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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 14 2019, @09:44AM   Printer-friendly
from the poison-pen dept.

With each news cycle, the false-information system grows more efficient.

Even on an internet bursting at the seams with conspiracy theories and hyperpartisanship, Saturday marked a new chapter in our post-truth, “choose your own reality” crisis story.

It began early Saturday morning, when news broke that the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein had apparently hanged himself in a Manhattan jail. Mr. Epstein’s death, coming just one day after court documents from one of his alleged victims were unsealed, sparked immediate suspicion from journalists, politicians and the usual online fringes.

Within minutes, Trump appointees, Fox Business hosts and Twitter pundits revived a decades old conspiracy theory, linking the Clinton family to supposedly suspicious deaths. #ClintonBodyCount and #ClintonCrimeFamily trended on Twitter. Around the same time, an opposite hashtag — #TrumpBodyCount — emerged, focused on President Trump’s decades-old ties to Mr. Epstein. Each hashtag was accompanied by GIFs and memes picturing Mr. Epstein with the Clintons or with Mr. Trump to serve as a viral accusation of foul play.

The dueling hashtags and their attendant toxicity are a grim testament to our deeply poisoned information ecosystem — one that’s built for speed and designed to reward the most incendiary impulses of its worst actors. It has ushered in a parallel reality unrooted in fact and helped to push conspiratorial thinking into the cultural mainstream. And with each news cycle, the system grows more efficient, entrenching its opposing camps. The poison spreads.

It's time to end "trending" on Twitter

By now you've probably read enough about the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, his death in a Manhattan jail, and the attendant conspiracy theories that consumed social networks over the weekend. President Trump led the charge, retweeting a conspiracy theory that sought to implicate former President Bill Clinton.

While there is much blame to go around, Charlie Warzel finds that Twitter bears a special responsibility for what one researcher termed "the Disinformation World Cup." Warzel writes:

At the heart of the online fiasco is Twitter, which has come to largely program the political conversation and much of the press. Twitter is magnetic during huge breaking stories; news junkies flock to it for up-to-the-second information. But early on, there's often a vast discrepancy between the attention that is directed at the platform and the available information about the developing story. That gap is filled by speculation and, via its worst users, rumormongering and conspiracy theories.

On Saturday, Twitter's trending algorithms hoovered up the worst of this detritus, curating, ranking and then placing it in the trending module on the right side of its website. Despite being a highly arbitrary and mostly "worthless metric," trending topics on Twitter are often interpreted as a vague signal of the importance of a given subject.


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  • (Score: 2) by meustrus on Wednesday August 14 2019, @03:26PM (5 children)

    by meustrus (4961) on Wednesday August 14 2019, @03:26PM (#880268)

    not everything the other side of the aisle supports is automatically bad

    To play devil's advocate for a moment:

    I've caught myself doing this at times. When there's some idea I'm not sure about, I want to know who wants it and why. If I find out the other side wants it, I'm automatically more suspicious.

    But the thing is, there's almost always something to be suspicious of. And I don't think it's specific to which side we're talking about.

    The real issue here is the fact that each side is ignorant to or willing to accept corruption from their own side. So no matter what it is, the other side usually has a valid reason to criticize it.

    The solution is election reform. Term limits and finance regulation are probably the best avenues for it. Unfortunately, Republican voters are too distracted by voter ID, and Democrats are too butthurt about the electoral college. Hell, Bernie used to talk a lot about campaign finance reform, and nowadays he talks more about "Medicare for All" because his polling shows the general population like that idea more than anti-corruption.

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  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday August 14 2019, @04:36PM (3 children)

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Wednesday August 14 2019, @04:36PM (#880308) Journal

    The solution is election reform.

    No, it most emphatically is not. The solution is for people to wake the hell up, pay attention, and pitch in. As in, put the smartphone the fuck down, turn the TV the fuck off, show up to public meetings and public places and tell public officials to fix shit right now or they will hang in the yard out front.

    If we all do that today, I guarantee you things will be right as rain by tomorrow. There is nothing quite so motivating to a government, any government, as the imminent threat of dismemberment.

    If that's too graphic and violent an imagery for some, I'll point out that the public doesn't usually have to go that far. Remember SOPA? When we all said on the same day that that shit wasn't going to fly, and melted down the switchboards in DC? They panicked, lost their shit, and killed it dead immediately.

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    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 14 2019, @05:40PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 14 2019, @05:40PM (#880382)

      Wow.

      You are an idiot or a shill, pick one and GET OFF MY LAWN!

    • (Score: 5, Interesting) by meustrus on Wednesday August 14 2019, @06:06PM

      by meustrus (4961) on Wednesday August 14 2019, @06:06PM (#880408)

      Disengagement and corruption are entangled with each other. Many people don't engage in politics because they don't feel like they can make a difference. They feel like they can't make a difference because all the politicians are just different breeds of lizard people.

      I'm all for boosting engagement, but I'm not sold on whether it can be done without fixing the unfair distribution of political power first. Nothing gets talked about without first being approved by the corporate forces that will be affected by it. Somehow, we the people need to be able to find and elect independent thinkers.

      Systematically, we need a movement to make that happen. Unfortunately, such movements have two problems:

      1. Their leaders quickly get encouraged to run for office, becoming part of the system they are supposed to be fixing.
      2. People at large don't really care about democratic principles so much as they care about their immediate problems, i.e. health care, student loans, etc.

      If you have an idea for how to fix engagement without fixing corruption, I'd love to hear it. I'm not convinced the democratic process is much good for fixing corruption, honestly. It seems to be a lot better at electing demagogues who promise to fix corruption while really just co-opting it for their own personal interests. I can think of at least 4 world leaders right now that fit this mold.

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    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 15 2019, @07:06PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday August 15 2019, @07:06PM (#880706)

      We can never be complacent again.

  • (Score: 2) by HiThere on Wednesday August 14 2019, @08:58PM

    by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday August 14 2019, @08:58PM (#880527) Journal

    Sorry, but term-limits is not an answer. California tried it, and all it did was ensure that thoughtful people didn't get re-elected very often.

    I think the entire idea of elections doesn't work in a large populace. My guess is that a lottery would, on the average, produce better results. For one thing, in a large populace electioneering costs are so high that the winner is going to be in hock to a bunch of deep-pocketed "sponsors". These won't necessarily be people who directly gave the candidate money. Many of them merely bankroll "support organizations".

    Another problem, of course, is that just because an idea or policy is popular doesn't mean it's a good idea. Experts can usually be trusted when they criticize an idea or policy, even if they can't be trusted when they promote it. (Just carefully look into who's paying them.) The problem that this paragraph addresses is why governmental funding of electioneering isn't a sufficient answer. That will get you people who promise popular answers.

    FWIW, any type of government can work well at a particular scale. Communism is just about ideal for a group of less than 20 people. Democracy works well at groups from a few hundred up to several thousand, but I'm not sure it works for a million or more. If it does, it's with a different kind of electioneering process than has been tried. Perhaps it would sort of work if based around the old Anglo-Saxon method of choosing a king. Say anyone out to the second cousin of the current king was a viable candidate, and vote for which of those you prefer. Even then, though, the process would tend to select for those who want power, and that's a very poor criterion.

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