How often is the answer "no"? The ratio would be a pretty good discovered measure of her tolerance for false positives, which I'd assume would be very low in today's social climate.
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Replying to @mattknox
Maybe 3% of the time, although if the time window went say 10 years into the future, it might be 10%.
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I liked it better when intent mattered.
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Come on, you guys are way more powerful and influential than you were 20 years ago (which is exciting!) What’s that Spiderman line? With great power, comes great responsibility? Words matter. They travel farther & faster than they did a decade ago. We should exercise care.
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Maybe we've become more influential, but most of the problem here is another change that has happened simultaneously: the acceleration in the rate of new taboos.
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How do we prove that that is true?
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>> How do we prove that that is true? Open twitter? The most interesting explanation I've read: you win social media by being outraged. When outraged, you build currency with your tribe (likes/retweets), gaining social status, releasing dopamine & feeling the joy of acceptence.
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So what if we take Mark Zuckerberg’s chart and say that the lived experience of this chart can *feel* like two things at the same time? The system incentivizes us to say the most provocative, borderline stuff possible *and* toeing that line also *feels* like censorship?pic.twitter.com/GHRVOaroml
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Perhaps this chart argues that we should study the person's intent. i.e. Are they the alt-right/hysterical left/trolls, desperate to get page views & the dopamine hit of dancing on the line, or are they someone trying to have an intelligent debate about a topic near the line?
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That’s like asking a founder whether they want to change the world or make money, when the whole system around us is very directly incentivizing one of those behaviors.
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(And sometimes, incidentally, the other behavior.)
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