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https://warpcast.com/~/channel/ted
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ted (not lasso) pfp
ted (not lasso)
@ted
we used to rely exclusively on newspapers, radio, or letters for information. so limited, so slow. no way to “fact check” unless you were there on the frontlines. now we have endless resources to access information, the ability to fact check in minutes if not seconds, and… the majority of the world just doesn’t. this is egregiously bad on tiktok (more on this below). i know it is human nature to default to system 1 thinking (lol Daniel Kahnemann reference): fast, intuitive, emotional. i know that we tend to process information in ways that reinforce our group identity. and i know that emotion drives virality. and so ofc i know that if we keep treating misinformation as an individual problem, this will only get worse. platforms like groundnews are great, but that’s opt-in so it attracts users who already care about truth (unfortunately that’s magnitudes smaller TAM). to me it is much more interesting to think of it as a platform problem. with AI, the design space could expand significantly (but obviously comes with its own risks). two good built-in platform examples: - twitter community notes on inaccurate tweets cut retweets by at least 50% and increased user-initiated deletions by 80% (but right now it is too slow, should be done within an hour not 12 hours!) - twitter reminding users to read an article before they retweet actually reduced blind shares by ~33% (a little bit of friction can be a good thing!) tiktok, however, hasn’t done anything really at all. some labels for COVID, a politifact and snopes partnership i never saw, and a bullshit STEM feed for “reliable, vetted data” (hint: it was a paid partnership for two science brands to get guaranteed distribution). the most dangerous feature of tiktok, imo, is its algo-driven echo chambers. it can ensure the content you see is what you want to see, that the comments are what you want to read. it pushes users deeper and deeper into self-reinforcing narratives. you can scroll for hours and never be exposed to an alternative perspective on a single topic. when users are exposed to entirely different information ecosystems, there’s zero foundation for shared discourse. this has got to be the most powerful, least visible force driving division today. SAD!!!
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Sandiforward
@sandiforward.eth
What we need is more transparency and independent audits of algorithms used by platforms that hit X scale/size. The algo black boxes and lack of liability on those building them thanks to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) are the starting point. Information dispersion already exists, very different info and experiences across platforms like QQ, WeChat, Yandex, VK on top of the ones you mentioned. Anything platform led is just handwavvy whilst behind the scenes the lobby government to not change regulation.
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