Archive for October, 2020

Following the Dating Bonus, Another Social Product, OyeChat, Made Its Debut – PRNewswire

SINGAPORE, Oct. 15, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Girls in Thailand are singing live to guys in Canada from their phones; rich men in Saudi Arabia are showering gifts on beautiful women in Indonesia; young people around the world are being seemingly randomly matched on video calls based on big data analysis. Now, influenced by the dual growth engine of "live video + short video", video dating has incorporated rich commercial imagination to track players of social products. Recently OyeChat, a video chat app, quietly launched on Google Play, attracting millions of users over only a month, reaching the top 100 best-selling Google Play apps in the Middle East and North America.

OyeChat focuses on social functionality and adds pan-entertainment modules, such as real-time video matching and short music videos. "According to Facebook's sharing data in early 2020, the Top 10 markets for SNS apps include India, the United States, Brazil, Indonesia, Germany, Mexico, Turkey, Pakistan, Egypt, and Thailand, showing that a growing number of national markets need localized social products. OyeChat will prioritize entering markets with less competition, polishing their products, cultivating an ecology, and ultimately moving on to other markets," Key Cheung, head of OyeChat, stated. According to data from App Annie, a third of the best-selling Google Play apps in India are video dating apps, and although they haven't reached a third of market share in Saudi Arabia and the United States, video dating apps are also a very important category on the bestselling list. Competition is fierce due to the profits. The global video chats the Match Group, Meet Group, Biglive, Badoo, Azar, Yalla, Uplive, and other social product giants have long established a foothold due to first-mover advantages. If OyeChat wants to be in the market, they must find a foothold that will differentiate it from the competition.

OyeChat initially targeted Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and North America. It has deployed streamer ecosystems in Vietnam, the Philippines, India, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, and other countries, building its own streamer base. "Our product has innovated targeting female users and helping them communicate and interact users on the other end both simply and effectively, increasing the frequency and depth of and interest in communication and establishing real social relationships with strangers," Key stated. In the live-stream industry, OyeChat has also encouraged excellent streamers to cultivate their own circles, typically 10-20, in addition to cooperating with talent agencies and recruiting and developing its own streamers.

OyeChat's team originated from the Singapore-based company Thor Network Pte., Ltd. In contrast, its operations and R&D members are younger and have a more international perspective. They have worked at many globally listed companies, covering multiple directions, including the network, social networking, and gaming, where they garnered rich experience in global markets and operations. In addition to the advantages that streamer resources in the entertainment industry have brought to bear, OyeChat's product has also worked hard to localize. Compared to traditional social products, OyeChat employs real-time matching to further diversify everyone's interactions with content. A recommendation algorithm is incorporated to manage the matching process to recommend matches between men and women based on factors, such as interests, personalities, and geographic locations. Unlike other products with the same purview, OyeChat is more likely to have female users command the rhythm of communication. Not to mention,users can experience real-time beautification, masks, and cartoonification to transform themselves. Real-time chat translation is also featured, and viewers can give gifts to their favorite streamers to increase the entertainment value while chatting. Let's not forget that OyeChat is different from traditional live broadcasting by allowing the streamer to create personal 1-on-1 channels with users, creating a better communication experience. The streamer can also easily switch from multi-channel communication to single-channel communication, which is both easy and simple. Key stated that even the best profitable product, if it lacks operational capabilities, will be reduced to a shell of itself. I have been using it before, and now I feel that this product has matured to the proper iteration. It is being cautious, taking itself seriously, and polishing all its features.

SOURCE OyeChat

Read more:
Following the Dating Bonus, Another Social Product, OyeChat, Made Its Debut - PRNewswire

Facebook and Twitter Cross a Line in Censorship – The Intercept

The Posts hyping of the story as some cataclysmic bombshell was overblown. While these emails, if authenticated, provide some new details and corroboration, the broad outlines of this story have long been known: Hunter was paid a very large monthly sum by Burisma at the same time that his father was quite active in using the force of the U.S. Government to influence Ukrainesinternal affairs.

Along with emails relating to Burisma, the New York Post also gratuitously published several photographs of Hunter, who has spoken openly and commendably of his past struggles with substance abuse, in what appeared to various states of drug use. There was no conceivable public interest in publishing those, and every reason not to.

The Posts explanation of how these documents were obtained is bizarre at best: They claim that Hunter Biden indefinitely left his laptop containing the emails at a repair store, and the stores owner, alarmed by the corruption theyrevealed, gave the materials from the hard drive to the FBI and then to Rudy Giuliani.

While there is no proof that Biden followed through on any of Hunters promises to Burisma, there is no reason, at least thus far, to doubt that the emails are genuine. And if they are genuine, they at least add to what is undeniably a relevant and newsworthy story involving influence-peddling relating to Hunter Bidens work in Ukraine and his trading on the name and power of his father, now the front-runner in the 2020 presidential election.

But the Post, for all its longevity, power and influence, ran smack into two entities far more powerful than it: Facebook and Twitter. Almost immediately upon publication, pro-Biden journalists created a climate of extreme hostility and suppression toward the Post story, making clear that anyjournalisteven mentioningit would be roundly attacked. For the crime of simply noting the story on Twitter (while pointing out its flaws), New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman was instantly vilified to the point where her name, along with the phrase MAGA Haberman, were trending on Twitter.

