디시인사이드 갤러리

갤러리 이슈박스, 최근방문 갤러리

갤러리 본문 영역

재미있는 NY times 기사

영갤러(175.209) 2024.10.24 10:18:18
조회 44 추천 0 댓글 0

Bad News: We’ve Lost Control of Our Social Media Feeds. Good News: Courts Are Noticing.


by Julia Angwin, NY times, Oct 21, 2024


During a recent rebranding tour, sporting Gen Z-approved tousled hair, streetwear and a gold chain, the Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg let the truth slip: Consumers no longer control their social-media feeds. Meta’s algorithm, he boasted, has improved to the point that it is showing users “a lot of stuff” not posted by people they had connected with and he sees a future in which feeds show you “content that’s generated by an A.I. system.”


Spare me. There’s nothing I want less than a bunch of memes of Jesus-as-a-shrimp, pie-eating cartoon cats and other A.I. slop added to all the clickbait already clogging my feed. But there is a silver lining: Our legal system is starting to recognize this shift and hold tech giants responsible for the effects of their algorithms — a significant, and even possibly transformative, development that over the next few years could finally force social media platforms to be answerable for the societal consequences of their choices.


Let’s back up and start with the problem. Section 230, a snippet of law embedded in the 1996 Communications Decency Act, was initially intended to protect tech companies from defamation claims related to posts made by users. That protection made sense in the early days of social media, when we largely chose the content we saw, based on whom we “friended” on sites such as Facebook. Since we selected those relationships, it was relatively easy for the companies to argue they should not be blamed if your Uncle Bob insulted your strawberry pie on Instagram.


Then, of course, things got a little darker. Not everything Uncle Bob shared was accurate, and the platforms’ algorithms prioritized outrageous, provocative content from anyone with internet access over more neutral, fact-based reporting. Despite this, the tech companies’ lawyers continued to argue, successfully, that they were not responsible for the content shared on their platforms — no matter how misleading or dangerous.


Section 230 now has been used to shield tech from consequences for facilitating deadly drug sales, sexual harassment, illegal arms sales and human trafficking. And in the meantime, the companies grew to be some of the most valuable in the world.


Sign up for the Opinion Today newsletter  Get expert analysis of the news and a guide to the big ideas shaping the world every weekday morning.

Then came TikTok. After the wild popularity of TikTok’s “For You” algorithm, which selects bite-size videos to be fed to the passive viewer, social networks are increasingly having us watch whatever content their algorithms have chosen, often pushing to the sidelines the posts of accounts we had actually chosen to follow.


As annoying as this development has been, it could be beneficial in the fight to gain more control of our online lives. If tech platforms are actively shaping our experiences, after all, maybe they should be held liable for creating experiences that damage our bodies, our children, our communities and our democracy.


In August, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that TikTok was not immune to a legal challenge regarding its algorithm, which disseminated dangerous videos promoting a “blackout challenge” showing people strangling themselves until they passed out. TikTok delivered a video of the challenge to a 10-year-old girl named Nylah Anderson, who tried to emulate it and killed herself.


Placing the video on Nylah’s feed “was TikTok’s own ‘expressive activity,’ and thus its first-party speech,” Judge Patty Shwartz wrote. The judge, writing for a three-judge panel, rejected the company’s defense that the video was made by a third party and thus protected by Section 230. (TikTok has petitioned the Third Circuit to rehear its case with a broader panel of judges.)


In a similar vein, the Superior Court of the District of Columbia ruled last month that Meta could not use Section 230 as a shield against a lawsuit by the district’s attorney general alleging, among other things, that the company’s “personalization algorithms” were designed to be addictive for children, as are other harmful features such as infinite scroll and frequent alerts. There are additional pending cases across the globe alleging tech-company culpability for the distribution of nonconsensual A.I.-generated nude images, hate speech and scams.


The issue is likely to end up at the Supreme Court. In July, the justices returned two challenges to state laws that restrict the power of social media companies to moderate content to lower courts, without addressing the implications for Section 230. Justice Clarence Thomas, though, has repeatedly signaled that he is eager for a chance to whittle away at Section 230’s protections.


