Archive for the ‘Censorship’ Category

NSF paid universities to develop AI censorship tools for social media, House report alleges – The College Fix

Used by governments and Big Tech to shape public opinion by restricting certain viewpoints or promoting others: report

The National Science Foundation is paying universities using taxpayer money to create AI tools that can be used to censor Americans on various social media platforms, according to members of the House.

University of Michigan, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and MIT are among the universities cited in the House Judiciary Committee and the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government interim report.

It details the foundations funding of AI-powered censorship and propaganda tools, and its repeated efforts to hide its actions and avoid political and media scrutiny.

NSF has been issuing multi-million-dollar grants to university and non-profit research teams for the purpose of developing AI-powered technologies that can be used by governments and Big Tech to shape public opinion by restricting certain viewpoints or promoting others, states the report, released last month.

Funding for the projects began in 2021 and was issued through the NSFs Convergence Accelerator grant program, which was initially launched in 2019 to develop interdisciplinary solutions to major challenges of national and societal importance such as those pertaining to AI and quantum technology, it states.

In 2021, however, the NSF introduced Track F: Trust & Authenticity in Communication Systems.

The NSFs 2021 Convergence Accelerator program solicitation stated the goal of Track F projects was to develop prototype(s) of novel research platforms forming integrated collection(s) of tools, techniques, and educational materials and programs to support increased citizen trust in public information of all sorts (health, climate, news, etc.), through more effectively preventing, mitigating, and adapting to critical threats in our communications systems.

Specifically, the grant solicitation singled out the threats posed by hackers and misinformation.

That September, the select subcommittee report notes, the NSF awarded twelve Track F teams $750,000 each (a total of $9 million) to develop and refine their project ideas and build partnerships. The following year, the NSF selected six of the 12 teams to receive an additional $5 million each for their respective projects, according to the report.

Projects from the University of Michigan, University of Wisconsin-Madison, MIT, and Meedan, a nonprofit that specializes in developing software to counter misinformation, are highlighted by the select subcommittee.

Collectively, these four projects received $13 million from the NSF, it states.

The University of Michigan intended to use the federal funding to develop its tool WiseDex, which could use AI technology to assess the veracity of content on social media and assist large social media platforms with what content should be removed or otherwise censored, it states.

The University of Wisconsin-Madisons Course Correct, which was featured in an article from The College Fix last year, was intended to aid reporters, public health organizations, election administration officials, and others to address so-called misinformation on topics such as U.S. elections and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy.

MITs Search Lit, as described in the select subcommittees report, was developed as an intervention to help educate groups of Americans the researchers believed were most vulnerable to misinformation such as conservatives, minorities, rural Americans, older adults, and military families.

Meedan, according to its website, used its funding to develop easy-to-use, mobile-friendly tools [that] will allow AAPI [Asian-American and Pacific Islander] community members to forward potentially harmful content to tiplines and discover relevant context explainers, fact-checks, media literacy materials, and other misinformation interventions.

According to the select committees report, Once empowered with taxpayer dollars, the pseudo-science researchers wield the resources and prestige bestowed upon them by the federal government against any entities that resist their censorship projects.

In some instances, the report states, if a social media company fails to act fast enough to change a policy or remove what the researchers perceive to be misinformation on its platform, disinformation researchers will issue blogposts or formal papers to generate a communications moment (i.e., negative press coverage) for the platform, seeking to coerce it into compliance with their demands.

Efforts were made via email to contact senior members of the three university research teams, as well as a representative from Meedan, regarding the portrayal of their work in the select subcommittees report.

Paul Resnick, who serves as the WiseDex project director at the University of Michigan, referred The College Fix to the WiseDex website.

Social media companies have policies against harmful misinformation. Unfortunately, enforcement is uneven, especially for non-English content, states the site. WiseDex harnesses the wisdom of crowds and AI techniques to help flag more posts [than humans can]. The result is more comprehensive, equitable, and consistent enforcement, significantly reducing the spread of misinformation.

A video on the site presents the tool as a means to help social media sites flag posts that violate platform policies and subsequently attach warnings to or remove the posts. Posts portraying approved COVID-19 vaccines as potentially dangerous are used as an example.