(That Habermanis a crypto-Trump supporter is preposterousfor so many reasons, including the fact that she is responsible for countless front-page Times stories that reflect negatively on the president; moreover,the 2016 Clinton campaign considered Haberman one of their most favorable reporters).

The two Silicon Valley giants saw that hostile climate and reacted. Just two hours after the story was online, Facebook intervened. The company dispatched a life-long Democratic Party operative who now works for Facebook Andy Stone, previously a communications operative for Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, among other D.C. Democratic jobs to announce that Facebook was reducing [the articles] distribution on our platform: in other words, tinkering with its own algorithms to suppress the ability of users to discuss or share the news article. The long-time Democratic Party official did not try to hide his contempt for the article, beginning his censorship announcement by snidely noting: I will intentionally not link to the New York Post.

Even more astonishing still, Twitter locked the account of the New York Post, banning the paper from posting any content all day and, evidently, into Thursday morning. The last tweet from the paper was posted at roughly 2:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday.

And then, on Thursday morning, the Post published a follow-up article using the same archive of materials, this one purporting to detailefforts by the former vice presidents son to pursue lucrative deals with a Chinese energy company by using his fathers name.Twitter is now alsobanning the sharing or posting of links to that article as well.

In sum, the two Silicon Valley giants, with little explanation, united to prevent the sharing anddissemination of this article. As Los Angeles Times reporter Matt Pearce put it, Facebook limiting distribution is a bit like if a company that owned newspaper delivery trucks decided not to drive because it didnt like a story. Does a truck company edit the newspaper? It does now, apparently.

That the First Amendment right of free speech is inapplicable to these questions goes without saying. That constitutional guarantee restricts the actions of governments, not private corporations such as Facebook and Twitter.

But glibly pointing this out does not come close to resolving this controversy. That actions by gigantic corporations are constitutional does not mean that they arebenign.

State censorship is not the only kind of censorship. Private-sector repression of speech and thought, particularly in the internet era, can be as dangerous and consequential. Imagine, for instance, if these two Silicon Valley giants united with Google to declare:henceforth we will ban all content that is critical of President Trump and/or the Republican Party, but will actively promote criticisms of Joe Biden and the Democrats.

Would anyone encounter difficultly understanding why such adecreewould constitute dangerous corporate censorship? Would Democrats respond to such a policyby simply shrugging it off on the radical libertarian ground that private corporations have the right to do whatever they want? To ask that question is to answer it.

To begin with, Twitter and particularly Facebook are no ordinary companies. Facebook, asthe owner not just of its massive social media platform but also other key communication services it has gobbled up such as Instagram and WhatsApp, is one of the most powerful companies ever to exist, if not the most powerful. In June,the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial, and Administrative Law launched an investigation into the consolidated power of Facebook and three other companies Google, Amazon and Apple and just last week issued a sweeping reportwhich, as Ars Technica explained, found:

Facebook outright has monopoly power in the market for social networking, and that power is firmly entrenched and unlikely to be eroded by competitive pressure from anyone at all due to high entry barriersincluding strong network effects, high switching costs, and Facebooks significant data advantagethat discourage direct competition by other firms to offer new products and services.

In his New York Times op-ed last October, the left-wing expert on monopoly powerMatt Stoller described Facebook and Google as global monopolies sitting astride public discourse, and recounted how bipartisan policy and legal changes designed to whittle away antitrust protections have bestowed the two tech giants with a radical centralization of power over the flow of information. And he warns that this unprecedented consolidation of control over our discourse is close to triggeringthe collapse of journalism and democracy.

It has been astonishing to watch Democratsover the last twenty-four hours justify this censorship on the grounds that private corporations are entitled to do whatever they want. Not even radical free-market libertarians espouse such a pro-corporate view. Even the most ardent capitalist recognizes that companies that wield monopoly or quasi-monopoly power have an obligation to act in the public interest, and areanswerable to the public regarding whether they are doing so.

That is why in both the EU and increasingly the U.S., there are calls from across the political spectrumto either break up Facebook onantitrust and monopoly grounds or regulate it as a public utility, the way electric and water companies and AT&T have been. Almost nobody in the democratic world believes that Facebook is just some ordinary company that should be permitted to exercise unfettered power and act without constraints of any kind. Indeed, Facebooks monumental political and economic power greater than most if not all the governments of nation-states is themajor impediment to such reforms.

Beyond that, both Facebook and Twitter receive substantial, unique legal benefits from federal law,further negating the claim that they are free to do whatever they want as private companies. Just as is true of Major League Baseball which is subject to regulation by Congress as a result of the antitrust exemption they enjoy under the law these social media companies receive a very valuable and particularized legal benefit in the form of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which shields themfrom any liability for content published ontheir platforms, including defamatory material or other legally proscribed communications.

No company can claim such massive, unique legal exemptions from the federal law and then simultaneously claim they owe no duties to the public interest andare not answerable to anyone. To advocate that is a form of authoritarian corporatism: simultaneously allowing tech giants to claim legally conferred privileges and exemptionswhile insisting that they can act without constraints of any kind.

