Could it be that social media is giving us a glimpse of what unfettered (direct) democracy actually looks like?
There are at least a couple flaws in this viewpoint: that social media is mostly controlled by a privileged few, and with enough resources an individual can gain more votes (if you consider an account as a vote). But social media is basically letting everyone have a voice in the conversation, and the result is kind of gross sometimes.
In other words, maybe its undermining our current system by actually being more technically democratic.
Yeah, I think that's hard to say without taking into account the issue of social media algorithms. These algorithms purposefully amplify some of the most toxic content out there, so I think gaming the system to harm democracy would be considerably more difficult if social media feeds were just a chronological list of friends' posts.
Even without the algorithm, though, I also believe that humans just aren't evolved to have some kinds of discussions asynchronously, remotely behind a screen. I've found myself needing to disconnect from social media because it leads me to having negative feelings about people that I know I like. E.g. after the overturning of Roe v. Wade there were some posts by family members who I know and love, even though I know we don't share the same politics. After seeing their posts the first thought that went through my mind was "WTF is wrong with these people??" But if we had been discussing it face-to-face, I'm sure we would both have been more respectful of the other person's viewpoint, or at least would have agreed to disagree and move on.
Everyone has seen it (and probably done it) - said something extremely hostile in an online forum that we would never say face-to-face.
The algorithms seek to maximize engagement. And it turns out that rage is one really good way to maximize engagement. After being on twitter for a bit over 14 years I deleted my account in May when I realized this is what the algorithms were doing. I'm still detoxing from twitter, but I feel like quitting has been very beneficial for my mental health.
> Even without the algorithm, though, I also believe that humans just aren't evolved to have some kinds of discussions asynchronously, remotely behind a screen.... But if we had been discussing it face-to-face, I'm sure we would both have been more respectful of the other person's viewpoint, or at least would have agreed to disagree and move on.
Yes, this. But what I fear is that heavy use of social media is causing our face-to-face interactions to change for the worse as well. People seem to be getting less respectful in face-to-face interactions as social media led the way towards making it easy to dehumanize the other.
> The algorithms seek to maximize engagement. And it turns out that rage is one really good way to maximize engagement.
I used to think this was only a property of algorithms but I'm not convinced anymore. Any number of link aggregator sites I'm on with no algorithmic surfacing of content, Reddit (at least on the old site), HN, Lobsters, Tildes, etc all have the same effect. Everyone comments on and engages with the rage inducing post. Nuanced, sanguine conversations get maybe an upvote or two but are just a few posters talking. This tracks with my experience on forums back in the '90s where huge hellthreads would spawn and have people arguing for weeks, and every archive of Usenet flamethreads that I've seen.
I don't think the algorithms are helping, but I think this is just a property of socializing in the large. Humans, when socializing in person, have a lot of context. When my friend rants "relationships are terrible they are just adults emotionally manipulating each other" to me, and I have the context of knowing my friend just had a bad breakup, I know the place this is coming from. When someone posts this on Twitter, everyone is up in arms because there's no context. There's other properties of socializing in the large that I suspect leads to the patterns we see in online discourse, but I'm beginning to think that the algorithms are the minor part.
Early twitter didn't have much algorithmic involvement. I recall early twitter being a much chiller place. But in the last couple of years (and especially in the last six months or so) algorithms seemed pretty blatant - getting tweets from people was not following, etc. So while I agree that part if this is " a property of socializing in the large", it seems from experience with early twitter vs late twitter that as the algorithms became a bigger part of the platform, things went downhill.
Twitter has developed norms which prioritize anger. Some fairly prominent folks on Twitter can go weeks without tweeting anything positive. This isn't going away. Much like Reddit has developed norms around downvoting to disagree.
I think you're laser focusing on Twitter because of your experiences on the platform. I only started using Twitter recently as I felt the non-technical content on HN became too one-sided or rage-filled, so I can't offer much observation there, but I've been on non-algorithmic social sites for decades. I've been on HN for over a decade. Heck, you can hop onto Usenet today and see hellthreads still spawning. A Raspberry Pi group I'm in had a (crossposted) hellthread about Apple products.
People respond to rage whether there's algorithms or not. People give others online much less benefit of the doubt than they do in person. I've seen this constant on every non-algorithmic social site I've been on. Mastodon, despite being a much smaller network, also has huge chains of posts spawned by angry toots/posts. At this point I'm convinced that this is just a modality of failure in human discourse. I'm cautiously optimistic that humans will develop norms around socializing in the large, but it took centuries of political instability for the printing press to be normalized, so it may take (turbulent) decades for socializing in the large to be normalized.
Narkive has a whole bunch of these archived (especially since Google Groups is terrible these days.) If you know which group you're looking for they have old logs. Some folks associated with the newly revived Big 8 are also looking to submit Usenet archives to archive.org.
> These algorithms purposefully amplify some of the most toxic content out there
No, these algorithms (often) purposefully amplify content that increases the engagement rate or "average time on page" metric.
It's just that toxic content coincidentally often has high values on this metric:
- if you agree with the content, you stay on the page longer to read more of what you love
- if you disagree with the (toxic) content, you perhaps invest a lot of time to post strong counterarguments (increases engagement rate and average time on page)
This distinction is needlessly pedantic. While social media companies might not have initially sought to promote toxic content, they have long since known they are effectively doing so and have done very little to stop it. In practice, "content that increases the engagement rate" so frequently means toxic content that it's not a useful distinction.
> In other words, maybe its undermining our current system by actually being more technically democratic.
I think OPs point is valid if the algorithm is really just giving humans more of what they want. In other words, if the engagement metric really is responding to how humans prefer to spend their time, this really is a view into what a more technically democratic society looks like.
Personally, I don't like the idea of that and would prefer the thought that these algorithms really are measuring the wrong thing!
To highlight the point I'm making, assuming the above is true, your stance could be summed up as: "yes, humans prefer this content, but we know better and will make the right decision on their behalf"
To re-enforce a sibling comment, being able to choose your own algorithm is exactly how you tease apart these two takes. Twitter supports this (chronological vs. engagement) - I personally opt for chronological. I'd be interested to see the stats on usage of that!
You'd be venturing into the realm of psychology for that, but I would argue that short-term engagement != long-term desire. Think of gambling or gaming addictions- nobody's "forcing" those people to engage in behavior against their best interest, but many would argue that they're not freely choosing to succumb to addiction either.
I agree that it's not, but long-term desires are not all that people have.
> many would argue
Maybe, maybe not, but I would disagree.
> that they're not freely choosing to succumb to addiction either.
"freely" is doing the heavy lifting in that sentence. And a discussion about that is philosophical. They're as free to make that decision as they are to make any other.
> Nobody is being forced to read/share that content.
Those things are literally the result of human and automated research on how to make people read/share content. I wonder what is your definition of "forced".
If you go to the bookstore and there are two shelves, one of Danielle Steel novels and another of Dan Brown, are you making a free choice to read trashy pulp fiction?
The point of a functioning market is that humans choose who they do business with. Both sides of the transaction are responsible for this - if you fill your shelves with trashy pulp fiction and there isn’t a market for that people stop going to your store.
Personally I try to go out of my way to purchase books directly from the author, publisher, a book store with a local presence, and online retailers in that order.
I’ve mostly cut Barnes and Nobel out of my vendor list for this exact reason, their book shelves are full of products I have no interest in - walking into their store has such a high noise to signal ratio that, unless I place my order in advance for a specific product, I don’t bother walking in anymore. The books of value are buried on shelves drown out by heavily marketed pop culture noise; and that’s if I’m lucky, often I have to have it ordered and shipped to store to pick it up locally. They don’t meet my needs for content discovery so I don’t do business with them very often.
Don’t optimize, don’t recommend. Chronological timeline of only things you directly subscribed to. If you want to go down a rabbit hole, you should have to find it on your own.
My inner Libertarian is screaming, but I would support a "choose your algorithm" law. Wherein social media platforms would be required to allow the user a clear choice to opt-out of algorithmic recommendations. Perhaps even requiring a basic chronological feed.
I know the actual text of the bill would require a lot of finagling and legalese, but that's the concept of what I want.
You inner Libertarian has the same problem as every other person with that ideology - you are vastly overestimating the knowledge and capabilities of the average user, and the ideas that result will fail in practice. Algorithmic content is a market failure being subsidized by the fact that it helps sell ads. The capitalist greedy function means they're going to keep pushing algo content, because it's the money making engine. If you ban the combination of algorithmic content and targeted advertising, the damage would be vastly reduced (also Meta would implode, because their business is a market failure that only exists because regulators are not enforcing competition laws that prevent the use of free services subsided by ads and other antitrust laws).
> but the requirement to provide non algorithmic alternatives for content feeds.
"Non algorithmic" means "some human creates the content feed by hand". This is also not free of lots of biases and what news portals in the web did in the past.
