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Twitter, Facebook face competition from blockchain-based social media platforms – Geo News

Twitter, Facebook face competition from blockchain-based social media platforms. variety.com

Bluesky, a decentralised communications app, is posing a new competition to Elon Musk's Twitter. The app, which is backed by Twitter co-founder and twice-former CEO Jack Dorsey, is an alternative to centralised social media platforms.

Unlike Twitter and Facebook, decentralised social media platforms have no single owner or leader and are not beholden to commercial or financial interests. Decentralised projects are less likely to collect and sell users' data and less susceptible to censorship.

Bluesky has become popular in recent months, with 628,000 mobile downloads in April, a 606% rise from the previous month. However, Bluesky still lags far behind Twitter in total download volume.

Bluesky's emergence highlights how Dorsey is looking to disrupt what he helped create. In 2019, Bluesky was originally incubated within Twitter when Dorsey was still CEO.

The app runs on a decentralized networking technology called the AT Protocol, which could power future social apps, enabling people to maintain their identities across multiple apps. Other decentralised social projects that have been getting more attention include Mastodon, as well as Lens and Farcaster, which are both Twitter substitutes built on blockchains.

Decentralised platforms lack the algorithms that recommend particular content. They also don't sell ads or collect and sell user data, which are the traditional ways that social networks make money. However, the only drawback is scale, with Bluesky having only around 50,000 users and unclear financial plans.

Bluesky, which is currently invitation-only, could turn to subscriptions to monetize its operations. But the front-end apps built atop these decentralized platforms are often clunky, not professional-looking, or easy to use. The team hasn't given many hints on any financial plans, according to recent blog posts. The user experience is also another drawback, with the platform still being tested and developed.

The emergence of decentralised social media platforms provides an opportunity for people to be citizens of their platforms, with the ability to vote.

Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen said that it all comes down to self-governance. "Weve kind of come to accept that we are subjects of a king, like Mark [Zuckerberg], or Elon [Musk], and we can either follow their rules or leave," Haugen said.

"And theres an interesting opportunity for people to be citizens of their platforms, having an ability to vote, but also having..."

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Twitter, Facebook face competition from blockchain-based social media platforms - Geo News

Four ways to take control of social media algorithms to get the … – Stuff

ANALYSIS: Whether its Facebooks News Feed or TikToks For You page, social media algorithms are constantly making behind-the-scenes decisions to boost certain content giving rise to the curated feeds weve all become accustomed to.

But does anyone actually know how these algorithms work? And, more importantly, is there a way to game them to see more of the content you want?

In broader computing terms, an algorithm is simply a set of rules that specifies a particular computational procedure.

In a social media context, algorithms (specifically recommender algorithms) determine everything from what youre likely to read, to whom youre likely to follow, to whether a specific post appears in front of you.

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Their main goal is to sustain your attention for as long as possible, in a process called optimising for engagement. The more you engage with content on a platform, the more effectively that platform can commodify your attention and target you with ads: its main revenue source.

One of the earliest social media feed algorithms came from Facebook in the mid-2000s. It can be summarised in one sentence:

Sort all of the users friend updates including photos, statuses and more in reverse chronological order (newer posts first).

Since then, algorithms have become much more powerful and nuanced. They now take myriad factors into consideration to determine how content is promoted. For instance, Twitters For You recommendation algorithm is based on a neural network that uses about 48 million parameters!

Imagine a hypothetical user named Basil who follows users and pages that primarily discuss space, dog memes and cooking. Social media algorithms might give Basil recommendations for T-shirts featuring puppies dressed as astronauts.

Elisa Ventur/UNSPLASH

Algorithms have become much more powerful and nuanced. They now take myriad factors into consideration to determine how content is promoted.

Although this might seem simple, algorithms are typically black boxes that have their inner workings hidden. Its in the interests of tech companies to keep the recipe for their secret sauce, well, a secret.

Trying to game an algorithm is like trying to solve a 3D box puzzle without any instructions and without being able to peer inside. You can only use trial-and-error manipulating the pieces you see on the outside, and gauging the effects on the overall state of the box.

Even when an algorithms code is revealed to the public such as when Twitter released the source code for its recommender algorithm in March its not enough to bend them to ones will.

Between the sheer complexity of the code, constant tweaks by developers, and the presence of arbitrary design choices (such as explicitly tracking Elon Musks tweets), any claims of being able to perfectly game an algorithm should be taken with a pinch of salt.