Then there is the practical impactof Twitter and Facebook uniting to block content published by a major newspaper. It is true in theory that one can still read the suppressed article by visiting the New York Post website directly, but the stranglehold that these companies exert over our discourse is so dominant that their censorship amounts to effective suppression of the reporting.

In 2018, Pew Research found that about two-thirds of U.S. adults (68%) get news on social media sites. One-in-five get news there often. The combination of Facebook, Google and Twitter controls the information received by huge numbers of Americans, Pew found. Facebook is still far and away the site Americans most commonly use for news.About four-in-ten Americans (43%) get news on Facebook. The next most commonly used site for news is YouTube [owned by Google], with 21% getting news there, followed by Twitter at 12%.

While Twitter still falls short of Facebook in terms of number of users, a 2019 report found that Twitter remains the leading social network among journalists at 83%. Censoring a story from Twitter thus has disproportionate impact by hiding it from the people who determine and shape the news.

The grave dangers posed by the censorship actions of yesterday should be self-evident. Just over two weeks before a presidential election, Silicon Valley giants whose industry leaders and workforce overwhelmingly favorthe Democratic candidate took extraordinary steps to block millions, perhaps tens of millions, of American voters from being exposed to what purports to be a major expos by one of the countrys oldest and largest newspapers.

As the New York Times put it in an article in March about the political preferences of tech leaders: Silicon Valley has long leaned blue. Large numbers of tech executives, including Facebooks second-in-command Sheryl Sandberg, were also vocally supportive of Hillary Clinton in 2016. At the very least, the perception, if not the reality, has been created that these tech giants are using their unprecedented power over political and election-related information to prevent the dissemination of negative reporting about the presidential candidate they favor. Whatever that is, it is not democratic or something to cheer.

The rationale offered by both Twitter and Facebook to justify this censorship makes it more alarming, not less. Twitter claimed that the Post article violates its so-called Hacked Materials Policy, which it says permits commentary on or discussion about hacked materials, such as articles that cover them but do not include or link to the materials themselves; in other words, Twitter allows links to articles about hacked materials but bans links to or images of hacked material themselves.

Thecompanyadded that their policy prohibits the use of our service to distribute content obtained without authorization because, they said, theydont want to incentivize hacking by allowing Twitter to be used as distribution for possibly illegally obtained materials.

But that standard, if taken seriously and applied consistently, would result in the banningfrom the platform of huge amounts of the most important and consequential journalism. After all, alarge bulk of journalism is enabled by sources providing content obtained without authorization to journalists, who then publish it.

Indeed, many of the most celebrated and significant stories of the lastseveral decades the Pentagon Papers, the WikiLeaks Collateral Murder video and war logs, the Snowden reporting, the Panama Papers, the exposs from the Brazil Archive we reported over the last year relied upon publication of various forms of hacked materials provided by sources. The same is true of the DNC and Podesta emails that exposed corruption and forcedthe 2016 resignation of the top five officials of the Democratic National Committee.

Does anyone think it would be justifiable or politically healthy for tech giants to bar access to those documents of historic importance in journalism and politics? That is what the Twitter policy, taken on its face, would require.

For that matter, why is Twitter not blocking access to the ongoing New York Times articles that disclose the contents of President Trumps tax returns, the unauthorized disclosure of which is a crime? Why did those platforms not block links to the now-notorious Rachel Maddow segment where she revealed details about one of Trumps old tax returns on the ground that it was content obtained without authorization? Or what about the virtually daily articles in the New York Times, Washington Post, NBC News and others that explicitly state they are publishing information that the source is unauthorized to disclose: how does that not fall squarely within the banning policy as Twitter defined it yesterday?

Worse still, why does Twitters hacking policy apply to the New York Post story at all? While the Posts claimsabout how these emails were obtained are dubious at best, there is no evidence unlike the award-winning journalism scoops referenced above that they were obtained by virtue of hacking by a source.

Facebooks rationale for suppression that it needs to have its fact checking partners verify the story before allowing it to be spread poses different but equally alarming dangers. What makes Mark Zuckerbergs social media company competent to fact check the work of other journalists? Why did Facebook block none of the endless orgy of Russiagate conspiracy theoriesfrom major media outlets that were completely unproven if not outright false?

Do we really want Facebook serving as some sort of uber-editor for U.S. media and journalism, deciding what information is suitable for the American public to read and which should be hidden from it after teams of journalists and editors at real media outlets have approved its publication? And can anyone claim that Facebooks alleged fact-checking process is applied with any remote consistency given how often they failed to suppress sketchily sourced or facially unreliable stories such as, say, the Steele Dossier and endless articles based on it? Can you even envision the day when an unproven conspiracy theory leaked by the CIA or FBI to the Washington Post or NBC News is suppressed pending fact-checking by Facebook?

Twitter is not opposed to hacked materials and Facebook is not opposed to dubiously sourced stories. They are opposed to such things only when such storiesanger powerful factions. When those power centers are the ones disseminating such stories, they will continue to have free rein to do so.

The glaring fallacy that alwayslies at the heart of pro-censorship sentimentsis the gullible, delusional belief that censorship powers will be deployed only to suppress views one dislikes, but never ones own views. The most cursory review of history, and the most minimal understanding of how these tech giants function, instantly reveals the folly of that pipe dream.