If the court holds platforms liable for their algorithmic amplifications, it could prompt them to limit the distribution of noxious content such as nonconsensual nude images and dangerous lies intended to incite violence. It could force companies including TikTok to ensure they are not algorithmically promoting harmful or discriminatory products. And, to be fair, it could also lead to some overreach in the other direction, with platforms having a greater incentive to censor speech.


My hope is that the erection of new legal guardrails would create incentives to build platforms that give control back to users. It could be a win-win: We get to decide what we see, and they get to limit their liability.


In the meantime, there are alternatives. I’ve already moved most of my social networking to Bluesky, a platform that allows me to manage my content moderation settings. I also subscribe to several other feeds — including one that provides news from verified news organizations and another that shows me what posts are popular with my friends.


SKIP ADVERTISEMENT

Of course, controlling our own feeds is a bit more work than passive viewing. But it’s also educational. It requires us to be intentional about what we are looking for — just as we decide which channel to watch or which publication to subscribe to.


This brings me to a very different kind of lawsuit. A professor at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst named Ethan Zuckerman is suing Meta, arguing that Section 230 gives him the right to release a tool that helps Facebook users to control their feeds.


I hope he succeeds. Giving power back to the users would not only be good for us as citizens, and it would also test the tech companies’ longstanding argument that the problems with social media is what we are doing to ourselves — not what they are doing to us.