Yeah, I understood what you said, I just would be against it in general unless advertising is strictly decoupled from it. Even then, I'm not sure there is a huge benefit to it.
There used to be a news app called Pulse that LinkedIn bought and killed. To me, that was the best possible execution of the feed concept. It was essentially RSS with a scrollable feed component. You could browse feeds by category, but it wasn't recommending things based on current interests. If you wanted to go down a right/left wing newshole it was possible, but you had to consciously seek it out and go down it. The app wasn't breadcrumbing you.
except recommendation platforms are more popular all the time. ppl will choose the algo feed bc they like it more. idk why but everybody is taking america off the hook for wanting toxic shit and gravitating to it. its at least half a demand side problem.
if u want an example: tiktok has the for you page (algo discovery) and the following page (just ppl u follow). its the fyp where ppl spend time.
I can't respond to the child comment, so I'll reply here. The "type everything out" must be a generational/cultural thing. Because when I read your comment I literally did not realize you used words like "ppl". I automatically expanded it to people when reading it
If that's true, why is twitter making it so difficult (and more difficult over time) to see only content you follow, and Facebook making it impossible?
The answer to that question has nothing to do with my objection. I was simply pointing out the irrelevance of the "original intent" of these algorithms, given that we now know, and have known what they do. Focusing on that downplays their effects, which can indeed be considered their intent nowadays since we have known the effects for a while.
Say you hit a button, and each time you hit it you gain a million dollars. After you hit that button once or twice, you discover that it also causes great harm to other people. If you continue to hit the button, your original intent (when you didn't know it's effects) is no longer relevant to whether or not it you should continue hitting the button, since you would now knowingly be harming people for your own profit. The side-effect is no longer a side-effect. It's just an effect.
To answer your question anyway, perhaps we should consider the well-being of a user and bake that into our algorithms. It might not be as profitable, but there's a reason we regulate companies- having some restrictions on profitability can often be a net benefit to society.
Who gets to define what “toxic content” is? Is the Great Barrington Declaration toxic? How about studies that show masks might not work? How about public sourced data showing the IFR of Covid was nowhere near what “the experts” modeled early on?
The owners of the space can make those decisions, and the users can provide feedback, just like it happens now. There's no static status quo where everybody's happy, just like there's no static society.
So, the previous point still stands. These algorithms purposefully amplify content that increases engagement, which often happens to be toxic. Ergo, these algorithms often purposefully amplify toxic content.
At this very moment, the person trending highest across all social media is a sex trafficker hawking his self improvement remote mentorship thing to insecure young men. His basic tactic is to say blatantly misogynistic things to get eyeballs.
I saw youtube's new shorts feature and clicked on it out of curiousity. It gave me a couple funny cat videos and some cooking content copied from tik tok... but after that it was just a doomscroll of the guy I'm talking about above, Prager University, etc.
Youtube has like 2 decades of data on what videos I watch, and it's definitely not that shit, but yet it's clear their algorithm is optimizing to put that in front of my eyes.
> At this very moment, the person trending highest across all social media is a sex trafficker hawking his self improvement remote mentorship thing to insecure young men
Who is this? And what platforms? I'm not seeing anything like this on fb/twtr/ig/tt/yt
If you know exposure to radiation causes cancer, then you shouldn't let people continue to mine despite simply wanting more uranium or what have you for philanthropic purposes.
You seem to be confusing correlation with causation. Correlation is effectively coincidence. You can't expect anyone to make decisions - business or otherwise - based on coincidence. In fact, we attemp to solve too many symptoms based on correlation. We can't keep doing that. It's creating more noise while true root problems continue and expand.
The irony is that these machine learning algorithms are effectively coincidence machines. There's no rhyme or reason as to why they work once you have even just a handful of neural net layers, and people invest quite a lot into these magic recommendation machines.
As for toxicity, I don't think there's one magical root cause for all of it. And I'd argue that most features and designs to increase engagement _are_ one of the many causes for people to create lucrative polarizing digital content.
edit: Also I'm not sure how my original post was confusing correlation with causation. You can replace "correlation" with "coincidence" there without issue.
They're tuned to increase engagement. They figure out based on inputs what does that. There's no morality, no value judgement, etc. They try to increase engagement.
Why toxic (which is subjective) appeals to so many humans is really the question here. The algorythms has no say in that.
A coincidence is a good starting point for discovering things. A natural next step would be to figure out how to dissect trained networks and turn them into proper models.
I hope we can figure it out! I'm a big fan of explainable AI initiatives. Though I have a feeling it won't be for another decade or so before anything huge is discovered, considering how long the technology has been around.
> Ergo, these algorithms often purposefully amplify toxic content.
"Purposefully" means that the algorithms were developed with the purpose to amplify toxic content. I seriously doubt this is the case. Amplifying toxic content is rather an unintended side effect of the metrics that the algorithms optimize for.
The algorithm is not looking for toxic content to amplify. It's looking for content that would attain the most engagement of its users. If you consider the posts to be toxic, then maybe you are in a minority.
Everyone in this thread but you understands that the even if they are not optimizing for outrage, by optimizing for engagement you implicitly (and objectively) serve more negative/polarizing/divisive content.
Yes it does. The amplified content is just content that attracts the most engagement. It is not a reflection on how "toxic" the content is. If someone considers the post to be toxic and does not engage with it, then that person is not the majority of users.
This line of argument is exactly why I think intention (mens rea) should be abolished from the legal system completely. Outcomes matter, intentions don't matter. If you don't want to put someone in danger, don't do the thing that may put them in danger. It's up to you to anticipate the consequences of your actions.
It really doesn't matter what the algorithm is meant to do because it's very obvious the material consequences of what it does.
I suggest that it might be worth reflecting on what ‘toxic’ means, because it is at least unclear to me, and the term seems to carry a lot of significance in this conversation!
> No, these algorithms (often) purposefully amplify content that increases the engagement rate or "average time on page" metric. It's just that toxic content coincidentally often has high values on this metric
Because people democratically choose to engage with it!
To refine the analogy a little more then: regarding the algorithms, maybe it's more like direct democracy but with a really powerful propaganda department (that's run by a sort of evil AI) influencing lots of votes?
> t humans just aren't evolved to have some kinds of discussions asynchronously, remotely behind a screen
Evolution does not have an intended purpose.
> I've found myself needing to disconnect from social media because it leads me to having negative feelings about people that I know I like
That sounds a lot like heated face to face interactions. I guess that's why they call it "social" media!
People can take responsibility for their feelings and actions. Or they can find a scapegoat like social media. There's a long human tradition of scapegoating, after all.
I never said it did. What's your point? I'm just emphasizing that humans have clearly evolved to have social constraints in face-to-face interactions that haven't evolved in async, remote interactions (which is unsurprising).
> That sounds a lot like heated face to face interactions
Except it's not, and that's my whole point. Yes, of course people can have heated face-to-face interactions, but it's undeniable that people can be a lot nastier, quick to judge, be belligerent, etc. in remote interactions vs. in-person. And it's not just social media. Louis CK has a great bit about how he can be a total asshole when driving in traffic in a way that would be completely unacceptable/insane if he did it in an elevator, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8062QEFk5g . The same dynamic applies in online interactions.
The content promoted by the algorithm results in higher user engagement because people like it. If they didn’t, the algorithm would have been changed to promote other kinds of content instead.
Define "like it". Many people also drink themselves to death or OD on heroin because they "like it".
I don't think it's that hard to differentiate between things people do for enjoyment that they think of as a positive influence, and addictive substances that can fleetingly make people "feel better" but are extremely harmful.
Most addicts may say they enjoy getting high, while even simultaneously talking about how drugs have ruined their lives. The fact that social media companies have hacked the same brain pathways doesn't mean the answer should be "it's fine, they all like it!"
Yes and different cultures have different appetites for these vices. For example, in East Asia it's much more acceptable to gamble than it is in most Western countries. In most of Europe it's more acceptable to do drugs than it is in the US, and the US finds it much more acceptable to do drugs than East Asia does. In East Asia it's common to be openly drunk, at night, in public. In the US it's much more acceptable to enjoy firearms than it is in Europe or East Asia.
There's no easy answer to "this is toxic, we should ban it." Everyone has a different definition of toxic. Cultures form around different norms. Social media, like HN, spans multiple continents and cultures. I don't think you'll ever be able to get all of the userbase of any of these sites to agree on what is toxic and what is not.
I'm of the opinion that the user should be able to:
1. Audit their algorithmic recommender to see which bin they're bucketed into.
2. Adjust the weights on the recommender
But anything more, any form of broad agreement on toxicity, is asking for humans around the world to land at a single definition of what is good and what is bad.
It turns out that people are more likely to engage with content they don't like, at least when it comes to factional politics. So that's what ends up being promoted the most.
Controversial content is the one getting promoted more. More often not because of the content itself, but because of the amount of comments (read, fights) attached to it.