Facebook is not some benevolent, kind, compassionate parent or a subversive, radical actor who is going to police our discourse in order to protect the weak and marginalized or serve as a noble check on mischief by the powerful. They are almost always going to do exactly the opposite: protect the powerful from those who seek toundermine elite institutions and reject their orthodoxies.

Tech giants, like all corporations, are required by law to have one overriding objective: maximizing shareholder value. They are always going to use their power to appease thosethey perceive wield the greatest political and economic power.

That is why Facebook accepts virtually every request from the Israeli Government to remove the pages of Palestinian journalists and activists on the grounds of incitement, but almost never accepts Palestinians requests to remove Israeli content. It is the same reason Facebook blocks and censors governments adverse to the U.S., but not the other way around. They are going to heed the interests ofthepowerful at the expense of those who lack it. It is utter madness to want to augment their censorship powers or to expect they will use it for any other ends.

Facebook and Twitter havein the past censored the content or removed the accounts of far-right voices. They have done the same to left-wing voices. That is always how it will work: it is exclusively the voices on the fringesandthe margins, the dissidents, those who reside outside of the factions of power who will be subjected to this silencing. Mainstream political and media voices, and the U.S. Government and its allies, will be fully free to spread conspiracy theories and disinformation without ever being subjected to these illusory rules.

Censorship power, like the tech giants who now wield it, is an instrument of status quo preservation. The promise of the internet from the start was that it would be a tool of liberation, of egalitarianism, by permitting those without money and power to compete on fair terms in the information war with the most powerful governments and corporations.

But just as is true of allowing the internet to be converted into a tool of coercion and mass surveillance, nothing guts that promise, that potential, like empowering corporate overloads and unaccountable monopolists to regulate and suppress what can be heard.

To observethat those who are cheering for this today because they happen to like this particular outcome are being short-sighted and myopic is to woefully understate the case. The only people who should want to live in a world where Mark Zuckerberg andSundar Pichai and Jeff Bezos have a stranglehold on what can be said and heard are those whose actions are devoted to the perpetuation of their power and who benefit from their hegemony.

Everyone else will eventually be faced with the choice of conformity or censorship, of refraining from expressing prohibited views as the cost for maintaining access to crucial social media platforms.The only thing more authoritarian than the acts of Facebook and Twitter yesterday is the mentality that causes ordinary people to cheer it, to be grateful for the power and control they have long wielded andyesterday finally unleashed.

Update: Oct. 16, 2020, 6:18a.m. ETLateThursday evening, Twitter announced changes to its Hacked Materials Policydesigned to address concerns that its policy as stated and as applied to the Post articles would result in the banning of crucial reporting based on hacked materials or other unauthorized disclosures. Explainedby Vijaya Gadde, a top Twitter executive, the new rules now provide that Twitterspolicy applies not to articles by news outlets reporting on hacked materials but only in those cases when the hacked material is directly shared by hackers or those acting in concert with them. Additionally, going forward, Twitter will label Tweets to provide context instead of blocking links from being shared. Gadde said specifically that the changes are intended to address the concerns that there could be many unintended consequences to journalists, whistleblowers and others in ways that are contrary to Twitters purpose of serving the public conversation.

There are still serious concerns about what Twitter did in this particular case and how these rules will be appliedto future cases, but these changes are a commendablyresponsive effort to minimize the dangers of this policy and alleviatethe concerns raised by journalists and transparency advocates.

See the rest here:
Facebook and Twitter Cross a Line in Censorship - The Intercept

It’s Time to Nationalize Social Media and Big Tech – City Watch

After a brief chat on the phone, I was informed that I was unwittingly caught up in aRussian-backed media operation, for a publication that had recently offered a writing opportunity.

The outlet PeaceData reached out to me through one of their associate editors (@Alex_Lacusta) via DM on July 8, writing, were a young, progressive global news outlet that is seeking young and aspiring writers. I was told that the editors liked my writing and views, and was initially offered $200 to $250 per piece. (Photo above: Jason Howie CC BY 2.0)

I went back and forth with Alex, while in the meantime I checked out the editors social media pages on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, the pieces that were published (which generally aligned with my values), and contributors which included some Twitter blue checks and leftist journalists, adding to the operations legitimacy. After exercising due diligence and expressing interest in the opportunity, Alex dropped the rate to $100 to $150 per piece, with the hook that I could write a regular column. Alex informed me I could choose the topics so long as they focused on anti-war, anti-corruption, and environmentalism. I accepted and was excited to have a home and compensation for my work.

After talking to the reporter who DMed me, I was sent areportdetailing how the Russian oligarch-sponsored troll farm Internet Research Agency was behind the PeaceData front. I was initially shocked and confused, but in retrospect, the red flags added up.

On July 22, I noticed the first red flag. Alex and Albert Popescu, another associate editor for PeaceData had eerily similar profile pictures which turned out to be digitally generated fake images. Popescus account was also recently created in May 2020. The second odd occurrence happened in email exchanges with Alex. Prepositions were sometimes omitted and verbiage would be singular rather than plural, or vice versa. Yet, I had been in contact with busy editors for legitimate publications that would make grammatical mistakes here and there. I was also paid by three separate Paypal accounts, which seemed suspicious.

