Facebook Is Deprioritizing Our Stories. Good. – Motherboard

“In the end, Facebook didn’t care about media companies. Faced with perhaps its first ever existential crisis—the weight of being considered a “media company,” and all the responsibilities that come with it, including being blamed for the rampant spread of “fake news,” a Russian psyops campaign, and the tampering of a US election—Facebook has decided it’s not cut out for the news business.

In the long term, this is good. For all of us. First, it is a personal relief. I hope that I nor any other journalist will have to care for one second longer about Facebook’s news feed. More importantly, journalism that is engineered to be viral, to be liked or picked by an algorithm is not journalism, it’s marketing. A news media whose existence relies on a centralized portal is subject to the whims of that portal. And a society that relies on a centralized portal to get its news may very well be doomed. My hope is that Facebook is not as important as everyone thinks, it’s just where people happen to be on the internet right now.”

Kilde: Facebook Is Deprioritizing Our Stories. Good. – Motherboard

Scientists warn we may be creating a ‘digital dark age’

Det undrer mig jævnligt, at der ikke er mere opmærksomhed på det problem, at digitaliseringen af såvel kommunikation som arkiver skaber en stor risiko for at uendelige mængder viden enten tabes – eller bliver utilgængeligt.    En skræmmende historieudslettelse, som vi bare blindt har accepteret. Jeg sørger allerede ofte over, at jeg ikke har spor tilbage af vigtige korrespondancer fra de sidste 20 år. Mens alle de vigtige brevvekslinger fra mine første 25 år ligger trygt og godt (sammen med mine dagbøger) i en stålkasse på loftet, så ikke bare jeg selv, men også mine efterkommere nårsomhelst vil kunne fordybe sig i mine pinlige kærlighedserklæringer og mere eller mindre dybsindige refleksioner.

Kilde: Scientists warn we may be creating a ‘digital dark age’

Signal >> Home

Husk at facebook altid læser med – også på messenger – og gemmer alt (også det i “sletter”) – og at de scanner indholdet for evt. ulovlige ting (børneporno fint, men hvem ved hvad ellers og slet ikke hvad mon i fremtiden ?) og at de leverer resultatet til amerikansk politi, der sender videre til Europol, der sender til dansk politi…..
Protip: brug SIGNAL-app ….signal.org

Kilde: Signal >> Home

Nyudnævnt ITU-professor: ”Vi skal passe på, at vi ikke bliver dummere, efterhånden som teknologien bliver smartere”

”Statslige institutioner skal huske at passe på borgernes data fremfor at hige efter at kunne det samme som de store big tech-industrier. Ligesom vi borgere har et ansvar for, hvilke data vi deler med andre, har staten et ansvar for, hvordan digitaliseringen foregår, og for hvordan data bruges. Når offentlige myndigheder i Danmark vil bruge data om os, trækker vi måske på skuldrene og tænker, at det er lige meget. Men det er det ikke. It er jo meget mere end hardware og software. Det er social, politisk og fysisk infrastruktur for vores arbejde, liv og færden. Vi må aldrig trække på skuldrene og sige, at det er lige meget hvilken teknologisk kultur, vi er i gang med at skabe,” afslutter Brit Ross Winthereik.

Kilde: Nyudnævnt ITU-professor: ”Vi skal passe på, at vi ikke bliver dummere, efterhånden som teknologien bliver smartere”

BlackRock’s Message: Contribute to Society, or Risk Losing Our Support – The New York Times

Er det en etisk tendens, der får Wall Street til at begynde at sætte social responsibility på værdi-menuen ?

“In a candid assessment of what’s happening in the business world — and perhaps taking a veiled shot at Washington at the same time — Mr. Fink wrote that he is seeing “many governments failing to prepare for the future, on issues ranging from retirement and infrastructure to automation and worker retraining.” He added, “As a result, society increasingly is turning to the private sector and asking that companies respond to broader societal challenges.”

It is a refrain that we’re hearing more and more from various pockets of the business community, and in fact last year company leaders found themselves taking stands on issues like immigration policy, race relations, gay rights and more.

But for the world’s largest investor to say it aloud — and declare that he plans to hold companies accountable — is a bracing example of the evolution of corporate America. Mr. Fink says he is adding staff to help monitor how companies respond; only time will tell whether BlackRock truly uses his firm’s heft to influence new social initiatives.”

Kilde: BlackRock’s Message: Contribute to Society, or Risk Losing Our Support – The New York Times