I think it is also partially because many people have become accustomed to having a left-leaning media that espouses a certain viewpoint. So in yesteryear the viewpoint might have been very liberal New York or LA, and nowadays it is possible to see a similar "bias" on news outlets like Reddit where the moderation has turned everything into certain left-wing viewpoints US-centric echochambers. A lot of the internet forgets that FOX News is technically a young media network.
And the fact is that most Americans are actually on the fence on the abortion issue, although most people are also against a full-on ban against abortion which the media is focusing on. The media has been presenting a very narrow view in the past, and now you are just getting exposed to the full spectrum of viewpoints on the internet.
Reddit I think is the best counterargument against further moderation of social media. The moderation outside the US at least is wholly haphazard and out-of-touch with mainstream views in said localities. For example if a left-wing American were to actually go around asking how Scandinavians themselves viewed their socialist paradise nordic welfare state as being viable, the response would be something that might be against left-wing interests, and they would be banned on Reddit. Similarly the way the media has supported Muslims and the on-the-ground Islamophobia in Europe and Asia are widely apart, and most of these people would be blanket-banned on Reddit as well.
This comment fails to account for the fact that communicating via software is different than communicating offline.
If a drunkard wanders through a (physical) town square, verbally harassing everyone he meets, it is possible a mob will assemble and physically remove him. Such an outcome may be illiberal (it deprives the drunkard of his voice), but since it fulfills the wishes of the majority, it is highly democratic.
If a drunkard wanders onto social media and harasses everyone, what happens next depends on the design of the social media site.
Social media, like most online media, causes people to behave and to think differently than they would offline. There's a low limit to what we can correctly extrapolate about humanity in general from the behavior of humans on arbitrarily-designed social media websites.
> If a drunkard wanders through a (physical) town square, verbally harassing everyone he meets, it is possible a mob will assemble and physically remove him.
Let me introduce you to Reddit.
Although on Reddit, you may be digitally removed for merely saying something unpopular.
A decade ago Reddit hosted all manner of offensive (and sometimes literally illegal) content. It's not human nature that changed; it's the design of Reddit that changed.
If we make generalizations about society using social media sites, we have to take into account that the design of a site, and the idiosyncrasies of online communication, foster unique kinds of behavior.
But Reddit is by far the best counterargument to all these articles. It not only has the effect of suppressing new viewpoints and arguments that might make the viewpoints a correct (or incorrect) one, but it also has the effect of fueling resentment/blame against the left-wing because people mainly interact with the left-wing of the internet on a daily basis and see the left wing suppressing their personal complaints, and Reddit may have had the unintended consequence of helping the right wing by making them a protest party. The moderation on the site has managed to turn the entire global redditsphere into a US left wing echochamber completely aloof from the localities being represented.
The article argues that the effect of social media is to weaken democracy. And the comment to which I responded, as I understand it, argues that social media, in itself, represents a flowering of democracy.
My own view is a variation of 'the medium is the message': that social media molds the world to suit itself.
Online platforms all have idiosyncrasies: one platform incentivizes performative behavior, another incentivizes flame-wars, a third leads users to misjudge the prevalence of some subculture in society, and so on.
So I agree with the article that social media is weakening democracy, in as much as we have designed social media sites stupidly. And I disagree with the comment to which I responded, insofar as, if social media represents a flowering of democracy, it represents democracy based on people who are effectively in an altered state of mind.
I don't know if flowering is the right word, that might be too rosy of a picture (sorry, bad pun).
I don't mean to attach a value judgement to direct democracy. If you asked me to, I'd agree that it's something thats doomed to fail.
I just find it ironic that an elite media institution makes the argument that something that ostensibly lets every person (all of the 'demos') voice their opinion is undermining "democracy".
I find it hard to explain the amusement that I get from this scenario... it's sort of like a double entendre. If you use the original literal meaning of the word democracy, the headline seems like an obvious contradiction (letting all the people speak is undermining rule by the people!). If you translate democracy to "our specific form of democracy" or just "our current system" then the effect goes away.
Of course a lot of this relies on social media being some perfect public forum, which it obviously isn't. I just saw some comedy to the situation is all.
I see some truth to that, but I tend to focus on all the possible versions of the internet we could have designed, probably some would be dystopic, and others utopic.
I also can see the irony in democracy falling to democracy, but, at the risk of sounding preachy, we should remember that the most infamous dictatorships of the 20th Century sprang from democratic elections.
Democracy leading to non-democracy isn't the irony i was talking about.
The irony is in an institution that has enormous power in our system complaining that giving the little people a chance to speak up is somehow undermining the ability of those little people to self-govern.
Edit: In other words, social media may not be perfectly representative of the people's will, but it's almost certainly more so than what comes out of something like the atlantic. On top of that, you could argue that social media diminishes the power of an institution like the atlantic. That is the irony.
Social media is what happens if you give everyone a microphone.
The mob mentality, fake news, conspiracy theories, and so forth were all big problems in the past. Until sometime in the 20th century, lots of newspapers published that kind of stuff too. It’s an unavoidable part of human nature.
People who want regulation of social media need to realize that they really desire a return to elite control of public discourse and want the microphone taken away from many of the people it has been given to. Maybe that is the correct position — but people making that argument should realize and admit that is the case.
> Social media is what happens if you give everyone a microphone.
Bullshit. Anyone can post, but how much their post actually gets shown to others is dependent on the algorithm. Everyone gets a microphone but the microphone manufacturer gets to decide how loud every microphone is.
Next you'll tell me the Letters to the Editor page in newspapers is a democratic space everyone has a microphone for because anyone can write in.
The real innovation here is being able to make people feel like they're in a "democratic" communication space when it's still a top down media space where what gets heard is controlled centrally.
Usenet, forums, etc were more real democratic spaces since anyone could just post, and it was up to individual readers to decide who to ignore. That said in practice, most successful communities usually had to have moderation to avoid being overrun in spam-- but this is a much more honest, gentle, and transparent sort of control than an algorithm that operates subtly, with the readers not even really realizing what other choices were ignored.
> Bullshit. Anyone can post, but how much their post actually gets shown to others is dependent on the algorithm. Everyone gets a microphone but the microphone manufacturer gets to decide how loud every microphone is.
Yes, and people like it, and we know that because they continue to engage with the content. If they didn't like the results of the algorithm they would not engage.
The algorithm does not shape people's preferences -- quite the opposite! It is an attempt to discover their preferences and cater to them in order to sell more advertisements. If the algorithm did not give people what they want, it wouldn't work, and social media companies would have to change it in order to chase the advertising dollars.
If there were two equivalent social networks, and one of them had algorithmically curated content and one of them just presented a straightforward chronological feed of posts, the vast majority of people would flock to the one that had the algorithm. The social network that did not have an algorithm would need to invent one in order to stay in business.
> The algorithm does not shape people's preferences -- quite the opposite! It is an attempt to discover their preferences
Which preferences though? There might be a hundred different types of content that I hypothetically would find very engaging, but the system happens to pick one particular one of those somehow. Yes, it's subject to some constraint but there is still a lot of degree of freedom left over.
> but people making that argument should realize and admit that is the case
I personally do and I always find it a little bit funny that this is framed as so scandalous. How to elevate capable elites so they can govern responsibly and create some sense of regularity and order is one of the oldest and maybe the primary questions we've always dealt with. 'Let the inmates run the asylum' and don't dare question if they're qualified to do so is a fairly new experiment, with so far questionable results
I don't believe social media gives us a glimpse of democracy, but rather anarchy.
As for it being controlled by a privileged few I believe that part is true from my experience in the industry, and my experience with it in general. It's very, very easy to sock-puppet and there are maybe...3-4 companies who control ~80% of all "truth" that is out there. For example, the rise of so-called "fact-checkers" is largely due to the control needed on society. You can probably think of 10 examples where a fact checker would be useful, but who controls them? Who signs their paychecks? The same people who control the flow of information. If you want evidence of this one-sided control ask yourself what would happen if you were a normal joe nobody and google shut down your gmail account, or instagram, facebook, etc. You've completely lost your voice.
This fact that some company can be the arbiter of "truth" and information flow implies tyranny, rather than democracy. If the world was set up on mastodon I would be inclined to agree with you. However, in it's current state it feels more like a method to control people and not a method for so called "democratic" exchange. Control of the media is very important to governments exactly for the purpose of reducing democracy [1].
> I don't believe social media gives us a glimpse of democracy, but rather anarchy.
But it seems like the conclusion you reach is that it's tyranny. Do you view anarchy and tyranny as the same thing? Or would you view them as opposites, or somewhere in between?
I don't believe so. I think the problem is the way social media platforms prioritize engagement above all else. They use clever algorithms to curate the content you scroll through to maximize time spent engaging with the platform.
This has a side effect of promoting fringe content, because it drives engagement. Even if the interaction is the user calling someone an idiot for thinking the Earth is flat, that is still engagement. It gets fed into the algorithm, and now that content gets recommended to more and more people.