The last red flag was the most egregious and led me to distance myself. I had been notified that my first article arguing that U.S. sanctions and the embargo against Venezuela were not about enforcinghuman rights was republished inGlobal Research Centre, a conspiracy blog that I was unfamiliar with at the time. I looked briefly on their home page and saw articles that were critical of U.S. foreign policy, the U.S. government response to the dismal state of current affairs, and capitalist hegemony. About a week later, I was scrolling through mind-numbingQAnonposts on Twitter and noticed that the Q accounts were sharing hydroxychloroquine propaganda that was linked from Global Research.

I was disturbed and didnt want my thorough, well-sourced work to be associated with a conspiracy blog. I started digging. Along with hydroxychloroquine conspiracies, I found 9/11 truther articles and pro-Putin content. I started diving through the PeaceData archive and found some vaguely pro-Putin content, notably one article defending Belarussian authoritarian Alexander Lukashenkos state violence on demonstrators. I then decided that I didnt want to be associated with PeaceData any longer. Unfortunately, I had already submitted my final piece by this point.

In the days and weeks following September 1, I was (and still am) constantly inundated with requests for comment from outlets. I initially talked to reporters off the record, as I thought this experience would ruin aspirations of becoming more frequently published. As a journalist committed to transparency and as a Socialist, I lost sleep over my involvement with a reactionary regime that I have been previously critical of. After mulling it over for a night, I opted for transparency and went on therecord. I turned over my emails and PayPal receipts to reporters and provided statements to those who reached out. I was never contacted by law enforcement.

In the time between my final piece being submitted and then later published, Twitter and thenFacebooksuspended all PeaceData linked accounts, following a tip from the National Security Agency (NSA) and the Federal Bureau of Investigations. I was caught up in the fallout. Twitter blanket suspended every single account I ever had access to, relaying that I was manipulating the platform for accessing multiple accounts.

My account, my former employers accounts, and a Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) linked account were all suspended due to their association with my digital footprint. I had not used my former employers account since April 2019 and I hadnt posted anything on the DSA associated account since about March 2019. None of these accounts, except my account, had any relation with PeaceData.

After I noticed that every account I ever had access to was suspended, I reached out to two reporters who had been following the story and I had been speaking with. I trusted them, as they were among most of (but not all) the journalists who didnt misquote me or editorialize in their write-ups.

I flagged the account suspensions and they requested comment from Twitter. At first, a spokesperson failed to respond to either. It wasnt until one of the reporters tweeted about it, highlighting that Twitter had suspended a journalists account along with other associated accounts, calling it ridiculous. Following the reporters post to get the accounts reinstated, all were reactivated about three hours after the tweet. Twitters spokespeople then responded to one of the requests for comment, stating, we suspended these accounts out of an abundance of caution.

I was told candidly that had the reporter not posted about it, my account and those associated would likely have been suspended longer or permanently banned. Fortunately, my former employer didnt notice or at least didnt reach out. On the other hand, DSA comrades were quick to notice and didnt seem pleased with my involvement in getting one of their accounts suspended. I was deeply apologetic, offered an honest account on the situation, and elected to remove myself immediately when the account was reinstated.

Sadly, I wasnt the only one affected in the PeaceData mess. Others were also thrown under the bus by a social media corporation not exercising due diligence and overreacting. Over 200 independent journalists were implicated, including Jacinda Chan, a person with a complex disability, whose account was temporarily purged from Facebook.

Chan told theDaily Beastthat after her suspension she was unable to find a caregiver in assisting her daily living, as she used Facebook to find home health aides. When pressed for comment, Facebook cited her posts as advertisements, telling theDaily Beast, its against company policy for users to either attempt to or successfully sell, buy or exchange site privileges or Facebook product features, including attempting to complete the U.S. authorizations process on behalf of another individual. Public relations spin aside, a spokesperson for the networking site later stated that the moderators planned to reinstate Chans account.

While understandable that Twitter and Facebook were attempting to mitigate the influence of a Russian oligarch-sponsored media campaign that targeted leftist journalists and independent media, likeCounterPunch, the blanket suspension demonstrates how tech giants keep their procedures under tight wraps. Ultimately, big tech and social media platforms arent transparent and are only accountable to negative press and revenue streams, rather than serving the public interest. The motivating rationale driving their irresponsibility and unaccountable actions: profit and consolidating market share.

Social Media And Tech Giants Arent Accountable To The Public

The tech oligopolies and monopolies and particularly social media corporations are not accountable to the public and lack meaningful regulation. The industry creates corrosive environments for democratic societies. The result allows for users and workers to be manipulated and exploited so that the industry can secure market share and profits.

The proliferation of conspiracy across the ideological spectrum has seeped into the mainstream through social media. The most flagrant pushing of conspiratorial dogmatism is through QAnon, which evolved from a fringe online conspiracy to being embraced byTrump,far-right popular media, and now propelled into themainstream, giving it cult-like status.

