Sunday, July 29, 2018
When Too Much Creates No Choice at Law
The
worldwide web was supposed to open minds to new experiences, learning,
exploration and discovering new truths. It was a marvel, able to access books,
expertise, data and hordes of information, taking people to knowledge sources
in democratic freedom. As you watch Facebook shares plummet by almost 20%
because of that company’s utter failure to control its role in the
dissemination of “fake news” (not the Trumpian-labeled kind… but that which
truly false and misleading, which often emanates from Trump himself), bots
customizing fake news to cater to the gullible searching for confirmation of
inane conspiracies, and Twitter that foments mass followings of mendacity – the
modern versions of the golden calf (Bible: Exodus 32:4), a fake religious
vector demanded by the masses – something has gone terribly wrong.
Russians
have mastered using the Web to decimate our democratic basics and filter
disinformation (based on data-scraping personal information on millions of Americans)
to influence our election process. Polarized Americans now routinely refuse to
consume any content that contracts their calcified view of what they believe is
supposed to be. Fox News is a very strong example of a once-independent news
services that has morphed into the propaganda arm of the Republican Party, a
problem only exacerbated by the President’s castigating the rest of the free
press and the “enemy of the American people.” Fox New followers treat its
“report only what the government wants people to hear” as their news gospel,
despite a tsunami of false and biased reporting.
Too
much information has resulted in Americans’ reducing and narrowing their focus.
Instead of using the Web to generate information to help them make better
decisions, so many Americans have simply pushed anything that contradicts their
expectations out the window, never to be seen, read or understood. In short, we
are dumbing down based solely on bias and opinion.
But
the ability to track and filter out “objectionable material” is now being aided
by software originally created to allow parents to protect their children from
porn and predators. The July 28th FastCompany.com provides this
real-world example: “Netsweeper,
a company in Ontario, Canada, has touted its internet filtering software as a
way for institutions like schools and hospitals to block pornographic,
exploitative, or illicit websites, or help governments collect taxes on
e-commerce sales. It says that its artificial intelligence
software can filter the web in real time while receiving requests for
‘approximately 22 million new URLs each and every day’ from over 500 million
end users.
“Increasingly, many of those users are living
in countries where authoritarian and otherwise troubled political regimes are
using Netsweeper and similar tools to block a range of ‘controversial’ content,
including political campaigns, media websites, and even search terms like
‘LGBTQ,’ ‘gay,’ and ‘lesbian.’
“An April report by researchers at the Munk
School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto identified 10 countries
where the company’s tools ‘appear to be filtering content for national-level,
consumer-facing ISPs’ [Internet Service Providers] amid acute human rights or
security concerns: Afghanistan, Bahrain, India, Kuwait, Pakistan, Qatar,
Somalia, Sudan, UAE, and Yemen. Except for India and Pakistan, all of the
countries are ranked ‘authoritarian’ by the Economist Democracy Index.
“‘It does appear that Netsweeper has no
aversion to selling to clients in authoritarian regime contexts, within which
there is a growing appetite to censor the internet,’ says Ron Deibert, the
director of Citizen Lab, the internet watchdog group behind the report, ‘Planet
Netsweeper.’
“Filtering the web like this ‘appears
inconsistent with core corporate responsibilities to respect human rights such
as freedom of opinion and expression and non-discrimination,’ the
researchers wrote…
“Netsweeper is far from the only company that
sells internet-filtering technology to governments. As with systems sold by
companies like Blue Coat Systems, SmartFilter, and Sandvine—which also has its
headquarters in Ontario—Netsweeper’s products are marketed at a wide range of
clients, like libraries, schools, hospitals, and businesses, meant to keep
users ‘safe’ from malware and objectionable content, like pornography or
violent imagery. In recent years the firm has also marketed its filtering
technology as a way to help governments collect taxes on cross-border
e-commerce sales. ‘Netsweeper is here to enforce the internet laws of your
country,’ the firm said in a 2016 promotional video… But the same tools are also used by
governments and ISPs to monitor and filter political, social, and LGBTQ content
across whole countries.”
Individuals will soon be able to guarantee
that they don’t even get any information from any source that contradicts their
world-view. They can censor their family, and a U.S. government with authoritarian
leanings can apply some of their filters against MSM (mainstream media) that
they so violently oppose. The Western notion of democracy is struggling to
survive, but the very technology intended to enable maximum free expression is
producing very much the opposite result.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and exactly what are the values, the very form of government, that
we are passing down to the next generation of Americans?
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