote it after the founding of the US - he understood that our democracy is not an exception to this cycle.

      Yes, if we all did our civic duty not just to vote, but to actually inform ourselves about the choices, we’d be able to maintain democracy potentially indefinitely, but the reality is that a huge portion of people are complacent, and won’t take even the simplest of actions until they’re forced to. So, democracy degrades slowly as it’s desperately propped up by the few who understand its importance until it finally fails enough to start really affecting the people who “aren’t really into politics,” by which point its too late to use sweat instead of blood.

      We water the tree with the sweat of the few, but when that inevitably isn’t enough and it starts to wither, we refresh it with blood of the many.

      • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Question: What is the mythical height that American “democracy” has degraded from? The country was founded by a bunch of settlers who violently kicked out the people living there. They set up the government and immediately restricted who could vote and how much influence that vote could even have. They kept some people as non-human property. They spent the next ~century arguing about it until it had to fight a war about it and the result was to leave those people being merely treated as sub-human rather than non-human. Moving on to the 20th century, it took movements of labor and minorities that were met with extreme violence to get anywhere and that’s still left us where we are today, begging for crumbs and for police not to just execute people in the streets.

        Then of course there’s all the people we invaded or otherwise screwed with who never even got a vote in the first place. Were they not “doing their civic duty?”

        America has never been the experiment in democracy it purports itself to be. It’s a nice ideal to strive for, but in order to do that you have to stop pretending and recognize that there’s nothing to protect or repair. Nothing to go back to. Just something we’ve yet to build.

        • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Franklin Delano Roosevelt has entered the chat…

          Look up the New Deal. Pretty good blueprint for a place to start.

          • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Refer to my comment bellow for a more expanded discussion, but specifically talking about the New Deal:

            • The voter participation in this period was comparable to what we have today. Minus all the people excluded, but the comment I’m replying to was talking about people deciding to vote, so those without that option, these people aren’t included in the asserted culpability for the success or failure of democracy.

            • The New Deal happened with significant context outside of the electoral system. A massive war with another looming on the horizon. A global financial collapse that threatened to incite people against the ruling class. Militant union organizing against violent state and private repression. The rise of the Soviet Union as a counterweight to capitalist hegemony and an example to show workers what was possible.

            • The goal was to placate workers enough to preserve the power structure. Far from being a democratic revolution, it was a stalling tactic that kept power concentrated and allowed those in power to slowly dismantle outside power structures like unions until such time as they could claw back those gains. The later end of the Keynesian government programs can be better attributed to the weakening of unions than the failure of people to vote or vote correctly at the ballot box. Government policy obviously had a big hand in this attack on unions, but there were also the material factors of automation and globalization that greatly reduced union bargaining power.

            • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              The goal was to placate workers enough to preserve the power structure.

              Nice revisionism.

              There wasn’t any chance of a massive class struggle like the USSR happening. There was more of a chance that the richest would have kicked FDR out and put in their own junta. That attempt only failed because Smedley Butler wasn’t having any.

              I was lucky enough to meet some old school Communists who’d been in the Spanish Civil War. They would have laughed at the idea that the US was on the verge of a Socialist takeover in the 1930s.

              • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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                It certainly wasn’t as extreme or successful as the soviet union, but there was a lot of unionization going on during the industrial revolution that was more radical than the tamer bargaining unions we see in the post-war era. And then the depression happened and things got really bad. It’s not hard to see how elites would have looked out at what was happening in the world, looked at the bad economic situation at home, and concluded that something had to be done.

                FDR even said that they were trying to reform capitalism to save it.

                https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wikiquote:Transwiki/American_history_quotes_New_Deal

                1933 “It was this administration which saved the system of private profit and free enterprise after it had been dragged to the brink of ruin.” President Roosevelt, on how his emergency actions in 1933 prevented a revolution and saved capitalism.

                • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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                  It certainly wasn’t as extreme or successful as the soviet union,

                  So we agree that there was no way there was going to be a Socialist uprising in America in the 1930s, which is what you were trying to imply.

                  Also, the idea that FDR’s plans weren’t radical is ludacris. The only evidence you can come up with is a cloying speech he gave to settle the nerves of people who feared an actual revolution.

        • Signtist@lemm.ee
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          The height was when the vast majority of people understood the importance of informed voting, and did so with pride. We’ve never really been great in any other way, and even back then we weren’t all that great because we kept the right to vote from huge swaths of the people, but democracy functions when people vote, and it fails when they don’t.

          • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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            1 month ago

            Watch the movie ‘Network.’

            When it came out it was a cutting edge satire; it’s become a quaint and staid docudrama

            • Snowcano@startrek.website
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              1 month ago

              I watched it recently and it’s shocking how well it’s held up. Aside from the fashion, it feels like it could have been made last year.

          • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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            Ok, when was this? I tried looking in to voter turnout rates over time. https://www.electproject.org/national-1789-present

            As they say in the article, it’s harder to get good estimates of earlier turnout rates, but for the sake of talking about it, lets take for granted that the numbers are in some reasonable ballpark of accuracy.

            It looks like turnout tops out at about 80% (presidential elections) of the VEP in the later half of the 19th century. Before this the numbers were even lower than they have been in modern times. This of course was a time when many people could not vote. It was also a period of growing inequality and monopolization. It took 2 major wars, a lot of militant unionizing, and a global financial collapse to end up with the brief period of relative prosperity for specifically white working class men.

            Throughout the 20th century though, the numbers pretty consistently dropped to between 50-70% turnout. Throughout a lot of this many people still could not vote, either explicitly or implicitly through Jim Crow laws. Even post-civil rights and voting rights act, prisoners still do not have the right to vote. Considering that we know that the war on drugs was started to pretty specifically target enemies of the state like minorities and hippies, this is a pretty clear attempt to once again implicitly deny certain people the right to vote. So even through multiple slices of the population being eligible to vote over time, we’ve never really had close to a significant portion of the eligible population voting.

            This is also only talking about American citizens. Again, a fundamental tenet of democracy is that it only exercises government power over those who have consented to it. US imperialism, starting with the native Americans and African slaves and only expanding from there, has extended the application of that power to countless people around the world who never got a vote on the US fucking with their country and were often denied the opportunity to participate in their own democracies. Taken from this perspective, the majority of people under US rule/influence have NEVER gotten to participate in the “democratic process.”

            This is also all before we talk about the ways that the electoral system and government structure was explicitly designed to not allow the popular will to have proportional influence over the government.

            The implication of the assertion that “democracy works when people vote” is that the condition of these millions of people who have been systematically denied the right to influence the government that rules over them is their own fault for not voting anyway. It’s simply ahistorical. It’s as much a call to a mythical glorious past that conservatives engage in.

            Rights have never and will never be won through the ballot box so long as the US remains a plutocracy. It has always required people to work outside the system and engage with violence, whether they are doing it or it is being done to them.

            This history isn’t just some bad stuff that bad people did in the past. They’re the events that created the world we live in today. We aren’t free of their influence and we haven’t even stopped all of them. You can learn from that or you can keep blaming people. You can’t have both and still be honest with yourself.

            • Signtist@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              You seem to be under the impression that I think our democracy somehow makes us superior, or that it functions more often than others, when my point is pretty much the opposite: regardless of the governing system, people will not do enough to avoid a corrupt tyrant of a leader from coming into power, which they will then need to literally fight to overcome.

              Rights are not earned through voting, but they are lost due to lack of voting, allowing corrupt leaders to roll back the hard-fought advancements. That’s what the quote means: the tree of liberty is refreshed with blood. White men own slaves? Fight to free them. Only white men can vote? Fight to achieve voting rights for everyone. Those were the times the tree of liberty was refreshed. We’re now seeing these rights called into question because of political leaders that we allowed to be voted in; our rights are slipping due to our insufficient use of the freedoms we fought for, inevitably leading to us needing to fight yet again to refresh them.

