This is nicely different from the short-sighted, occasionally moronic, level of discourse. However, although it’s not intended to encompass everything, I wish it had done more to nod to the problem as a problemhttps://shift.newco.co/the-reality-of-twitter-puffery-or-why-does-everyone-now-hates-bots-47958dcedd3c …
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A lot of conspiracy theories are about how things are rigged, that a nefarious force is in control — again, a refusal to accept chaos and meaninglessness or sometimes even the possibility that your own actions will substantively help or harm people around you
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Before I became an ~ educated left wing elite ~ I grew up in a conservative evangelical community. I was taught abstinence and creation science.
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The impulses that drive online fakery have existed for a long time in entrenched, fully-fleshed out real life social networks that indoctrinate children and rely on familial ties to propagate reality-denying belief systems
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I think the anecdote about that online dating site is fascinating because it suggests again a refusal to engage with reality — on the part of straight men
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Of course there’s the part that we’re trying to discuss right now: that fakeness harms people and possibly political systems at large. I like danah’s point because it first points to the flip side: that some of us like fakeness and choose fakeness, sometimes knowingly
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I think we’re really too married to the binary of unwilling dupes and nefarious propagandists. I think a lot of propagandists, on some level, believe their bullshit, and a lot of the unwilling dupes kind of do know
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(borrowing from the mens rea framework) — you can’t just say some sketch guy paid you tens of thousands of dollars to drive a car across state lines and told you not to look in the trunk, and because you never looked you definitely never trafficked drugs
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"Irish slaves meme that rewrote history" what are you talking about
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this, from the looks of ithttps://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/17/us/irish-slaves-myth.html …
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I'm curious what you mean by the "'fake news' we choose". Is this saying "pick your poison" or just a general trend of we pick to listen to news that we feel lets us stick our heads in the sand?
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As in, why do certain fake news go viral, and which ones go viral with what people. Especially which ones do YOU see and think is true, even if just for a second
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I read a book a long time ago about hacking that impressed upon me the way that news from outside of the states often looks very different than inside the states and even very different inside the states. I've taken any news source with a grain of salt ever since.
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Le chargement semble prendre du temps.
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