Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Monday, September 07, 2015

Cynicism on the Cheap

A new Chrome add on was recently released that provides a unique service, turning the growing news filtering business on its head. Rather than only providing you with the news you want to read, as Facebook, Reddit, Fox News, Salon and a host of other sites promise to do, “I Haven’t Got Time for the ‘Paign” instead filters out any news related to that pesky presidential campaign that you might have heard something about. That’s right, this free application will allow you to ignore the most rudimentary function of citizenship, namely being informed enough to make rational choices come that quadrennial election day. 

The website attempts to entice you with the following three lines: “I haven’t got time for the ‘paign …;” “I haven’t got room for the ‘paign …” and “I haven’t the need for the ‘paign …” While this is certainly good news for the ubiquitous Taylor Swift, the attention-addict Kardashians, celebrity culture in general and click bait advertising, it also appears to be good news for candidates like Donald Trump and Scott Walker who rely on a population that doesn’t really pay attention to what they says. It’s also great news for Fox News and all the other skewed “news” sites that provide information with the propaganda-infused acuity of Pravda. The Koch brothers, who are planning to spend close to a billion dollars on the election, will also be happy to hear that a site dedicated to “ignorance is strength” and “freedom is slavery” is available to further dilute the truth.

Social theorists have been talking about the disengagement and apathy of Millennials for some time now, noting that they identify less with political parties, are less interested in politics and vote at lower rates. Even the young Americans who do consider themselves politically active often do little more than vote every four years, sign an online petition once or twice a year or unfriend Facebook contacts that disagree with their loosely-formed political ideologies. A Pew Research study in May of this year, in fact, found that Millennials are less interested in politics and talk about it less than Baby Boomers and Gen X, to a significant degree (Pew). All of this means that we are left with the older generations making decisions about the future while the younger generations adapt themselves to the new global economic order and virtual spectacle world and their incantations to self actualize and succeed at any cost.


But what of democracy, that bygone ideal that seems to be fading into the Kansas night like dust in the wind? It is a small price to pay for more news on Caetlin Jennings latest outfit choice.

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

I, Journalist (aka iJournalist)

Back in the 80s, but really starting much earlier, there was real fear that robots and computers were taking over the world. They could work 24 hours a day, never asked for raises, never went on strike, rarely got injured (though they might be more expensive to diagnose and treat) and wouldn’t wile the day away surfing the web. Fears emerged that we were moving toward a period of high unemployment and high profits, creating a permanent underclass and small, unaccountable elite. One could argue we’ve ended up there without the help of the robots, who are taking a lot longer to become productive than originally envisioned. Yet it is clear that “automated” machines have taken many jobs over the years, with bank tellers being among the most obvious, and that many more will do so in the future. It is wonderful for business, but less obviously beneficial for workers, customers or, arguably, the social order in general.

The latest attempt to automate a job that few thought would ever fall outside the purview of humanity is journalism. It might sound like pure science fiction, but companies like Narrative Science are already perfecting technology that will allow computers to create content, already utilized in sports and business journalism. The computer-generated journalism is not bad, able to point out the highlights of an event and create pithy, to-the-point sentences. It reduces the need for editing, obviously, and makes the pathway to distribution that much faster. Co-founder Kris Hammond argues that “Look … we are humanising [sic] the machine and giving it the ability not only to look at data but, based on general ideas of what is important and a close understanding of who the audience is, we are giving it the tools to know how to tell us stories.”

Hammond envisions a future where more and more content is handled by his computer programs (he believes 90 percent of journalism will be computer-generated by 2030) and where, someday, a computer will win a Pulitzer Prize. But his vision goes well beyond increase efficiency and cost saving (and a jobless economy, one should add) to a future where stories can be tailored to the specific interests of audiences. Quill has already taken steps in this direction, as it quickly learned to frame stories to suit its audience. If the readers were the supporters of a particular baseball team, it gave the match report from that team’s vantage. Likewise, if it is creating two company reports based on the same data, the machine can produce a positive emphasis for clients and a must-try-harder tone for employees. It has learned the art of spin.