Reddit is the only social media platform that I think actually resembles a direct democracy. It's algorithm is driven by the karma system, not engagement. Posts and comments that people mostly dislike or disagree with get hidden by their low karma scores even though they often have high engagement metrics for the few people who do see them. This direct democracy comes with it's own problems though, mainly in how it reinforces groupthink and the formation of echo chambers.
The idea that everyone has a voice is false on social media. The people whose posts tend to trend in culture are often not random people but established players offering an already entrenched perspective.
I would have agreed with your view 25 years ago, when everyone was making blogs instead of instagram profiles. But today what you assume is organic discussion on social media is entirely artificial, designed to limit the shades of acceptable opinion amongst the public in a manner not much different than old media has done (deferring to authority, pundits, established known variables).
This is a really interesting point. We’ve bought into the “American Dream” of social media— as long as what you’re saying is “good” enough or “interesting” enough, you too, can go viral. But the reality is the success is not nearly as organic as it seems.
Social media in its current form (ad-driven, VC-backed) is far from direct democracy. It's obscurely controlled by not elected persons working for large corporation, optimized by AI/ML algorithms for confrontation (a.k.a. "engagement") and ad revenue, not for social problem-solving. The current social media are simply designed for a different purpose.
I personally disagree with direct democracy unless it's extremely localized, and otherwise agree with representative democracy, like we have with governors, senators, and the electoral college. As Zizek once said, even if we had direct democracy, we would still have a situation where only a privileged few have the luxury of time, education, and understanding to be deeply involved in the political process, just like we do now. Except at least with representative democracy we can choose who those people are (and make them need re-elections), whereas in a fully direct democracy, I'd just have no say whatsoever if I didn't have the time to stay up to date with global economics, politics, news, culture, voting, etc.
Not to mention humans defer to 'representatives' anyway: local charismatics; implicit hierarchies at work, at the gym, school, etc; can even be anonymous, i.e. whatever ideology they purpose which they haven't carefully reflectd on for inconsistencies and aporias, etc
This is just the death throes of the legacy media losing their influence.
The Internet democratizes the spread of information and smartphones give easy access to all of it. Social media allows bloggers and podcasters to distribute information faster, cheaper, and to a much larger audience than the printing press, radio, or television could ever dream of.
It seems to me that since the rise of social media, politicians are voting in a way that's less representative of their constituents, not more. By that measure social media is bringing us farther from direct democracy, not closer.
> It seems to me that since the rise of social media, politicians are voting in a way that's less representative of their constituents, not more.
A consideration: Could it also be that the politicians are voting quite like before, it is just that social media made you much more aware of the fact that this voting behavior is not representative of the wishes of their voters?
I don't, but regardless the US doesn't seem very close to direct democracy to me. So I disagree with OP when they say we're getting a glimpse of what direct democracy looks like right now.
To clarify, I don't mean to say the US is looking like a direct democracy. I mean to say that maybe we can think of social media as a microcosm that shows what direct democracy might look like.
Topics going viral are sort of like issues coming up for a vote, and the result is that you see different consensuses emerge and different real world consequences (companies changing policies and making phony apologies for things, for example).
I would recommend "The Myth of the Rational Voter" which deals with this issue very systematically. Democracy is good for a lot of reasons, but that doesn't mean voters make the best choice for themselves every time. I think over time the system heals though. It has so far.
Yeah when it comes to detailed policy decisions, voters have a huge information disparity. This is why a solid trust in media is so critical to democracy: otherwise the situation devolves into a contest of persuasive personality.
idk, I feel like the opacity of social media allows for the more direct control of the zeitgeist from special interests. Propaganda can be given the paradoxical credibility of a "concerned citizen" through mass bot campaigns or not even bots, media specialists being paid to disseminate scripted opinions with just as much verisimilitude as posts from either you or me. We are all highly influenceable, and we are weak to this because we all believe we aren't.
No, because in actual social settings, human inherently promote views they find to be reputable, and minimize the impact of speech they believe to be dishonest and/or harmful.
Social media largely does the opposite, as a byproduct of optimizing purely for engagement
> Could it be that social media is giving us a glimpse of what unfettered (direct) democracy actually looks like?
Only if unfettered direct democracy includes censorship of any comment that exists outside the official approved message.
I would call social media an unfettered plutocracy.
It's unregulated and unstructured conversation in isolated information silos. Different groups of people are on different information streams. A particular conversation should be visible for the whole nation and the participants in that conversation should be chosen in a representative manner.
>with enough resources an individual can gain more votes
It's not just the usual resources, it's time. If you have lots of free time, you can make a name for yourself on social media. If you have to work and raise children, you can't engage as much. Guess who dominates the discussions?
News papers and anybody with a printing press used to hold that same power. So it seems like the same thing, just faster, and whatever else... but that might be a too simplistic perception, ignoring other factors... or perhaps not.
Or perhaps this shows that most of us aren't capable of or willing to think independently, and just trust whatever information presented to us?
Previously, the authority are more careful in presenting information. Now the social media just recommend whatever that can attract us to the platform, regardless of how ridiculous the information is.
Social media is dangerous, because the algorithms that make it money are milking negative emotions like outrage and hate.
Social media as "people interacring on the internet" is not bad per se. For example I'd guess Hacker News' net benefit for democracy would be positive.
If you mean "direct democracy" by "technically democratic" then you have a point. But direct democracy is totally flawed and rightly no country endorses it. (To make this clear, Switzerland is not a direct democracy, they merely have more plebiscites than other countries.) Real direct democracy would lead to horrible populism, short-sighted and uninformed decision making, and a tyranny of the majority. It would also likely be hijacked in no time by taking over mass media, and turned into a real dictatorship. Representative democracy with minority protections and strong power divisions is way superior and what people mean by "democracy" (at least upon a bit of reflection). I don't see how social media could possibly make representative democracy more democratic. Since the posters who actually know what they're talking about will always be in a small minority, it's hard to see how social media could make voters more informed, for instance. Most posts on social media contain no new information at all, all the information in them is aggregated from traditional media in a usually extremely biased and selective manner. The vast majority of posters employ no journalists, have no correspondents, and do not gather any news of their own.
In my opinion, it's important to distinguish between different types of social media, though. Heavily moderated forum-based social media like Reddit and HN make it possible to have halfway civil discussions, although the amount of noise and misinformation can still be high. I personally consider them relatively neutral or only slightly negative for democracy. They are good for finding like-minded people interested in niche topics, which can be good or bad depending on the topic.
Social media like Twitter and Facebook, on the other hand, seem to have no positive effect at all. Their rules of conduct basically enforce and select for passive aggressive posts and intellectual insults. It's unbearable for everyone involved and merely makes everyone more aggressive until they have customized their feeds so much that they create echo chambers. Such social media systems polarize a lot, even more so than traditional media.
> in other words, maybe its undermining our current system by actually being more technically democratic
That pure popular democracy per se doesn’t work was well known when our republic was founded. That knowledge, drawn from antiquity and refreshed over millennia, has been edited out of our culture’s diet over the past century. (In part because in fascism and totalitarianism we saw its opposite noxiously close.) A perusing of the Federalist Papers [0] is quick refreshment, however, and it’s shockingly topical to this day.
Unfettered democracy is a ship with untethered cargo. Once the crowd starts oscillating it self amplifies, careening into majoritarian tyranny (often punctuated by hyper partisan deadlock). This happens [1]. Every [2]. Single [3]. Time [4].
In small groups we intuitively know this, and thoughtlessly deploy troves of customs and manners reinforced from childhood and in part hard coded (e.g. our sense of fairness [5]). We make allowances for those whose interests are repeatedly, but reasonably, in the minority. And we tell jerks to shut the hell up, and if they don’t, stop inviting them. In large groups, none of that comes naturally. It needs to be codified. Particularly when customs and norms vary across people, regions and time.
Yet we somehow are led to believe that no, if we just did this or that with elections, the law of large numbers ensures rationality, and the madness that would ensue at a dinner party unconstrained by manners, norms, laws or empathy is somehow chased off by the garlic of popular consent. (In case it isn’t clear, I don’t believe in legitimate government without democratic elections. I love democracy. But more popular control isn’t boundlessly good. You don’t rest your case after showing X is more democratic than Y. If you love democracy, you should want it to thrive; for it to thrive, we must tend to it.)
It’s even worse than a direct democracy because we know there is a portion the social media “crowd” who aren’t actually constituents. So it’s like a direct democracy where the democracy’s enemies are also allowed a vote.
>But social media is basically letting everyone have a voice in the conversation
Me and Elon Musk both have "a voice" but one reaches much farther than the other. It's like saying capitalism is true democracy because everyone can vote with their wallet. Or as a farm animal once put it "all animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others"
People like Elon have an expanded reach due to their huge number of followers, but the neat thing about social media is that there are a lot of normal people who can also get a bunch of followers.