              If democracy worked unerringly, we’d be more free than ever right now due to the fact that the vast majority of Americans can vote, and while I believe that would be true if everyone did vote, the fact of the matter is that they wont. That allows corrupt leaders to slowly achieve strategic positions in all levels of the government over time, and eventually use their power to bring in the Tyrant mentioned in the quote.

              The only people I’m blaming for the regression of our rights and democracy are the tyrants tearing them down. Yes, if we had all voted they never would have gotten the power to do so, but my point has always been that that was never going to happen.

    • samus12345@lemmy.world
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      “The price of freedom is eternal vigilance.”

      We weren’t vigilant. Quite the opposite, in fact.

    • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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      if we want a breather we gotta upend the system.

      not keep struggling with it.

      • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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        Let me count the ways that upending the system isn’t going to happen anytime soon.

        For the system to be upended in a meaningful way first means you’ve got an organized cadre in place. Savvy political operators who can make things happen.

        The Left failed to get past the DNC twice with a popular candidate. The idea that the Left could get past the US Army is ridiculous.

        Next, let’s look at what ‘upending the system’ would actually look like. Look at the hyperinflation in Germany after WW1. Or the Depression. Or maybe just the riots of the 1960s. Life isn’t a video game, and when the system fails the most vulnerable people are the ones who suffer the most.

        Finally, do you really think that companies like Blackwater are just going to step aside and let themselves be swept away?

        If the system goes down, it will be replaced by something much uglier.

        • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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          none of the examples you came up with have anything to do with a worker revolution. yes, silly, it does takes time. and no, democrats have never been leftists.

          do you have an actual idea to save the rest of that broken democracy? because its already being replaced with something uglier. you seem to think fascism is gonna stop itself?

          • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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            The Left failed to get past the DNC twice with a popular candidate. The idea that the Left could get past the US Army is ridiculous.

            • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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              cmon, tell me what your idea is for fixing the system that doesnt involve begging the right wing for a candidate nomination.

              • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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                You’d rather face the US Army then vote for someone endorsed by Barack Obama and Bernie Sanders.

                Please read some history. Back in the day, Frederick Douglas campaigned for candidates who couldn’t promise to end slavery.

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                  30 days ago

                  im sure you will have plenty of fascists to root for in 2028, no worries 😂

                  did the whitewashed history you learned in school include all the genociding you have been doing this last couple of centuries?

  • Saleh@feddit.org
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    What did the Arab spring give the people in the end?

    Syria? never ending civil war between factions controlled by foreign interests
    Lybia? never ending civil war between factions controlled by foreign interests
    Tunesia? temporary improvements now to be revoked by a new authoritarian
    Egypt? temporary improvements followed by an US backed coup installing an even worse military dictator

    Maybe we were just naive in thinking that social media back then wasn’t already doing the bidding of governments against people.

    • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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      One could say the same about the Liberal Revolution of 1848. It failed, and yet it took many years before much of the liberal and progressive values became culturally ingrained.

      “The arc of moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.”- Martin Luther King Jr

      Good or bad, that’s why any ideas never die. That’s why the powers-that-be love to censor.

    • Cyborganism@lemmy.ca
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      The conclusion: as soon as a country is destabilized, you can bet your ass the US is going to come in and fuck up any democratic progress in their own favor.

    • Keeponstalin@lemmy.world
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      Tunesia is the only one with a success story where the mass protests were successful in creating reform (new president and constitution). In the other countries, the mass protests for reform were violently suppressed, and still are in the present day.

      Summary of each country

      What has happened since the so-called Arab Spring? Eight years later, human rights are under attack across the region. Hundreds of thousands of people, many of them children, have been killed during armed conflicts that continue to rage in Syria, Libya, and Yemen. The Syrian conflict has created the largest refugee crisis of the twenty-first century, humanitarian crisis.