As of October 2, 2020, 75 Republicans, two Democrats, one Libertarian, and three independent candidates are espousing sympathies for Q in the election season. There are nowmillionsof users and thousands of groups across social networking sites that are dedicated true-believers to Q. Thedelayedmeasures from social media platforms have resulted in the conspiracy metastasizing, causing Q to spread and adherents committing acts of fascistterrorismin the name of stopping the cabal and those that oppose Trumpian autocracy.

Outlandish online conspiracy isnt limited to the fringes or far-right: liberals have also fallen prey to false realities. In the U.K.s Prime Minister runoff, Socialist Labourite Jeremy Corbyn was the center of a conspiracy thatsmearedthe former anti-apartheid activist as an anti-semite and terrorist sympathizer. While theBritishandAmericanpress abetted this narrative, social media users on the right and center endlessly shared this fake news to discredit Corbyn.

During the 2020 Democratic Primary,prominent liberalspromoted conspiracy that U.S. SenatorBernie Sanderswas awittingRussian asset, while also likening his supporters toNazi brownshirts. Given his background and prior statements denouncing Putins far-right regime, like the smears Corbyn faced, these claims were completely beyond the pale.

Even the left dabbles in conspiracy on social media, with some elements outright dismissing the Trump-Russia connection or the reactionary tendencies of Putins regime as U.S. intelligence propaganda. Yet given the long history of the intelligence and foreign policy apparatus outright lying (remember theGulf of Tonkincharade or the WMDs in Iraq or James Clappers testimony before Congress?), the skepticism is more understandable. Furthermore, the corporate media obsession and Democratic Party reductionism of blaming the entirety of the U.S.s failures on a Russian Manchurian candidate and Putin hacking the election also dissuades the left in realizing that far-right governments like Russia, Israel, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia have an interest in influencing U.S. politics.

Social media platforms, along with corporate media, have allowed nefarious actors to push narratives to audiences while either under- or overreacting in their responses depending on the ideological underpinnings from foreign-linked information. For example, reactionary propaganda from Israel and Saudi Arabia client states of the U.S. mostly go unchallenged andcritical viewsare met with censorship. Conversely, some credible reports citing the U.S. governments incompetence or imperialist brutality from outlets likeTeleSur(essentially Venezuelan state media) are more frequentlycensored. With that said, censorship of Russian information is more nuanced, and appears that its ideological framework resembles the Cold War tactics of yesteryear, rather than overt ideological or economic biases.

Twitter and Facebook have only recently started labeling content as manipulated media or removing posts, mostly opting for the former. While the platforms have started issuing this tag, posts arestill visibleto users. Facebook has recently moved toremoveusers and groups promoting QAnon. While likely for the best, this should be approached with careful skepticism and challenged as the removal of content and accounts could ultimately be used (it already has been) against the left and independent media. Its a bit of a catch-22. Free speech and press freedoms should be vigilantly protected, yet its no question that allowing conspiracy dissemination on social media is pushing segments of the public into mythological existences. The environment is a threat to democratic societies.

While allowing users to be constantly bombarded with conspiratorial misinformation, manipulated media, or fake news, social networking corporations have gobbled up the competition, creating a consolidated market for consumers.Facebookhas swallowed up WhatsApp, Instagram, Oculus, and have been exploring the prospect of acquiring other tech-based services, whileTwitterhas acquired Periscope, Tweetdeck, and other platforms. Consolidation isnt exclusive to Facebook and Twitter. Other tech corporations are acquiring competitors and skirtingantitrust lawswhile remaining mostly unregulated and unaccountable to the public.

Uber hasignored pressurefor improved screening processes for gig workers and ensuring that riders (especiallywomen) are kept safe. The ride-sharing tech duopoly (along with Lyft) has been accused ofripping offworking-class drivers andthreatened capital strikes.

Google run by tech conglomerate Alphabet failed to safeguardusers data from the NSAs domestic spying program and has beenaccusedof selling off data, which the corporation hasdenied.

Tesla and SpaceX founder, Elon Musk, has violated labor laws after issuing statementsintimidatingworkers that wished to unionize, while the Securities and Exchange Commission hascitedthe South African billionaire for blatant fraud.

Apple has been caughtdodgingtaxes and working with the exploitative Taiwanese manufacturer,Foxconn, which installed nets to prevent suicides after 14 workers took their own lives due to the conditions. Apples manufacturer has also made workers sign agreements that they wont take their own lives due to the abysmal environment.

Techs top firm, Amazon, has been widely documented violating federal labor laws and engaging in exploitative practices: firing andsmearingpro-union workers, denying safe andappropriate accommodations, and forcing workers to dedicate uncompensated time to beingfriskedat the end of shifts. Jeff Bezoss monopoly has also recentlydonatedto a QAnon-supporting GOP candidate for the Tennessee House of Representatives.

As the tech industry now becomes evermore consolidated and shady business practices mostly go unpunished, profits and executive salaries are reaching an all-time high. According toFortune Uber, Facebook, Dell, Comcast, Microsoft, Tesla, Alphabet (Google), AT&T, Samsung, Verizon, Apple, and Amazon are among the 300 most profitable corporations in the world.