Hammond believes that this would be a dramatic improvement on the journalism of today, largely driven by data and personal/business interests. Yet what is lost in this process, beyond millions of jobs? Well, the news is not simply an objective compilation of what’s happening on a given day, it is also a very human and subjective rendering of what is important on a given day. Reporters go out and talk to people, humanize stories, dig below the surface and find the heart of the narrative. Sure a computer can do with this with some effectiveness, but is this really the world we want to live in? Do we really want to destroy the world of journalism completely? And two other essential questions emerge as well.

The first is what this means for the idea of media as the fourth estate of government? Media is supposed to hold the powerful accountable for their actions and to keep the population at large educated and informed on the key issues of our age. We already see the abrogation of this responsibility in the age of corporate media but could it get even worse if computer programmers are setting the parameters of what we read each day – what counts as news and maybe more importantly, what doesn’t count. He said, she said reporting could become even more of a norm than it presently is and even if fact checking was programmed in, the sources of that fact checking would play a big role in the ultimate conclusions. What would even happen to human interest stories, which tend to provide a framework from moving a story from a distraction to something people actually care about, can empathize with or decide to fight against? In the broader sense, the idea seems to fit with the broader debates about data journalism. I’m not against it as an element of journalism, providing a more quantitative approach to news analysis at the macro level, but I personally don’t want to live in a world where that is all there is. Reading fivethirtyeight.com is sometimes interesting, but if that was the totality of my sports reading, I would probably stop altogether. Data pretends to be neutral, but analyzing it always moves us from objectivity to a more subjective rendering of reality, though it is cloaked by the lie that statistics never lie.

The second concern relates to trends that are already well underway – the tailored news filtering systems that currently exist. Facebook is getting in the news business and there are already hosts of other sites that promise to only give you the news that you want. On the surface this seems wonderful, a way to swim through the infinite seas of irrelevance to find the information that is most important to you. But is something lost if we get to decide exactly what we hear, read and see and from which perspective that information is delivered? Anyone not a fan fully understands the critique of Fox News, but more and more of us across the political spectrum arguably live in a world that is increasingly politically insular. We only hear the opinions of those who agree with us, only filter the news through sources with particular entrenched interests and can ignore anything that doesn’t meet our ideological or taste predilections. That might work in Utopia, but in a democracy, we need spaces for debate, we need to hear opinions that differ with our own and need a common set of information to make informed decisions. Just looking at the partisanship that dominates Washington DC today, we can see the results of increased insularity. Imagine if it was taken to the next level? Imagine if corporate interests were at the fulcrum of the programs’ algorithms? Imagine if an entire country could be slowly hypnotized into a waking sleep that ensured that the interests of the few dominated the interests of the many. I wonder if you already can?

Monday, August 04, 2014

Eating Chips is More Dangerous Than You Think!


One easy way to lose weight is to cut chips and sweets from your diet, or at least limit yourself to a reasonable helping rather than scarfing down an entire family-sized bag of Doritos or Fritos. But are there other perils in eating chips beyond the cholesterol, calories and fat content? Apparently there are, as researchers at MIT have used video to actually discern what people are saying near a bag of chips (WP). How, you might ask? Using a high-speed camera that takes 2,000 to 6,000 frames per second (a movie uses 24), it can capture the micro-vibrations made in that bag and then use a complex algorithm to translate those indentations into discernible words. The technology is not perfect yet, and there are certainly easier ways to capture sound, like using high-powered mic equipment or just shoving a bug under the table, or even in the bag itself, but this provides yet another way for Big Brother to spy our every move and word. And “all that and a bag of chips,” certainly takes on a new meaning now (Urban Dictionary), capturing the sense that privacy is a bygone dream of a forgotten past and that little remains outside the purview of the panopticon or synopticon today! But screw it; I still like my not-quite-potato-chip Pringles!