Edit: added part 1 per request Part 1 https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=T48KFiHwexM Part 2 https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3BTqBmb3fJ0
I feel like puking. How much can one lie 😶 Political inclinations - I'm neutral about Trump for lack of strong reasons to not like him
Is problem with like button. I no want see what my friend see. It make bad stuff spread too many people
Great documentary so far. Thanks! Watching now.
“The UN comes out with a report that says that facebook played a significant role in a genocide. What’s it like for you, running content policy at Facebook?”
It’s crazy to see what they can get away with. I hope people vet the news they get on Facebook.
Damn.... how do you actually control content at scale and remain that profitable though... the better question is, younger people aren’t joining Facebook so how long will this last? Go into Instagram?
You don't. The better question is: how do you mimic the real world better? I as an owner of, let's say McDonalds, am not responsible for the conversations had within a McDonalds nor am I responsible for people having meetups in or right outside McDonalds. Nor am I responsible for violence incited by two patrons (unless my employees had direct involvement). The problem lies in the perception fb has created. The way they designed their tool it comes across as though *they* have control over the content and even the slightest perception of them being in control makes it *feel* like they should be accountable for *all* content. They also misrepresented privacy, it was never aligned with how humans actually behave with regards to privacy in the real world.
@logmeln nailed it Also its weird when people like Oliver blame fb entirely for enticing the recent Burma crisis because of their huge market share in Burma!!
Sum Ting Wong
Facebook convinced itself that it could abdicate any and all responsibility for the content it distributed. It came up with this mythology that it was a network, not a content platform. It pretended that it was just connecting people, and not publishing and distributing content. But that mythology is wrong. Facebook is in fact publishing that content and distributing it broadly and it owns full and total responsibility for that content and the impact of that content. If that's a problem for Facebook's business model, then Facebook owns that problem too. The world doesn't owe Facebook a free ride. Facebook does owe the world editorial responsibility for all that it publishes. "Move fast and break things" doesn't justify anything, it is actually just an admission of criminal negligence, and Facebook should be made to pay in full for every injury and every death.
Mirror?
"Move fast and break things" may cause unintended consequences
Break wrong thing very bad