The tech executives, including social media moguls Jack Dorsey and Mark Zuckerberg, have made out like bandits. According toForbes, Dorseys net worth is now up to$8.4 billion, while Zuckerberg has become the third richest person in the world, amassing a net worth of$92 billion. Similarly, whileAmazonescapes tax obligations, Jeff Bezos now the worlds wealthiest individual has acquired his very own media outfit,The Washington Post, while his net worth skyrockets to an absurd$181.7 billion.

The industry and their robber baron executives are unaccountable and uninterested in protecting a democratic society the result amounts to users and the public paying the price for big techs consolidation, profits, and salaries.

Democratic Ownership Creates Accountability

Tech behemoths have transformed into public (although privately held) services that virtually every American interacts with regularly.Over a thirdof Westerners look to social media for their news consumption, now with more young people turning to online platforms to get their media fix.69 percentof Americans are Facebook users, while73 percentconsistently consume content on Youtube (owned by Google). Close totwo-thirdsof the U.S. use Amazon, while more than 40 percent use the site monthly.36 percentof Americans use ride-sharing platforms like Uber and Lyft, while every American with a computer or cellphone (a necessity in this era) mostly relies on a binary choice. In a world where the masses are increasingly reliant on tech platforms, its time they serve public transparency and are held accountable under democratic ownership.

Under democratic ownership, speech can be better protected from corporate censorship, and responsiveness to manipulated media or fake news can be better addressed through independent procedural transparency. Its noteworthy that as media and information channels progress, some Western governments have created editorially independent outlets, likeBBCandCBC. Although these institutions are far from perfect and certainly possess a bias towards the status quo, their creation didnt deliver an authoritarian blow to free speech. The same can be applied to social media corporations.

In an oligopolistic or arguably monopolistic environment, big tech and social media monoliths have become too large to manage and hold accountable. Tech giants have increasing political, economic, and social power over the public, while the working-class people become growingly reliant on the platforms. It should be recognized that big techs jumping-off point was created and is now sustained throughpublic funding. Public investments should serve the public, not shareholders, executives, and market consolidation.

Nationalization would also curtail overly exploitative labor practices from big tech and their contractors. While under democratic ownership, labor standards could be more strictly enforced and dignified, high-paying jobs can be promoted. Simultaneously, users and consumers wouldnt be manipulated for profit, personal data could be better secured and protected, and the public could have an independent arbiter to rely on for information. Public ownership serves to protect democratic societies, workers, and users.

At its heart, the profit motive doesnt serve the publics interest and its time that tech giants are nationalized and placed under democratic control. While conspiracies run wild, tech consolidates, users are manipulated, and data is unsecured and auctioned off, democratic societies are at a precipice. Big tech and social media corporations must be placed under democratic ownership for the sake of accountability and transparency to the public.

(Jack Delaneyis a former policy analyst. He worked on issues relating to health care, disability, and labor policy, and is a member of the National Writers Union. Posted first at Counterpunch.org.)

-cw

Read more here:
It's Time to Nationalize Social Media and Big Tech - City Watch

Global Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market 2020-2025: Due to COVID-19 – Increased IP Traffic will Lead to Higher Utilization of CDNs -…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - Forecast (2020 - 2025)" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

Content delivery network market value was $11.85 billion in 2019 and is anticipated to see an upsurge during the forecast period and will reach $24.70 billion till 2025 growing at a CAGR of 13.4% in between 2020 to 2025.

Exponentially increasing internet penetration in all the industry verticals along with the increasing utilization of this type of delivery network for traffic handling and latency reduction owing to their effective data handling has been stimulating the market growth across the globe

Key Takeaways

Solution - Segment Analysis

The Content delivery network market is segmented into media delivery, web performance optimization, DRM and transcoding, monitoring and analytics, transparent caching, data security and cloud storage by solution. Media delivery segment held the major share accounting to around 34% in 2019. Content delivery network market value with respect to media delivery solutions was $4.06 billion in 2019 and is anticipated to see an upsurge during the forecast period.

The market will reach $8.6 billion till 2025 growing at a CAGR of 13.66% in between 2020 to 2025. There is a rapid increase in internet users across the globe, which in turn had affected the speed and performance of the websites. Owing to this problem there is a need of media delivery solution.

End User Industry - Segment Analysis

Media & Entertainment is the dominant end user industry of content delivery network market accounting for 30% share of the market in 2019. With media delivery and web performance optimization solutions, users can flawlessly view and access the high definition video content. Various web elements such as video, software updates, games, social media and other content can be delivered more efficiently without building out costly infrastructure.

Social networking sites such as Facebook, twitter and others are also one of the reason increasing internet traffic. Approximately, 1500 million are registered users in social networking sites currently. Growing demand from audiences for accessing online audio and videos coupled with flawless viewing experiences on any devices such as smartphones, laptops, tablets and others to accelerate the content delivery network market

Geography - Segment Analysis

Americas is estimated to hold the prominent share of 38% of global CDN market in 2019 and is forecast to reach $9.18 billion by 2025 growing at CAGR of 13.2% during 2020-2025. The market is analyzed to be driven by enterprises opting for CDN solutions. Media and entertainment industry accounted for the major value for the Americas CDN market in 2019 with online gaming poised to witness the highest growth of CAGR 18.95% during 2020-2025. The largest growing CDN market is APAC which is forecast to grow at CAGR 18.46% from 2020 to 2025 projecting to $7.49 billion by 2025.

