I would say it was somewhat worse than described above, because of the fine microtargeting of app respondents with the direct intent of moving their U.S. election votes.
Is fine microtargeting of Facebook users with the intent of selling them a political candidate fundamentally different from fine microtargeting of Facebook users with the intent of selling them shoes?
I think it is, especially if the fine microtargeting involves defaming the other candidate and spreading lies. The lies spread to sell shoes are, in my opinion, of a different character from the lies spread with the direct intent of selling fear. Would you disagree?
I'm of mixed opinion about it. If it's the lies that are the problem, that's a different question to me than if the microtargeting is the problem, first of all. I think? Maybe microtargeted lies are fundamentally different than television ad lies because journalists are more able to factcheck the tv ad lies? But fundamentally I feel like we already have (reasonable, probably subject to fine-tuning) remedies in place for confronting libel as an act.
But I mean, I know some techbro types have been loudly handwringing for the past year or so about if maybe the Facebook microtargeted ad model is essentially immoral because it's capable of algorithmically manipulating people's brains at a deeper level than older types of ad delivery systems, or something. That feels to me like it gives too much credit to the tech, in a way that's pretty typical for techbros, but on the other hand they spend more time in the guts of that tech than I do, so maybe they're right.
There's certainly an argument that because electoral decisions impact the broader world in a different way than shoe shopping decisions, there ought to be a recognition that powers capable of manipulating electoral decisions need to be exercised more carefully, but I'm not sure how cleanly that interacts with Free Speech principles and the idea that ideas and candidates should have to win out in an open marketplace of ideas.
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Date: 2018-03-21 08:22 pm (UTC)I would say it was somewhat worse than described above, because of the fine microtargeting of app respondents with the direct intent of moving their U.S. election votes.
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Date: 2018-03-23 04:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-03-23 05:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-03-23 06:02 pm (UTC)But I mean, I know some techbro types have been loudly handwringing for the past year or so about if maybe the Facebook microtargeted ad model is essentially immoral because it's capable of algorithmically manipulating people's brains at a deeper level than older types of ad delivery systems, or something. That feels to me like it gives too much credit to the tech, in a way that's pretty typical for techbros, but on the other hand they spend more time in the guts of that tech than I do, so maybe they're right.
There's certainly an argument that because electoral decisions impact the broader world in a different way than shoe shopping decisions, there ought to be a recognition that powers capable of manipulating electoral decisions need to be exercised more carefully, but I'm not sure how cleanly that interacts with Free Speech principles and the idea that ideas and candidates should have to win out in an open marketplace of ideas.