      Tunisia is the only relative success story. It has a new constitution, some justice for past crimes, but human rights are still under attack.

      In Egypt, peaceful activists, critics of the government, and many others remain in jail. Torture and other ill treatment are rife. Hundreds have been sentenced to death and tens of thousands put behind bars for protesting or for their alleged links to political opposition. However, we saw that the current president was just authorized to stay in power until 2034.

      In Bahrain, the authorities are silencing dissent.

      Libya has turned into chaos. There are many armed conflicts all across the country, and all sides have committed war crimes and serious human rights abuses.

      In Syria, the region’s bloodiest armed conflict emerged in response to the brutal suppression of mass protests by the government. Atrocious crimes are being committed on a massive scale. Half the population has been displaced.

      Yemen is an ongoing tragedy, with a Saudi Arabia–led coalition (principally with the United Arab Emirates), but with the US supplying arms, providing refueling and intelligence, and so forth. Here’s an interesting Tucson connection. The Emirates just bought $1.6 billion of arms from Raytheon, so the Tucson economy stays strong. The Saudi Arabia–led coalition air strikes and shelling by Houthi forces have killed more than ten thousand civilians, forty thousand wounded. Ten million are now in jeopardy of famine and disease. Some of the attacks amount to war crimes.

      The Arab Spring, which started out as an enormously hopeful movement for progressive change, has now largely been subjected to brutal repression and pushback from the forces of the status quo ante. It represents a poignant and tragic example of social struggle.

      • Consequences of Capitalism - Chapter 6 - Noam Chomsky and Marv Waterstone
    • bunchberry@lemmy.world
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      30 days ago

      Democracy implies a system to translate people’s will into action, and that implies both physical institutions for collecting information relating to the demands of the population, physical technology for processing that information, and physical institutions that can act on those demands.

      The problem is that westerners treat political systems as if they’re entirely built upon vibes. You can go to the poorest place in the world and as long as you have good vibes, as long as you get enough people to say the right “democracy” slogans and do the right “democracy” rituals, then you can introduce a true utopian democracy.

      The problem is they ignore that we live in a physical world and not a vibes-based world, all societies are built upon a particular material foundations. The idea that you can go to a country that is so ridiculously impoverished that barely anyone can even read, like in Afghanistan, and then through good vibes convert it into a western-style democracy, is just completely ridiculous. The institutions just aren’t there, it takes decades to build that.

      Westerners then use their vibe-based politics as justification to destroy these countries. “If you don’t agree that we should go to war with them, you’re just a dictator lover! You have bad vibes!!” Even westerners took centuries to actually evolve to their pseudodemocracies they have now, but they refuse to let other countries go through this same process. They insist they must skip this development process and just become western-style democracies right now, or else they’ll get bombed into the stone age, or the CIA will foster some sort of coup or color revolution to overthrow the government and plunge it into civil war or a military dictatorship.

      But all this endless war does is make it harder to develop, so in reality western countries end up being the biggest barrier towards actually moving towards democracy. They keep destabilizing them, either through war, coups, or color revolution, which destroys the physical foundations of their society, destroys their institutions and infrastructure, and this makes it more difficult for them to actually progress as a society, and then westerners condemn them and paint them as genetically inferior for not having progressed as much.

      • Saleh@feddit.org
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        30 days ago

        You still assume, that western countries would like to establish democracies as they would consider democracy in itself a value.

        But you have plenty of cases where actual democracies were overthrown violently in order to install a compliant authoritarian regime. Iran, Chile, Egypt…

        It is never about democracy and the “vibes” are just a farce. It is about installing compliant regimes that grant cheap access to their natural resources, labor, trade routes, markets…

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    Yeah, how is that going in the Arab Springs countries though? Was that actually a glorious people’s uprising, or just another despot using an angry mob to do his bidding?