People like Hasan, Destiny, or Popehat have a pretty much unprecedented amount of reach for "normal people".
> social media is basically letting everyone have a voice in the conversation
This is demonstrably false, as illustrated by the spate of silencing dissenting voices on various platforms, regardless of whether their content is factual. Just today even, you can no longer talk about how the Biden admin has redefined the word "recession", without Facebook removing your post. They claim it's not factual, when it clearly is. But is it dissenting from what the "privileged few" want the masses to believe, so it is silenced. There's literally a new example of this each and every day.
Interesting take, in a way it resembles direct democracy, but I don't think it qualifies since votes are meaningless in terms of what substantive power you gain from votes. Just because you have the right to speak your mind and have other people hear you does not mean you have any power over the direction of the platform or any additional agency. You can say (almost) whatever you want on the platform, but Facebook is still the arbiter of what speech is allowed on the platform and can ban you at any time, and as a user you are still nothing more than raw materials to them while they seek to monopolize your attention and energy.
The same goes outside of Facebook too for Americans, we can speak our minds but our political rights are being taken away because they inconvenience wealthy and powerful people. Without other freedoms, like freedom over your body, freedom from corporations abusing you by breaking the law and suffering no consequences, the right to vote, the Fourth Amendment, etc, freedom of speech is pretty empty on its own.
Direct democracy can have problems like you're describing, but I don't think it's the issue here. Rather it's exposing the fundamental issues of late capitalism that fails to meet human needs (healthcare, housing, belonging/emotional needs), compounded with unchecked corporate power which is increasingly resembling fascism. In fact, at this point most of the major tech companies (Google, Twitter, TikTok, Reddit) are hiring many people from intelligence services. Corporate power merging with government power, especially by corporations hiring government spies, is a huge red flag for fascism taking hold. Before questioning democracy (which is a trend I've seen lately, as if to normalize democratic backsliding), I think we should start questioning that first.
This somewhat assumes that the purpose of democracy is to create stability and institutional trust at the possible expense of freedom.
Social media creates terrible disorder compared to what you can get by ABC, CBS, and NBC giving you roughly the same nightly news and fostering agreement among the masses. At that time, getting into the mass media business was costly. There wasn't too much competition if you wanted that kind of reach.
But now, reach is very different. Gone are the days when reach was restricted to the upper crust. Now, some YouTuber can gain a following that rivals one of these esteemed institutions.
So I'll ask the big question. Does society need gatekeepers to control who has reach in order to remain stable? You can easily argue that it still does, but they're people who tweak algorithms or work at trust & safety departments. And if society needs these gatekeepers, what should their qualifications be?
> Does society need gatekeepers to control who has reach in order to remain stable?
This is the unspoken part of these sorts of criticisms of social media--people aren't responsible enough to form their own opinions. I actually believe that's the case, but I also believe in free speech, and I'm not sure how to reconcile those things.
Decentralization of views will never yield the "right" opinion with unanimity, because we're all so often drawn to bad ideas, bickering, or what not. But it will also never always yield the "wrong" opinion with unanimity. And that latter aspect, in my opinion, is so much more important than the former. Because in any system where you have a centralized opinion-maker, that authority will sooner, rather than later, end up being abused. The examples through history are endless and horrible. Imagine a scenario in modern highly interconnected times should the right opinion become the reich opinion once again.
Such wrongness is only allowed to foster when it eventually becomes impossible to challenge it publicly. Of course alongside that freedom also comes my freedom to publicly reject the idea that 2+2=4. It seems to me that in modern times the problem has not been so much people coming to 'wrong' opinions, but people being unable to accept others having such opinions. Then in the fruitless and effortful battle to convert the pagan, divisions are only widened and beliefs hardened.
Perhaps the issue is not one of wrongness but intolerance of wrongness. I suspect we all get this feeling when we see something we believe to be wrong of "Agh! If he only knew what I knew, he'd never think this way." Of course the catch is the other guy is also often thinking the exact same about you.
I think part of remedy is promoting an informed electorate. I imagine this would start at the level of schooling with promoting critical thinking and instillation of democratic supporting virtues (like always vote)
I agree with you, but the problem with this approach is there a vocal minority (in the US at least) that vehemently opposes this as it hurts votes for "their side". The last thing they want is an educated, critical thinking, populace. They want people who will fall in line, and do as they are let to believe.
While I inferred a particular angle from this comment, I realized that it actually works for folks across a broad spectrum of political leanings. It's a Rorschach test.
This is a feedback cycle. It's hard to become "responsible" and able to form your own opinions if you hardly ever get the chance.
Too add to that, if those who do express their own, dissenting, views get pilloried for it, who is going to want to start learning to express theirs? The usual answer is the thickest skinned and the most extreme.
for a true democracy, all voices must be equal, and no single voice of a private entity can be allowed to have more reach than any other.
for that, any media that is designed to amplify some voices over others would have to cease.
one way to help with that would be by disconnecting ideas from the people who shared them so that good ideas can be shared and discussed without creating leaders that people will be compelled to follow. (imagine if hackernews discussions would not show any usernames, so you would not know who said anything, and any message would have to stand on its own. i believe this would work because practically, i rarely notice who the parent posters that i respond to are, unless we start a longer discussion thread with the same few people. moderators would still see usernames, so they could identify spam accounts.)
this of course completely contradicts the personality cult that is made out of current leadership.
I’m sympathetic; I believe in the ideals of democracy, but it seems to me that those ideals come from outside of democracy itself, and that democracy cannot function without them. An example is the belief that everyone participates in a common rationality, such that there is benefit to be had by allowing different perspectives to be heard. This belief has been undermined in a very deep way in the US, to the point we can fairly clearly say that it is gone. I am deeply worried about what this means in the future, and am skeptical that there are procedural or technical solutions.
(As an aside, I think that the traditional left vs right hermeneutic is beyond useless to explain how this belief disappeared, but that’s maybe a different discussion).
well, not really, because technically, hackernews works that way too. the difference between 4chan and HN is, who the people are that participate. and what topics they are discussing. even 4chan has different topics and each topic is moderated. it's not a free-for-all. the difference is that on 4chan almost any topic and tone is welcome, whereas on HN it is not. the same would be true for any democratic discourse where we want to address the problems of our community.
any person should have an equal voice, as long as that voice contributes to the discussion of the problem at hand. moderation of off-topic or inappropriate contributions still needs to happen.
This belief has been undermined in a very deep way in the US, to the point we can fairly clearly say that it is gone.
not just in the US but pretty much world wide.
I am deeply worried about what this means in the future, and am skeptical that there are procedural or technical solutions
there are a few things that i believe are clearly a problem, and by changing those, democracy could be improved.
the strongest one is partisan politics, which causes groups to fight with each other instead of letting those interested in solving a problem work on it together.
another is the personality cult that is created by candidates around elections. if instead we have write-in nominations only, without allowing any kind of promotion of particular individuals, we would be able to elect those people that the majority feels, actually represent them.
that of course doesn't scale, so these elections would only happen at a local level. at regional and national levels the elections would be done by electorates from amongst themselves. so, in order to become president, someone would have to be elected locally into the regional electorate, and then be chosen by the regional electorate and later the national electorate all the way to the top.
and while we are at it, let's not have a single president but a committee of elected leaders who can only enact decisions if the majority of them agree. like the supreme court.
You're missing is the time factor. Someone with infinitely more time to post on Hackernews will have their opinions amplified over people who are more casually interacting with the site.
The probably with people is that if see the same opinion X number of times they tend to believe it. Nobody is immune to it.
hackernews actually already supports rate-limiting people from posting to much. so it is possible to implement systems where individual voices don't get a chance to dominate. i think that would address this problem.
I don't have time to create hundreds of alt-accounts or run proxies through alternative servers but there are people who do. I used to run a forum and play this game of cat and mouse.
It's pretty ironic that an article that decries the rise of polarization, using the term "polarization" 18 separate times, ends up being basically just a checklist of one-sided ideological complaints about the other side.
After reading this book review on Haidt's Righetous Mind (https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/your-book-review-the-r...), I've been wondering if I falsely gave him credence for channeling a neutral voice. This article pushes me further in that direction.
polarization noun [1]
: division into two sharply distinct opposites
especially : a state in which the opinions, beliefs, or interests of a group or society no longer range along a continuum but become concentrated at opposing extremes
political polarization
… the relationship between partisan polarization and legislative gridlock is direct, with stalemate more frequent as the political center shrinks.
— Sarah A. Binder
The drift in our society now is not toward a grouping around the middle, but toward polarization.
— Richard Todd
… the venue where our most fractious … arguments over identity occur: the internet. These arguments do not play out on a democratized playing field where all identities are weighted equally; rather, they play out in a meticulously crafted environment where identities are microtargeted and polarization is amplified by algorithms.
— Emma Levy
> Why would it be ironic to use a word describing the thing you're talking about a lot?