추천 비추천

0

고정닉 0

0

댓글 영역

전체 댓글 0
등록순정렬 기준선택
본문 보기

하단 갤러리 리스트 영역

왼쪽 컨텐츠 영역

갤러리 리스트 영역

갤러리 리스트
번호 제목 글쓴이 작성일 조회 추천
설문 인터넷 트랜드를 가장 빠르게 알고 있을 것 같은 스타는? 운영자 24/11/25 - -
448058 죶문가는 특히 조심해라ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ feat. 영영사전 [4] 영갤러(103.105) 10.27 233 1
448057 영어 진짜 노베이스인데 [9] 열심히살래이제갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.27 262 0
448056 에스텔잉글리쉬 유튜브 보다가 강의 수강 고민중인데 [12] 영갤러(211.234) 10.27 223 1
448054 영어공부를 해보려는데 조언좀 해줘 [2] 빨간망토갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.27 144 0
448053 해병대 영어캠프를 가야한다. 영갤러(211.246) 10.27 37 0
448051 효과적인 영어 공부 방법 [1] 영갤러(39.7) 10.27 92 0
448050 영어 질문방 이란 오카 있냐 ㅇㅇ(175.223) 10.27 24 0
448049 토익 보카책 [2] 영갤러(106.101) 10.26 89 0
448048 여기서 what이 왜 쓰인건가요 [6] ㅇㅇ(175.223) 10.26 114 0
448047 조니 소말리 이새끼 추방당하냐? [3] ㅇㅇ(118.235) 10.26 183 1
448046 진짜 재미있는 인풋은 교사나 강사들이 추천못해줌 [1] ㅇㅇ(115.23) 10.26 103 2
448043 영어권 문화가 진짜 ㄹㅇ 자극적임 [1] ㅇㅇ(115.23) 10.26 152 0
448041 연우리 영어 아는 사람 있음??? [1] 영갤러(39.112) 10.26 44 0
448040 I play piano in a local ochestra가 문법맞음? [6] ㄹㄹ(175.125) 10.26 118 0
448038 제 수준의 인풋이 너무 절망적입니다. [8] 피자는도미노갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 183 0
448037 미국 외교관 제일 배우기 어려운 언어 한국어 [9] 영갤러(175.204) 10.26 187 0
448034 한채영 '7억원 프러포즈' 근황? 결혼 17년차 베프 같이 산다 ^^H♥갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 53 0
448032 이거 팩트냐 [8] 영갤러(116.33) 10.26 158 1
448030 아직도 한국인들 이런 취급받군 [3] ㅇㅇ(118.235) 10.26 181 1
448029 Actually no need to try grammar [4] 영갤러(211.234) 10.26 82 2
448028 확실히 영어가 한국인이 배우긴 좀 어려운듯 [4] 영갤러(14.35) 10.26 192 3
448027 이거 무슨 말인지 [6] 수크라제갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 173 0
448025 여기 좋아하니 *^^*J♥(182.31) 10.26 102 0
448024 퀴즈 복습주기 좀만 더 짧게 해주셨으면 좋겠어요 ㅋㅋㅋ [1] *^^*J♥(182.31) 10.26 105 0
448022 보카 33000단어장 다 외우면 모르는 단어 거의 없음? [10] 수크라제갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 292 0
448020 입문자들 해외 유튜브 강사로 영어 공부할때 주의할점 ㅇㅇ(118.235) 10.26 174 3
448019 뇌졸중 환자가 팔다리 마비되듯이 [8] 영갤러(211.234) 10.26 183 5
448018 초딩영어 캐릭중에 인호, 수미, 그린 ㅇㅇ(118.235) 10.26 51 0
448015 아니 아리랑tv 진짜 ㅈㄴ 웃기다고 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ [1] *^^*J♥(182.31) 10.26 77 0
448014 아이엘츠 스피킹 6.5 받았는데 오픽 AL 가능? [2] 영갤러(118.235) 10.26 81 0
448013 서양인들이 이런식으로 대놓고 얘기하나요? [1] *^^*J♥(118.235) 10.26 74 0
448012 아니 한남들은 왜이리 멍청한거냐 *^^*J♥(182.31) 10.26 120 1
448010 아리랑 tv 영어공부도 많이 되고 재밌다 ㅋㅋㅋㅋ *^^*J♥(182.31) 10.26 58 0
448009 Nate the great 읽고 있는 중인데.. [1] 영갤러(116.43) 10.26 64 0
448008 재미있는데 거의 안들리는 인풋은 별론가요?? [10] 피자는도미노갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 192 2
448007 [323/832] ebse ebse갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 30 0
448005 영어 왜이렇게 어렵냐 [4] 영갤러(106.101) 10.26 132 1
448002 말이나 작문을 할 수 있게 문법 공부하는 법은 따로 있음 ㅇㅇ(118.235) 10.26 71 0
448001 존나웃긴게 문법강조하면 꼰대되버림 ㅋㅋ [2] 영갤러(106.101) 10.26 137 0
448000 님들은 크라센 박사의 이해할 수 있는 입력에 대해 어떻게 생각함? [3] ㅇㅇ(172.225) 10.26 163 0
447999 영어랑 한국어 진짜 호흡이나 발성?에서 차이 있는 거 맞음? [8] 영갤러(118.235) 10.26 180 0
447998 언어를 학문으로 받아들이지 말라는 사람들에게 질문 [7] 소케이못가면자살함갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.26 191 0
447996 두유 원미 영갤러(58.141) 10.26 36 0
447992 편영 어려움?? [1] 영갤러(118.235) 10.25 53 0
447991 영어 즐기면서 배우는 법 알아냈다. [2] 영갤러(58.141) 10.25 113 0
447990 평택에서 오지랖 원없이 부렸다. [4] NEWAMI_PIU/Riichi갤로그로 이동합니다. 10.25 137 1
447989 단어외우기 의미없는 이유 [7] ㅇㅇ(58.141) 10.25 175 1
447986 문법만 ㅈㄴ 파서 영어를 정복한 사람 자체가 드뭄 [4] ㅇㅇ(112.150) 10.25 199 3
447984 barron gre 33000 영단어 33000개 있는 책 어떤거있음? [1] 영갤러(183.104) 10.25 78 0
447983 문장 4형식 5형식 이런거 외워야되냐...?? [4] 영갤러(211.252) 10.25 128 0
뉴스 ‘로기완’ 이상희, 여우조연상 “연기 짝사랑 중…말도 안돼” 눈물 [45th 청룡] 디시트렌드 11.30
갤러리 내부 검색
제목+내용게시물 정렬 옵션

오른쪽 컨텐츠 영역

실시간 베스트

1/8

뉴스

디시미디어

디시이슈

1/2