Category «Social Media»

‘But I Saw It on Facebook’: Hoaxes Are Making Doctors’ Jobs Harder

The New York Times – Without the support of social platforms, our efforts to stamp out viral misinformation feel futile. “…Websites spreading health hoaxes on Facebook peaked at an estimated 460 million views on the platform in April 2020, according to the report, just as the virus was spreading around the world and overwhelming hospitals …

Subjects: Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Social Media

New Book – How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism

Medium OneZero – Editor’s Note: “Surveillance capitalism is everywhere. But it’s not the result of some wrong turn or a rogue abuse of corporate power — it’s the system working as intended. This is the subject of Cory Doctorow’s new book, which we’re thrilled to publish in whole here on OneZero. This is how to …

Subjects: AI, Economy, Financial System, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Privacy, Recommended Books, Social Media

Resources on Deep Fakes and National Security

Deep Fakes and National Security, August 26, 2020. “Deep fakes”—a term that first emerged in 2017 to describe realistic photo, audio, video, and other forgeries generated with artificial intelligence (AI) technologies—could present a variety of national security challenges in the years to come.As these technologies continue to mature, they could hold significant implications for congressional …

Subjects: AI, Congress, Cybersecurity, Defense, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Social Media

How Facebook and Other Sites Manipulate Your Privacy Choices

Wired: “…Dark patterns show up all over the web, nudging people to subscribe to newsletters, add items to their carts, or sign up for services. But, says says Colin Gray, a human-computer interaction researcher at Purdue University, they’re particularly insidious “when you’re deciding what privacy rights to give away, what data you’re willing to part …

Subjects: E-Commerce, Internet, Privacy, Social Media

One Twitter Account’s Quest to Proofread The New York Times

The Ringer – “In 2017, the Times dissolved its copy desk, possibly permitting more typos to slip through. Meet the anonymous lawyer who’s correcting the paper of record one untactful tweet at a time. …The proud pedant behind @nyttypos is, as his Twitter bio proclaims, an “appellate lawyer and persnickety dude.” While working for a …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Social Media

5 companies that want to track your emotions

Fortune: “Faced with ongoing social isolation, a turbulent economic climate, and continued uncertainty about when life will return to a simulacrum of normalcy—and what that normal will even look like—many adults are exhibiting mounting signs of clinical anxiety and depression during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. As the world’s …

Subjects: E-Commerce, E-Records, Economy, Financial System, Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Marketing, Medicine, Privacy, Social Media, Transportation

Automated fact-checking can catch claims that slip past human checkers

Poynter – Automated fact-checking can catch claims that slip past human checkers. Here are the two ways they work. They either verify claims by validating them against an authoritative source or article, or use a computing technique called stance detection. “From false claims that drinking warm water with lemon protects against the coronavirus to high …

Subjects: Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Libraries, Social Media

Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 23, 2020

Via LLRX – Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 23, 2020 – Privacy and security issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weiss, highlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly …

Subjects: Cybercrime, E-Commerce, Internet, Privacy, Social Media

Coronavirus Doctors Battle Another Scourge: Misinformation

The New York Times – Physicians say they regularly treat people more inclined to believe what they read on Facebook than what a medical professional tells them. “Doctors on the front lines of the global pandemic say they are fighting not just the coronavirus, but also increasingly combating a never-ending scourge of misinformation about the …

Subjects: Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Social Media

The Trump Campaign Accepted Russian Help to Win in 2016. Case Closed.

“Cooperation” or “collusion” or whatever. It was a plot against American democracy By The Editorial Board of The New York Times: “…There’s no way to sugarcoat it. In less than three months, the American people could re-elect a man who received a foreign government’s help to win one election and has shown neither remorse nor …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Congress, Courts, Economy, Education, Financial System, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Social Media

Most Americans Think Social Media Sites Censor Political Viewpoints

“Americans have complicated feelings about their relationship with big technology companies. While they have appreciated the impact of technology over recent decades and rely on these companies’ products to communicate, shop and get news, many have also grown critical of the industry and have expressed concerns about the executives who run them. This has become …

Subjects: Censorship, Congress, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Social Media