Their position seems to be that polarization (in the sense of the sides being pushed to extremes) is a bad thing, they claim that has happened, and yet they are extremely one-sided.
Ugh... this topic is exhausting, blown out of proportion, red-baity, and the voices yelling about it from the hills are usually blind to all players but one in the game of propaganda/public influence. It's also been a big part of political scapegoating/distraction of recent years.
It's a butchered topic, but with media revenue declining since the end of the 24/7 trump reality show, media is still reaching at this narrative since it still catches some eyes, still fresh in the public's mind, and still evokes outrage in their target audiences.
Just so over hearing it, nevermind seeing that it has made its way to the front page of hn...
"the front page of HN" is not so sacred; the politics of Tom Bombadil have been done and there's those that are so over that, too. Allow others the room to learn the weary cynical wisdom you've gained. Be open to the possibility that there still banality you haven't witnessed; and the hope of originality.
Maybe it would help to criticize the criticism. I think the current criticism is way oversimplified. It's not a social media problem per se. It's the current implementation and monetization of it. We have always had social media of some kind, even before the printing press. It is critical to democracy. We have even had an entity inserting themselves in between the speaker and the listener, filtering the discussion for their own benefit and using their own standards. That used to be newspapers, but now it's Facebook.
The difference is the filtering standard is now centralized by very few entities, basically Facebook and Twitter. Whatever standard they employ basically amounts to centralized information planning. Whatever is the resulting harm becomes greatly magnified. In the past if a few editors were causing harm to democracy in one direction or another, that harm was limited in scope. Now the devastation is total. Because the players have 100% coverage.
A breakup of some kind over this monopoly seems necessary now, before it becomes impossible.
Exhausting, yes, but I don't see how it can be blown out of proportion. The existence of social media is definitely undermining democracies, just like all previous mass propaganda machines, except with a larger and more accessible reach than ever before.
There's nothing for researchers to study to reach this conclusion. Have we all forgotten about Cambridge Analytica? As a reminder, they used targetted ads to spread disinformation on social media, the effects of which have surely influenced the status of dozens of "democracies" around the world. It's certainly not the only company in that business, just one that happened to be widely publicized.
Social media is not a unique tool in the arsenal of rich megalomaniacs, but to claim it doesn't have a major role in undermining democracies is willfully ignorant.
> with media revenue declining since the end of the 24/7 trump reality show
NYT and Reuters are both public companies with record levels of revenue and profit in 2021 and their recent quarters, compared to 2018-2020. Try again.
I did some thinking about this months ago and I think the origin of the problem is how groups make decisions. I think it is similar to a Flocking algorithm. In the algorithm, each bird starts in a random direction but then keeps adjusting its heading a little based on the average of its nearest neighbors. After many little adjustments, the birds will form flocks where all the birds fly in the same direction.
Similarly, in group decisions, each person starts with their own ideas. As people interact in the group, each person learns and modifies their position a little bit. Eventually, the group's members are all thinking similar ideas.
The big question is: Does this algorithm produce 1 flock or many flocks? If there is a force bringing all the birds together, they'll form a single flock. But if there isn't, the birds will separate into many flocks that each head in different directions and do not influence each other.
Before social media, most of our group interactions were physical. If we disagreed with our neighbor at a school meeting, the school was still a force to bring us back together. If we disagreed with family, there was still family reunions or holidays to bring us back together.
But social media allows us to "unfriend". That is, to cut connections to people who disagree with us. There is no forced interactions between strident voices of one political team and strident voices of another political team. The mantra of "for the good of the country" doesn't force us to communicate and bring everyone back together. On social media, we're fracturing into many flocks.
A different social media paradigm/algorithm might include a force that brings us back together. E.g., not allowing "unfriend" or forcing people at random to interact.
I always think a simple measure that would fix the toxicity in social media is to adopt the "right to answer" that worked for ages in the newspaper business.
It works by obliging the newspaper to print a correction at the same location as where they published the original piece (that was proved wrong in a court-of-peers of some sort).
It acts as an effective check because the right to answer would reach the same audience as the original fake piece and the credibility of the newspaper would decline.
In social media, fake news spreads virally and there is very little recourse except tweeting a correction and hoping it goes equally viral.
A simple law could require for-profit publishers of fake news to ensure a similar audience (retargeting or newly paid) reads the correction.
That would destroy all the profit of publishing fake news, while reducing the credibility of the fake news publisher effectively.
Identifying "fake news" in a non-partisan way is required for the consequences of such a law to be non-partisan, but is probably not possible with real humans. So instead you would get a Ministry of Truth that identifies fake news as that which is disapproved of by the party.
The Russian state is currently busy crushing independent journalism in just that way with their recent fake news law.
This applies to basically the entire spectrum of humanity, not just readers of “fake news”.
For example NYT published all kinds of hyperbolic garbage the last 2.5 years that scared the living daylights out of their readers. It took them better part of an entire year before they stopped saying that the IFR for Covid was 4%, despite there being ample real world data to suggest it was several orders of magnitude lower. Will they ever publish a correction for that? Is what they published “fake news”? I mean the figure they published was based on some sketchy model made by a person with a long history of publishing sketchy models… some “expert” said it was true, so it has to be right?
“Fake news” is just a way to dismiss anything that isn’t aligned with the current dogma. Plenty of “fake news” turned out to be quite real over the course of the last two years.
And yes there is actual fake news out there. But too many people think that whatever they are reading isn’t also “fake news”. Everybody needs to think critically about what they read. Just because NYT or The Atlantic said it doesn’t mean it is true either.
It can far more often than not. However certain parties have a vested interest in pushing the narrative that all news is equally fake and that any attempt to distinguish truth from lies is simply propaganda.
It's epistemology 101. Absolute truth can never be determined. So we must inherently use imperfect method of approximating the truth. Those approximations are open to criticism, so any system that determines fake news will necessarily have to take a 'stance' in some situations: it will politicize and reflect the biases of those administrating the system.
For example not long ago I saw some "news" segment going around twitter saying a paper showed that the COVID mRNA vaccines where gene therapy. The paper said no such thing, it wasn't even a slight misinterpretation but an outright lie.
Is social media and technology in general undermining the traditional democracy? Yes. And that's a positive. Well, as long as you're not an entity that benefits - financially or otherwise - from the status quo. Then of course you're going to want retain your power and its benefits.
The vast majority of those questioning the changes are those who will lose as we become more self-governed. The Atlantic included.
This article itself is undermining democracy. It reads like an ad for now censorship.
The Atlantic is owned mostly by "philanthropist" Laurene Powell Jobs since 2017. Why is it that philanthropists are always buying up media companies? It couldn't possibly be to promote their own ideologies. They always happen to push for censorship also.
Billionaires buying up all media companies and censoring debate is a far bigger threat to democracy than some people chatting online.
Another explanation is that these traditional media outlets were/are having a hard time economically, making it
a) easier/cheaper to buy them, and
b) more attractive for someone considering themselves a philantropist, given that they are by many considered to provide a vital service to society.
You're free to disagree, especially with that last bit of course. But assuming this view, "philantropists" buying news outlets is at least internally consistent without assuming malice.
Of course, whether or not someone like Bezos should be considered philantropic in his motivations is another matter entirely...
Also, the Atlantic's editor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg was hired after his pivotal role in drumming up support for the invasion of Iraq, by falsely associating Saddam Hussein with al-Qaeda.
At the end of the article the author provides 3 high level areas to focus on improving. (1) and (3) clearly have nothing to do with censorship. It's also not fair, in my opinion, to assume that (2) implies censorship considering the author doesn't give any detail on HOW to reform social media. If the solution to (2) is "require social media companies to offer a chronological news feed," which has been suggested a bazillion times in the comments, how is that censorship?
Personally, I think the word "censorship" should be reserved for governmental suppression but that ship sailed a long time ago.
>> I proposed three imperatives: (1) harden democratic institutions so that they can withstand chronic anger and mistrust, (2) reform social media so that it becomes less socially corrosive, and (3) better prepare the next generation for democratic citizenship in this new age.
> Personally, I think the word "censorship" should be reserved for governmental suppression but that ship sailed a long time ago.
This is the exact same argument used all the time to justify censorship. Most people agree about government censorship being bad and corporate censorship being fine.
However, what people miss is that this is government censorship. To think what's going on now isn't government suppression is completely naive. There are several examples of the US government influencing social media to have them censor. They admit it all the time.
"Corporate censorship" is "fine" because preventing corporations from moderating content is inconsistent with the 1st amendment.
I do not agree that those 2 articles support your point.
"“We’re flagging problematic posts for Facebook that spread disinformation,” she [Psaki] said." It's still up to Facebook to determine wether or not to take down a post. There is a BIG difference between a government official reporting a post to Facebook and the government passing a law preventing a citizen from posting in the first place (which would obviously violate the 1st amendment).