Michael Wagner from the University of Wisconsin-Madison also responded to The Fix, writing, It is interesting to be included in a report that claims to be about censorship when our project censors exactly no one.

According to the select subcommittee report, some of the researchers associated with Track F and similar projects, however, privately acknowledged efforts to combat misinformation were inherently political and a form of censorship.

Yet, following negative coverage of Track F projects, depicting them as politically motivated and their products as government-funded censorship tools, the report notes, the NSF began discussing media and outreach strategy with grant recipients.

Notes from a pair of Track F media strategy planning sessions included in Appendix B of the select subcommittees report recommended researchers, when interacting with the media, focus on the pro-democracy and non-ideological nature of their work, Give examples of both sides, and use sports metaphors.

The select subcommittee report also highlights that there were discussions of having a media blacklist, although at least one researcher from the University of Michigan objected to this, citing the potential optics.

MORE: Feds give professors $5.7M to develop tool to combat misinformation

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NSF paid universities to develop AI censorship tools for social media, House report alleges - The College Fix

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Cancel cultures: theatre censorship around the world – The Stage

The Curse at Teatr Powszechny, Warsaw, Poland. Photo: Magda Hueckel

Theatremakers from countries including Hong Kong, Turkey, Serbia, Hungary and Belarus discuss censorship in all its forms, from overt interference and the pressure to self-censor to the grey areas that can restrict artistic freedom

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Cancel cultures: theatre censorship around the world - The Stage

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Bill Maher rips govt for censoring ‘dissenting opinions’ about COVID-19 pandemic that were the ‘right ones’ – Fox News

Bill Maher rips govt for censoring 'dissenting opinions' about COVID-19 pandemic that were the 'right ones'  Fox News

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Bill Maher rips govt for censoring 'dissenting opinions' about COVID-19 pandemic that were the 'right ones' - Fox News

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EFF Opposes California Initiative That Would Cause Mass Censorship – EFF

In recent years, lots of proposed laws purport to reduce harmful content on the internet, especially for kids. Some have good intentions. But the fact is, we cant censor our way to a healthier internet.

When it comes to online (or offline) content, people simply dont agree about whats harmful. And people make mistakes, even in content moderation systems that have extensive human review and appropriate appeals. The systems get worse when automated filters are brought into the mixas increasingly occurs, when moderating content at the vast scale of the internet.

Recently, EFF weighed in against an especially vague and poorly written proposal: California Ballot Initiative 23-0035, written by Common Sense Media. It would allow for plaintiffs to sue online information providers for damages of up to $1 million if it violates its responsibility of ordinary care and skill to a child.

We sent a public comment to California Attorney General Rob Bonta regarding the dangers of this wrongheaded proposal. While the AGs office does not typically take action for or against ballot initiatives at this stage of the process, we wanted to register our opposition to the initiative as early as we could.

Initiative 23-0035 would result in broad censorship via a flood of lawsuits claiming that all manner of content online is harmful to a single child. While it is possible for children (and adults) to be harmed online, Initiative 23-0035s vague standard, combined with extraordinarily large statutory damages, will severely limit access to important online discussions for both minors and adults. Many online platforms will censor user content in order to avoid this legal risk.

The following are just a few of the many areas of culture, politics, and life where people have different views of what is harmful, and where this ballot initiative thus could cause removal of online content:

In addition, the proposed initiative would lead to mandatory age verification. Its wrong to force someone to show ID before they go online to search for information. It eliminates the right to speak or to find information anonymously, for both minors and adults.

This initiative, with its vague language, is arguably worse than the misnamed Kids Online Safety Act, a federal censorship bill that we are opposing. We hope the sponsors of this initiative choose not to move forward with this wrongheaded and unconstitutional proposal. If they do, we are prepared to oppose it.

You can read EFFs full letter to A.G. Bonta here.

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EFF Opposes California Initiative That Would Cause Mass Censorship - EFF

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X disagrees with Centres censorship orders, calls for greater transparency – The Indian Express

X disagrees with Centres censorship orders, calls for greater transparency  The Indian Express

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X disagrees with Centres censorship orders, calls for greater transparency - The Indian Express

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