"late-stage capitalism" is also worthy of your twitter blocked words list
-
This Tweet is unavailable.
-
-
Replying to @chr1sa @antoniogm
These are both among the phrases most like to be included in the subtitles of books about technology written by academics at elite universities
3 replies 1 retweet 12 likes -
This Tweet is unavailable.
-
Tech company insiders have a *terrible* track record. We didn't get food safety from the farming industry, nor seat belts from the auto industry, nor clean air from polluters. "Insider" incentive is their payout, denying distortion that is denial all that we know about humans.
1 reply 18 retweets 112 likes -
Replying to @zeynep @antoniogm and
And
@amcafee, those warning us did not originate from the "elite" academics. Gee. The Harvard/Stanford pipeline is integrated with the tech payout. Early warners were more marginal academics. It just moved up as it became more obvious so "elite" academia joined, as they do.2 replies 6 retweets 42 likes -
Replying to @zeynep @antoniogm and
While acknowledging there's reporting/writing that gets details wrong and could be better, I find the current tech industry obsession with "they don't understand" to be a defensive denial. It's a deflective shield not an answer; it's like Trump yelling "fake news" at journalists.
3 replies 3 retweets 65 likes -
This Tweet is unavailable.
-
In fact, I think ordinary people would be *more* horrified if they had a clearer understanding of how much data there really is collected about them, so whatever lack of understanding there is, it is to tech advantage (otherwise they'd make it clearer. It's obscured by intent).
1 reply 1 retweet 22 likes
Not you, but Andrew called the criticisms something that came from "academics at elite universities" which is not what happened. A few academics from elite universities (like his!) joined in late & they get the attention but most such elites are still on the tech payout pipeline.
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.