The second article describes people who used to work in government now working for Social Media companies. It is, in my opinion, a stretch to call that government censorship. "The problem is that having so many former CIA employees running the world’s most important information and news platform is only one small step removed from the agency itself deciding what you see and what we do not see online –" Disagree. It is a BIG step to leap from "former government employees, including members of the CIA, work in trust, security and moderation" to "the CIA is controlling what is on social media."
Fair enough. But if the government is giving these companies suggestions, I find it hard to believe they wouldn't follow them. The government can retaliate against the companies in several ways.
I just came across this. I'm not sure about this source but the emails look legit.
They have consistently lived up to their billing for neigh 40 years. It's really quite the achievement from the print-digital changeover. If anything, I'm impressed.
Somewhat parallel to your point is how traditional media seems to have blended and adapted their business model to work pretty well with social media. I remember years ago people talked about how the internet and social media would displace traditional media (I consider The Atlantic to be a traditional media source). But, in reality, traditional media has a big presence on websites like Twitter or YouTube and journalists at traditional media companies have large followings on social media. I think they are a major stakeholder of social media at this point.
>Why is it that philanthropists are always buying up media companies? It couldn't possibly be to promote their own ideologies.
Devil's advocate: why should large media platforms be only for the misanthropic? if you take your suggestion to its conclusion, no "philanthropists" would own a media company, so who does that leave?
> if you take your suggestion to its conclusion, no "philanthropists" would own a media company, so who does that leave?
Everybody else? The problem is that these billionaires have too much power. There are a lot independent journalists. They are constantly attacked and censored by these big media companies. The run hit pieces on independent journalists and label them conspiracy theorists without giving any examples of misinformation.
Another example is how billionaire owned YouTube only considers big billionaire owned media companies as "authoritative sources" and promotes them in the algorithm.
There are many things that are labeled misinformation and get censored when reported by independent journalists. But then all it takes is one corporate media company to claim the same thing and now all the sudden it's okay to say.
In summary, when you ask "who does that leave", it leaves a ton of people which is why billionaires try to attack them.
You're conflating philanthropists and billionaires. The person I was replying to called out philanthropists by name. Unless you don't believe someone can be both a philanthropist and wealthy enough to buy a media company, in which case we simply disagree.
can't they both be problems? "people chatting online" is pretty disingenuous when it's what underlies the spread of misinformation and partisanization in politics, culminating in stuff like trying to overturn the 2020 election and Jan 6th
If your plotting something illegal like a coup, that's already illegal. However, if you want to question the results of an election you should have every right to do so. Look at 2000 and 2016. Both those results were questioned and people weren't censored. What changed?
Our election system is far from perfect. The only way for it to get better is to talk about.
The rise of social media was somewhat preceded by the retirement of the fairness doctrine, and coincided with the rise in partisan media (1). Would a reintroduction of the fairness doctrine via legislation help in any way? I tend to think it would.
What exactly would it do? Broadcast is an increasingly uniform, bland, and irrelevant set of stock footage and scripts targeting a shrinking population. The fairness doctrine wouldn't have had any more impact on social media than it did cable.
Plato thought democracy held the seeds of its own destruction. Hard to argue with him. It's hard to pick a time when the US was more democratic than it is now though.
It was never intended to be a true democracy and there have never been true democracies that scale up. The New England town meeting is the closest thing to real democracy in the modern world and they don't have any real power. Maybe technological changes will enable true democracy, but I doubt it.
It's not really clear to me what a true democracy means since it's unlikely that best leader/best lawgivers correspond to most likely to be elected. In a small community electability is somewhat of a proxy for skill in governance but that's not true as the size of the electorate scales and the skill that elections select for becomes more weighted to marketability and salesmanship. Those are important skills for leaders to have but they are probably not the most important.
Agreed. And it's interesting that (collectively) we like to believe it was.
> there have never been true democracies that scale up
I'd put modern Switzerland forward as an example of a democracy that has scaled, perhaps to the extent a fair democracy can be scaled. It's a country of 8.5 million people, speaking several languages, split into 26 cantons, and further into local municipalities. There's a tradition of defaulting to local rule. Cantons are the size of counties in the U.S. but are more powerful in some ways than U.S. states - they collect taxes, administer health care, etc. If you don't like something you can lobby the representatives of your canton personally. You may have even gone to school with the people serving there. And the people have the power, at every layer of government, to petition for a referendum to add or delete any law or amendment. The politicians respect that the people can veto them. [0]
Political scaling is an interesting topic. Leopold Khor wrote a book called "The Breakdown of Nations" which talks about how bad the scale of the modern nation-state is, the brainwashing required to sustain such an unnatural construct, the bullying that inevitably ensues given such a concentration of power, and, like you said, the loss of anything resembling a representative democracy, an inevitable slide towards authoritarianism. [1]
You will not, so long as the Senate exists, with the Supreme Court an additional firewall. This Constitution was written for slaveholders, giving them permanent power in the creation and structuring of the Senate. It was designed to serve the 0.1%, and does so admirably.
? Madison et al. are quite explicit that non-proportional representation in the Senate was a deeply regrettable compromise that could potentially create extraordinary difficulties down the line. The only thing keeping it from being completely unjustifiable was that the alternative was remaining under the articles of confederation, which was already in the process of breaking down (hence the need for a constitutional convention in the first place). Far from being a concession to slave states, which were growing rapidly at the time and consequently favored proportional representation, the Connecticut Compromise was a concession to small states, mostly in the North (indeed the name of the compromise is a hint here). See Federalist 62 to see just how disappointed Madison et al. were to be forced to accept this compromise by political necessity.
To be clear, slavery and its legacy has had a profoundly malign influence on American politics and its constitution, but non proportional representation in the Senate is not an example of it.
Yes he believed society should be frozen in time & change prevented. He grew up from a well to do family & saw relatives ruined by tumult. But that reaction he had, to feel that society- a quite inequitable one in his time- should be held frozen in place, guarded carefully against change by citizens only of high metal, is a grossly stasist & crass way to run a planet, to dictate terms to the rest of humanity from.
Regardless of his view of the ideal form of government (Strauss, among others, has a much different interpretation) his criticisms of democracy and other types of regime hold up and were taken seriously by the men who set up America's original government (which of course looks nothing like the modern one... for reasons good and bad).
Which democracy? The US is barely democratic. To be truly democratic in my book, the people need to rule. Voting on one of 2 evils every few years while having "your representatives" raped by lobbyists 24/7 is not people ruling: it's a facade for a system in which money rules.
Pieces like this merely serve as a pretext for your fake-democracy to get more powers to sensor the, in this case, "social" media.
Democracy has never been in better health - more citizens are politically activated than ever before.
Remember not so long ago we (as in 'the media') were complaining about voter apathy and declining interest in politics? Now those very same voices are complaining that the people are too invested in the political process.
Like it or not, political polarization is political engagement by the people. That increased engagement is in of itself is a cause for alarm says a lot about a system where apathetic citizenry is considered the preferred state
> Like it or not, political polarization is political engagement by the people
We went from political apathy to populism. This "engagement" is largely by people who don't know anything about politics and have their emotions manipulated by unscrupulous politicians and biased reporting.
> This "engagement" is largely by people who don't know anything about politics and have their emotions manipulated by unscrupulous politicians and biased reporting.
In terms of correlation at least, yes. Between the fall and the USSR and when social media presence became the norm, people were largely apolitical. Now it's all about owning the libs/cons.
Populism is just a slur to apply to people you want to imply are too stupid to know what's good for them.
The People's Party https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People's_Party_(United_States) called themselves populists, and fought for: "collective bargaining, federal regulation of railroad rates, an expansionary monetary policy, and a Sub-Treasury Plan that required the establishment of federally controlled warehouses to aid farmers. Other Populist-endorsed measures included bimetallism, a graduated income tax, direct election of Senators, a shorter workweek, and the establishment of a postal savings system. These measures were collectively designed to curb the influence of monopolistic corporate and financial interests and empower small businesses, farmers and laborers."
The establishment hated this and made a full court media and institutional press to paint them as stupid rubes. Ever since everyone who the current establishment doesn't like, especially anyone who gives a shit about what voters say they want, is called a populist.
> Populism is just a slur to apply to people you want to imply are too stupid to know what's good for them.
If you say so. It can also mean anti-politics.
The example you give is for left populism. There is also right populism, e.g. a large part of Trump's voter base.
> The establishment hated this and made a full court media and institutional press to paint them as stupid rubes.
Yes, when the establishment is neoliberal, they will hate anti-political movements.
Voters may not be rubes, but I find it hard to believe that everyone who was apathetic before 2016 and is now "engaged" is suddenly a scholar of government, history, and economics.
Governments around the planet are increasingly becoming more autocratic.
This 'engagement' that you speak of is not just taking an interest. It's actually radical polarization and is not healthy. There's a difference between subscribing to a particular viewpoint versus outright rage against the other 'camp'. It fractures countries and allows for populist opportunists to fester.
agree with you on this, it is not healthy if the unit of analysis for health is society as a whole, which I believe is what you mean.