The market is poised to be driven by growing SMEs which opt for cloud CDNs and P2P CDNs owing to its cost effectiveness and flexibility. The growth is also estimated to be assisted by increasing access of internet through smartphones and portable computing devices for gaming and media consumption. Penetration of large scale e-commerce websites along with the consumers' preferences for online shopping is also pushing for the employment of CDNs by the mobile companies which has boosted the market growth in this region.

Work from home policy due to Covid-19

Due to Covid-19 situation, there is an increase in work from home options, which can directly and indirectly lead to higher media consumption. Remote classes and training plans also will contribute to increased IP traffic, which will lead to higher utilization of CDNs across countries.

Key Topics Covered:

1. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - Overview

2. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - Executive summary

2.1. Market Revenue, Market Size and Key Trends by Company

2.2. Key Trends by type of Application

2.3. Key Trends segmented by Geography

3. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market

3.1. Comparative analysis

3.1.1. Product Benchmarking - Top 10 companies

3.1.2. Top 5 Financials Analysis

3.1.3. Market Value split by Top 10 companies

3.1.4. Patent Analysis - Top 10 companies

3.1.5. Pricing Analysis

4. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market Forces

4.1. Drivers

4.2. Constraints

4.3. Challenges

4.4. Porters five force model

5. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market -Strategic analysis

5.1. Value chain analysis

5.2. Opportunities analysis

5.3. Product life cycle

5.4. Suppliers and distributors Market Share

6. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - By Type (Market Size -$Million / $Billion)

6.1. Market Size and Market Share Analysis

6.2. Application Revenue and Trend Research

6.3. Product Segment Analysis

6.3.1. Dynamic Content

6.3.2. Static Content

6.3.3. Streaming Content

7. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - By Solution (Market Size -$Million / $Billion)

7.1. Media Delivery

7.2. Web Performance Optimization

7.3. DRM & Transcoding

7.4. Monitoring & Analytics

7.5. Transparent Caching

7.6. Data Security & Cloud Storage

8. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - By Organization Size (Market Size -$Million / $Billion)

8.1. Large Enterprises

8.2. Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)

9. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - By Service Provider (Market Size -$Million / $Billion)

9.1. Peer-to-Peer CDN

9.2. Cloud CDN

9.3. Traditional CDN

9.4. Telco CDN

9.5. Distributed database

9.6. Others

10. Content Delivery Network (CDN) - By End User Industry(Market Size -$Million / $Billion)

10.1. Segment type Size and Market Share Analysis

10.2. Application Revenue and Trends by type of Application

10.3. Application Segment Analysis by Type

10.3.1. Online Gaming

10.3.2. Media and Entertainment

10.3.3. Educational Institutions

10.3.4. Advertising

10.3.5. Public sector

10.3.6. E-Commerce

10.3.7. Healthcare

10.3.8. Internet service providers(ISPs)

10.3.9. Consumer electronics

11. Content Delivery Network (CDN) - By Geography (Market Size -$Million / $Billion)

12. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market - Entropy

12.1. New product launches

12.2. M&A's, collaborations, JVs and partnerships

13. Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market Company Analysis

13.1. Market Share, Company Revenue, Products, M&A, Developments

13.2. iScaler Ltd.

13.3. CloudFlare Inc.

13.4. Chinacache

13.5. Internap Corporation

13.6. MaxCDN

13.7. Fastly Inc.

13.8. Alphabet Inc. (Google Inc.)

13.9. Hibernia Networks

13.10. Highwinds Network Group Inc.

13.11. Incapsula, Inc.

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/drutrf

Read more:
Global Content Delivery Network (CDN) Market 2020-2025: Due to COVID-19 - Increased IP Traffic will Lead to Higher Utilization of CDNs -...

Kris Jenner suggests societal networking has contributed to Keeping Up With the Kardashians end – The News Pocket

16 October 2020

Kris Jenner thinks societal media has contributed toKeeping Up With the Kardashians coming to a finish.

Kris Jenner

The 64-year old celebrity climbed to fame on the truth show that follows the lives of their mixed Kardashian-Jenner household which is coming to a conclusion after 14 decades at 2021 however Kris thinks that the growth of social networking platforms has diminished the need for tv.

She explained:When we started, there wasnt any Instagram or even Snapchat or alternative social networking platforms. The entire world has really changed.

Today there are numerous, the audience does not need to wait for three or four weeks to find an event. We could provide them all the info anyone would want to understand about real time.

Kris is included in the managing of her allies Kim Kardashian, Kourtney Kardashian, Khloe Kardashian, Kendall Jenner along with Kylie Jenner professions in addition to juggling other small business ventures like conducting a manufacturing firm and Kris has shown that she must maintain her different company independent from one another.

She added:I do not do things in precisely the identical moment. I really dont commingle my encounters or the time that I spend on every different company. They certainly have their own traces. Otherwise I could not stay organized

The TV character also implied thatintellect will be the trick to achievement.

Kris advised Beauty Inc magazine:I really dont believe you must get all the expertise in the Earth, but intellect is actually important.

Read the original here:
Kris Jenner suggests societal networking has contributed to Keeping Up With the Kardashians end - The News Pocket