Alt Text:
An edited meme image featuring two stills from MegaMind. The top still shows Titan speaking to a the mayor, who is labelled “TikTokers getting censored by China” and saying “You have freed us!” overlaid. Titan has a US flag as a label, and is saying “Oh, I wouldn’t say freed, more like under new management.”
I never thought about it that way. Basically any algorithm that sorts posts could be argued to be censorship. But you can’t sort based on straight vote either because of fake accounts and bots. I guess we are just doomed to be manipulated.
I think they’re referring to US talk about possibly banning tiktok.
Platform censorship is different than state censorship, and content curation is different than censorship.
It’s “I think you’ll like this” vs “I don’t want you to see this”.
Platforms can still participate in the “I don’t want you to see this”/“I want you to see this” game. Governments aren’t the only parties that benefit from looking to control public sentiment.
I never said otherwise, I just said that there’s a difference between the three things. 😊
A curation algorithm isn’t censorship, but a a biased one would be.
How is bias not inherent to curation? Preference for one thing over another is bias. Curation is literally showing you things it thinks you’re biased to like. These groups aren’t revealing their secret sauce for curation algorithms so we’d never know anyway.
There’s prioritizing the viewers preferences, and then there’s prioritizing the platforms preferences.
If I don’t show you a video because I don’t think you’d enjoy it, that’s different from not showing it to you because I don’t want you to see it.
User preference is a type of bias, but you wouldn’t typically call a platform “biased” unless it was putting it or some third parties preferences ahead of the users.
If I don’t show you a video because I don’t think you’d enjoy it, that’s different from not showing it to you because I don’t want you to see it.
I wouldn’t disagree those are different reasons for not wanting to show a video but both are curations based on biases.
I guess I just have a more neutral connotation for bias than “biased against you for others’ own interests” and so I didn’t find bias to be a useful term here to distinguish the reasons behind curation choices.
Nothing really in disagreement here, just fiddling with common usage.
To me bias from a service or platform would be a bias that’s contrary to what was expected or requested.
It’s when they put their finger on the scale.Bias, as a term, has heavy connotations of being unfair, or to have distorted results, which is why I kinda shy away from using it to describe “everything working as expected and no one would complain if they knew the details”.
If the grocer tampers with the scale so you take home less carrots than you wanted, that’s not fair, and so we would they they biased the scales.
Sounds like we agree, but I also like talking wording sometimes. :)
They are all biased, often deliberately so. Whether you think the US forcing ByteDance to sell TikTok to a US company will have a positive outcome or not, the reason the US is doing it is so they have control over the information being shared on TikTok instead of China. The method the US uses to control information is different from China but no less effective. It’s arguably more effective because the passive manipulation of information the US carries out is less transparent, making it harder to determine exactly how the narrative is being manipulated.
Okay?
Literally none of that has anything to do with there being three different things.
Showing someone videos related to ones they like is different from suppressing or promoting videos with content your company has reason to want suppressed or promoted, which is different from the government doing or compelling others to do the same.
The point I’m trying to make is that this:
Showing someone videos related to ones they like
Is most often a trojan horse for this:
suppressing or promoting videos with content your company has reason to want suppressed or promoted
Which is basically the same as this:
the government doing or compelling others to do the same.
But more passive and less transparent.
Alright. I understand your point. I don’t believe there’s as much coordination as you do, but that’s fine.
Do you understand what I’m saying, which is that there are three different things? And that a person saying “as long as there’s an algorithm there’s censorship” might be conflating some of those categories? Lemmy sorts and tries to present relevant data, but I have no reason to believe that it’s engaged in explicit or implicit state level censorship or propaganda.
So, you think it’s a protected right to speak freely on a privately owned platform? Tiktok, Xitter, etc., don’t need to make allowances for anyone. They exist to make money off of their users.
It astounds me to this day that people don’t understand the basic tenets of social media: if it’s free, YOU are the product.
Legally permissable censorship is still censorship. Just because you’re allowed to do something doesn’t mean that it isn’t that thing, and it’s silly to argue that because someone is allowed to do something means that people can’t complain about it.
Maybe, but the expectation that your can also speak freely on the platform is protected by the almighty capitalism compact we implicitly embrace as Americans and other (not all) 1st world citizens.
Just because you think you have a right doesn’t mean you do.
Yet to be seen really. Depends on who buys it (or if the CCP decides to sell it at all).
In the US it’s not quite the same as in China as all information in China is controlled by the government, there is no free speech protection and no separation between what you see and what the government wants you to see. In the US by contrast it would likely be a private entity, who will set their own rules for good or bad.
I think there is a good chance the CCP refuses to let it go, because it was never about profit to them. It was about control, and judging by the amount of death threats our legislators received that goal was exceeded.
How dare the US ban my favorite psyops platform run by a hostile authoritarian government!
Shhh. The Republicans might want it now.
They can use yt shorts to deliver the same messages they were delivering.
Jokes on you, our propaganda is also anti-US interests.
To be honest I rather the Chinese government steal my data than the US government at this point.
I’d honestly like to know why (for real, no judging, just curious)
Oh, I’m judging. I wonder if this guy you’re replying to pretended to care about the Uyghur people, a few years ago. That was pretty fashionable. Weird how everyone stopped giving a shit about them, right?
Not surprising, though. Because now we’re back to “pffft, all sides are the same. Both parties are the same. All the countries are the same. Everything’s the same.” That’s the fashionable sentiment, among certain political quarters.
But no, goddammit, it’s not all the same. The way we’re headed, maybe we’ll eventually have the kind of constant state surveillance and trips to reeducation camps that the PRC furnishes to its people, BUT WE ACTUALLY DON’T HAVE THAT SHIT, RIGHT NOW.
That matters. We’re waaaaaay far from perfect and we’re definitely headed in a shitload of wrong directions, but we’re not actually a totalitarian goddamn dictatorship, yet. We have a de facto oligarchy. And a corporate klepto-state. That needs to be fixed.
But I’m fed up with this “nah, the USA is the worst” attitude. I see our country as a shitty old Ford Fiesta, with no air conditioning and a transmission that keeps making weird noises. Sure, it sucks, and it’s gonna cost an arm and a leg to fix…but it’s the only car we’ve got. So there’s no sense in ignoring the problems until the transmission blows up on the highway, and it’s catastrophic.
That’s basically what jokers like the guy you’re replying to are advocating, though. Not only do they resist taking our shitty car into the shop while it’s still fixable, they’re looking over at guy in the Yugo with the bald tires and the potentially deadly exhaust leak, and saying “we’re no better off than him.”
If it’s a US company, they’ll just sell it to other companies as advertising data which is intrusive as shit… It’s all the fucking same at this point. At least I’d be less likely to see a personal impact if the Chinese government uses it for metadata analysis or whatever the fuck, vs. US companies directly using it to advertise more bullshit to me, and then selling it to other US companies for more marketing bullshit…
That being said, it’s a moot point for me since I’ve never used Tik Tok and never will. It’s straight garbage.
Chinese propaganda masquerading as a meme.
Still better than having our vulnerabilities dug up with the intention to militarize them. China would be ecstatic for us all to be dragged into “Pig Butchering” as they call it, and I’m sure our infrastructure makes easy targets for them, now.
The USA has far less to benefit from the destruction of the USA.