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    They found out how gullable religion has made Americans. They will literally believe anything and fall in line like sheep.

    “A Republican would eat a steaming bowl of shit if it meant a liberal had to smell their breath after”

  • thonofpy@lemmy.world
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    Monetization of human weaknesses. By this I mean our biased, emotional, prone-to-addiction brains being colonized for data and ad-revenue.

  • TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works
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    amazing how at the drop of a hat the mainstream media will shill for de-anonymizing trolls when someone makes fun of a corrupt politician

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    That’s when they noticed it could be used to topple governments and decided to use selfishly.

  • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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    How has it been weaponized against democracy?

    It’s still the best way to get info not filtered by MSM. There’s a reason politicians in both parties are calling for increased social media censorship.

    • Saryn@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Its much more complicated than that, and yes contemporart information sources (i.e., the internet) have absolutely been weaponized by both state (Russia should come to mind) and non-state (say, ISIL, energy companies, etc) actors, as has been detailed in tens of thousands of pages of research and independent analysis focused on digital forensics. And its not just about the content (i.e., the ideological, cognitive apsects). It’s also about control of the infrastructure - think media capture by oligarchs such as Musk or the reverse enginering of social media algorithms by countries like Russia to reach as many people as possible.

      I would argue it’s disingenuous to equate the activities of the two American parties in this field. If you were to take a comprehensive look at what they’ve been doing, there is a clear difference in their approach and intent. Where the Democratic Party wants to curtail the influence of foreign authoritarian states and local oligarchs by limiting their ability to spread disinformation, Republicans have been actively undermining these efforts, including by going after US agencies (such as the GEC) and independent researchers at NGOs. Why? Because these agencies and NGOs are exposing their lies and labeling their messages as misleading and dangerous. They are also exposing how aligned the Republics are with foreign authoritarian states.

      Granted, I’m a bit biased. I’m one of those researchers. And dealing with SLAPPs and other measures by Republicans and their proxies has been undermining information integrity significantly in the last two years, within and without the US.

      • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        You’re absolutely biased, and spreading disinformation of your own. People in the US are much more likely to be subjected to disinformation and propaganda from their own government online than any foreign actor. It’s not even close- we’re being flooded with state propaganda from the US astroturfing farms, compared to a trickle from outside sources.

        And it’s false to claim the Democrats are attempting to censor for our well-being. Whenever their activities are revealed in leaks or fulfilled FOIA requests, the vast majority is revealed to be censorship of criticism or dissent, or censoring anyone countering the state narrative. Truth and public good are not on the Dem priority list anymore than it’s on the Republicans’.

        And worth noting, these censorship efforts are illegal. This is a crime spree.

        • Saryn@lemmy.world
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          30 days ago

          It seems I am “absolutely biased” whereas you are clearly absolutely objective. My mistake!

          • Valmond@lemmy.world
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            30 days ago

            He’s a known russian troll.

            They’re not even good at what they’re doing, must be a low level troll :-)

            • Saryn@lemmy.world
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              29 days ago

              Yeah, just saw all of his “Ukrainians are Nazis” and “Russia great” comments. Talk about irony and self-contradiction - blames the US for censorship, but glorifies the Kremlin which maintains strict control over the internet and legacy outlets in Russia.

          • Guilherme@lemm.ee
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            26 days ago

            It seems some wave throw the ninja from the surfboard, causing him to smash the head against a rock.

    • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Haven’t you heard? Unregulated communication is our biggest threat. It tricked people into voting for the wrong candidate, which proves my point.

  • bunchberry@lemmy.world
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    30 days ago

    People put way too much weight on the “power of human ideas.” They think if thee is a “free marketplace of ideas” then naturally the best ideas spread and take over. But that’s not how the real world works at all. The ideas that are propagated are those that reflect what is “going around on the ground” to speak, not whether or not the ideas are actually good or bad.