kenberg, on 2018-March-25, 09:22, said:
I really like that article. It's not a solution, not even close, but for one thing he seems to share my view of what's important. Also he is trying to get at what it is exactly that really bothers us about the FB problem. Hugeness is a problem. Really we have known this since the monopolies of the nineteenth century. It's not that they didn't do something good, they did. Railroads got built. But they become a law onto themselves. I mentioned earlier about the girl I dated using her courthouse job to look up my IQ. But some teenage girl looking up my IQ is different from huge corporations gathering and selling data about me, and national political groups using that data to send us selected information of doubtful accuracy to get us fired up. It's just different. Again going back to my high school days, there was to be a special ballot to increase funding for the schools. We were given supportive propaganda to take home to our parents. As a prank, some friends and I wrote up some counter-propaganda, broke into the school and put fliers in the teacher's mailboxes with a note to distribute this to the students. Of course they did so. Ok, not good. But again the difference in scale and sophistication, and even the difference in intent, we were just having teenage fun, matters.
A problem with trying to prevent things like this is that you can easily throw the baby out with the bathwater.
I read in this month's Scientific American about a study that showed some promise in predicting flu outbreaks based on analyzing Twitter posts. Something like this is clearly a Good Thing. But how do you distinguish the good guys from the bad guys when deciding whether social media companies can share their data? Do we even want the government making this decision? They'd undoubtedly classify themselves as "good", but that might allow law enforcement to analyze people's social media to look for indicators of future crimes, a la "Minority Report".
I suspect FB actually thought that Cambridge Analytica was doing this kind of useful sociology research on the data -- how could they know that the company was actually an agent of the Trump campaign? But admitting it now would just sound self-serving -- a sincere-sounding mea culpa by Zuckerberg is better PR than trying to disavow any fault.