> There's a difference between subscribing to a particular viewpoint versus outright rage against the other 'camp'.
not really - I think it is only in a matter of degree!
> It fractures countries and allows for populist opportunists to fester.
democracies might just inevitably do that. If we observe democratic societies outside our own Western milieu we will observe political factions battling on the streets as much as the ballot box, or even in Parliament, as in former times we saw in South Korean and Taiwan.
What we are seeing today might just be the next stage in the evolution of democracy - this is what it looks like when we democratise mass communication, enabling not only freedom of speech but dispersing the power to amplify that speech to a much greater number of people so that many more alternative narratives can propagate and cohere. This dispersal is in itself arguably a characteristic of democratic systems.
Increased polarization may be a form of engagement but it's certainly not the only way to engage and very likely not the type of engagement people were hoping for when lamenting political apathy. If anything the apathy problem was probably better viewed as "only polarized people care" not "we need more people polarized so they too care".
In my experience, most political groups these days are openly and deliberately unwelcoming to people who don't share their full set of policy preferences. If you talk to organizers, I think you'll find that polarized engagement is very much what they're hoping for.
" Democracy has never been in better health - more citizens are politically activated than ever before."
Yea, I guess you could call experiencing a violent coup attempt "activated". If the majority of social media engagement is people believing dubious stories and memes by hating the other side, then the engagement is worthless.
Political polarization is engagement sure, but of what use is engagement when the subject itself is not subjective? Seems to me there is a lot of manufactured dissent to fracture or further curb political lines. making sides about every single issue.
> Seems to me there is a lot of manufactured dissent to fracture or further curb political lines. making sides about every single issue.
yes, I think this is fair assessment.
however, democracy - and liberal society - encourages this. Social media is only an accelerant to practices which have already present - the only difference is that narrative formation itself has been democratised and so can now be more effectively contested. In perverse way, this is kind of another characteristic of democratic systems.
It could be that what we have today is the natural evolution of democratic systems, this is what it looks like when we democratize the means of mass communication. If we are not happy with this, then we need to reform the political system to encourage the outcomes we prefer. Suppressing the information is the other option, which the author implicitly endorses
But is the fracturing coming from poor leadership, or is it coming because the newly engaged grassroots demand it? Nobody will self-identify with the phrase "manufactured dissent", but I suspect the average politically engaged person would tell you that politicians are a bit too chummy with each other and it's good when activists make them confront tough issues to see where their values really lie. (Did you hear about the Schumer protest this week, where a pile of random staffers occupied his office to demand he take a harder line on climate negotiations?)
The issue in this case is how we select our representatives, which I agree seems to be unrepresentative and even dynastic. The solution would require refactor of the system though, not a defence of it as the author implies in his article. It is not so much 'social media is undermining democracy' as much as social media is exposing a democratic system, which is in need of reform'
possibly as in ancient Greece at times - by lot. We have a similar situation with lay judges. For each district, exactly the same number of electoral districts and thus seats in parliament will be allocated. The remuneration will surely be interesting for many and who does not want can refuse. Draws will be made among all people living there. Including children (represented by their legal guardians in case) and illegal immigrants, former inmates and GAFAM CEOs.
Admittedly radical, but if we want to have a representative cast of the parliaments the most honest approach.
I'm up for any kind of experimentation, as I think one thing all the commentators in this thread can agree on, the current system is creaking at the seams.
How about more direct democracy? Representative democracy is a compromise for an era when the will of the people was practically too challenging to collect - something which has been solved in large part by social media. Perhaps the problems described by the author of the article is precisely the tension between a legacy system, made obsolete by new communication technology. If this is the case, we need to embrace more technology, not less and really lean into it. Maybe we could do a geo-fenced direct democracy for example?
legislation should not be delegated to a stable, forseeable, small number of possible actors. Corruption starts spot on. In a representative democracy legislation is a people duty because it is about the rules for all of us. So we have to decide.
Still the effort is brutal and requires full-time. So we need professionals (for a period), because we also need the lesser motivated people's views.
Social media (as is today) is to fragile, to toxic, to susceptible to surveillance and censorship, to centralised and to non-inclusive (in sum: non convival) to be even helpful.
Not all political activism is democratic. For example, just a bit ago some very politically active people decided to violently attack the US Capitol in an attempt to obstruct the culmination of the democratic process. That's not an expression of democratic values.
Yeah, political engagement was likely near its peak during the Civil War. I don't think it's as positive an aspect of polarization as the OP suggested.
this is an interesting conundrum, similar to the paradox of tolerance. In the end, we will likely draw a line based on an arbitrary rule, like any authoritarian would
It seems like an issue that a lot of this vigorous political activism is directed at disenfranchising other groups, rather than advocating for particular stances within the democratic system.
By that definition (the more political polarization, the more political engagement and better democracic health), wouldn't the healthiest the U.S. has ever been is during the Civil War? Does that not imply that the healthiest democracy is one that's in civil war? That just doesn't pass the smell test.
it does if we are able to separate 'what is good for democracy' with 'what is good for society'. It could be our current anxiety is the discovery that those two are distinct, and we can't handle the implication
Hacker news is actually non-democratic because people that are down voted and flagged makes content disappear/drop. So the site encourages the small voices to "go away" in favor of the popular opinion.
Or maybe that is what democracy is all about :shrug:
I always find it hilarious when someone who promotes trust in centralized institutions such as state-funded mass media complains about social media echo chambers - as if the latter is anything but one massive echo chamber itself.
There is no ”social media” when it comes to politics. The field is full of players with advanced manipulation capabilities, such as orchestrating fleets of fake personalities. This sort of thing is rampant, whether we want to accept it or not.
I think it is the short term (a few days) that is most concerned. As said you can lied to a few person all the time, … but not all people all the time.
Like open source and market there are bounded to be bad move and dead end, but the basic is still right.
social media or any similar technologies arent an issue. how they are consumed and misunderstood is an issue. an issue caused by lack of education and outdated educational systems at its core..
In the long run, Google/Facebook/Amazon/Microsoft will reveal that they have real time surveillance of everyone's inner speech and hardware backdoors in all devices, leaving people in a "use our products or go back to the stone age" situation.
Stupid metaphors from microplastics to tobacco, unrelated grievances from Trump to teen mental health, no attempt to understand what social media is and how letting people talk to each other is undermining democracy.
Social media is a scapegoat, hiding a more important issue that doesn't receive enough attention: increasing polarization is the inevitable product of our two-party system.
As someone who doesn't fit within either major party's ideology, I observe the increasing strife between the two majors with amusement and terror. Social media can indeed accelerate the polarization, but as the article concedes, polarization preexisted social media and I believe it would endure and continue to fester even if social media were undermined. Social media is a sideshow obscuring the root problem.
In a modern instant-communication "infotainment" economy, a two-party system establishes a political game where ideological territory is nearly always split. What do I mean by that? Imagine all political ideology as a two-dimensional plane, or a map. In a two-party system, a position on Issue X taken by Party A will inevitably see the space of opposition on Issue X occupied by Party B, even if that position isn't precisely consistent with the rest of Party B's platform. By occupying the opposite position's territory, Party B can capture any single-issue voters who hold that position on Issue X. Meanwhile, thanks to the stickiness of a two-party system and the totality of their other positions, they won't lose members who disagree on X.
The result is increasingly reduced ideological overlap between the major parties, whittling away opportunities for sympathy and reconciliation. On virtually all issues, the parties are at odds with one another, even if that doesn't seem consistent with their ideological roots or founding principles.
Third parties are where you find overlap, like overlapping layers on the ideological map. But because of our voting system (called "plurality voting"), where citizens may select one and only one candidate for each election, third-party candidates are squeezed out by strategic voting that avoids "splitting the vote." (If you support a third-party candidate, you are strongly incentivized to vote for the major candidate you can tolerate, because otherwise you risk "throwing your vote away" and ultimately supporting your opposition.)
It's for this reason that I believe voting system reform is the principal cause to support today. It is foundational: until we can reduce polarization, we won't have the capacity to address other issues.
If we adopted approval voting (select all the candidates you approve of) or score voting (score each candidate from 0 to N), we would invigorate third parties by eliminating the risk of vote splitting. Following adoption, I anticipate we'd see a gradual migration of citizens to more diversified ideologies; a recognition and empowerment of their innate, personal, nuanced ideology; and a weakening of the one-size-fits-all ideologies currently peddled by the two majors, Republican and Democrat. There would no longer be an incentive for parties to always capture opposing views on all issues because other ideological maps could better fit the populace's actual preferences and therefore get more votes.
There are at least a couple flaws in this viewpoint: that social media is mostly controlled by a privileged few, and with enough resources an individual can gain more votes (if you consider an account as a vote). But social media is basically letting everyone have a voice in the conversation, and the result is kind of gross sometimes.
In other words, maybe its undermining our current system by actually being more technically democratic.