Matt Slocum/AP

Trying to game an algorithm is like trying to solve a 3D box puzzle.

TikToks algorithm, in particular, is notoriously powerful yet opaque. A Wall Street Journal investigation found it uses subtle cues, such as how long you linger on a video to predict what youre likely to engage with.

That said, there are some ways you can try to curate your social media to serve you better.

Since algorithms are powered by your data and social media habits, a good first step is to change these habits and data or at least understand how they may be shaping your online experience.

1. Engage with content you trust and want more of

Regardless of the kind of feed you want to create, its important to follow reliable sources. Basil, who is fascinated by space, knows they would do well to follow NASA and steer clear of users who believe the Moon is made of cheese.

Unsplash

There are some ways you can try to curate your social media to serve you better.

Think critically about the accounts and pages you follow, asking questions such as Who is the author of this content? Do they have authority in this topic? Might they have a bias, or an agenda?

The higher the quality of the content you engage with, the more likely it is that youll be recommended similarly valuable content (rather than fake news or nonsense).

Also, you can play to the ethos of optimising for engagement by engaging more (and for longer) with the kind of content you want to be recommended. That means liking and sharing it, and actively seeking out similar posts.

2. Be stingy with your information

Secondly, you can be parsimonious in providing your data to platforms. Social media companies know more about you than you think from your location, to your perceived interests, to your activities outside the app, and even the activities and interests of your social circle!

If you limit the information you provide about yourself, you limit the extent to which the algorithm can target you. It helps to keep your different social media accounts unlinked, and to avoid using the Login with Facebook or Login with Google options when signing up for a new account.

3. Use your settings

Adjusting your privacy and personalisation settings will further help you avoid being microtargeted through your feed.

The Off-Facebook Activity setting allows you to break the link between your Facebook account and your activities outside of Facebook. Similar options exist for TikTok and Twitter.

Ad blockers and privacy-enhancing browser add-ons can also help. These tools, such as the open-source uBlock Origin and Privacy Badger, help prevent cookies and marketing pixels from following your browsing habits as you move between social media and other websites.

Gregory Bull/AP

You shouldnt let tech giants bottom line dictate how you engage with social media.

4. Get (dis)engaged

A final piece of advice is to simply disengage with content you dont want in your feed. This means:

So, hypothetically, could Basil unfollow all users and pages unrelated to space, dog memes and cooking to ultimately starve the recommender algorithm of potential ways to distract them?

Well, not exactly. Even if they do this, the algorithm wont necessarily forget all their data: it might still exist in caches or backups. Because of how complex and pervasive algorithms are, you cant guarantee control over them.

Nonetheless, you shouldnt let tech giants bottom line dictate how you engage with social media. By being aware of how algorithms work, what theyre capable of and what their purpose is, you can make the shift from being a sitting duck for advertisers to an active curator of your own feeds.

Marc Cheong is a Senior Lecturer of Information Systems at Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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Four ways to take control of social media algorithms to get the ... - Stuff

Michigan Senate passes ban on use of phones while driving – CBS News

(CBS DETROIT) - The ban on using phones while driving is heading closer to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's desk after Senate passed three House Bills Wednesday.

The amended bills expand on the state's texting and driving ban and would prohibit drivers from using or holding a mobile device while operating a vehicle. It was passed in House on May 2.

That includes talking on the phone, sending or receiving a text, recording or viewing a video or reading and posting to a social networking site.

The ban would not apply to those operating commercial vehicles or school buses, as well as law enforcement officers and first responders in emergency situations and public utility employees and contractors.

Use of phones would be allowed when making an emergency call to police, fire and health care providers, or using a hands-free system.

When finally approved, the amendments could take effect on June 30.

According to the crash data from Michigan State Police, there were 16,543 crashes in 2021 involving distracted driving, an increase from 14,326 crashes in 2020. Officials say fatal distracted driving crashes increased by 14% from 2020 to 2021.

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Michigan Senate passes ban on use of phones while driving - CBS News

Homeless Veterans Will Receive Less Help as Pandemic Aid Dries Up, Democrats and Veterans Groups Warn – Military.com

With the COVID-19 public health emergency now officially concluded, congressional Democrats are pushing to revive pandemic-related powers that allowed the Department of Veterans Affairs to expand support services for homeless veterans.

At a news conference Friday at the Washington, D.C., chapter of a nonprofit that provides housing and employment assistance to veterans, Democrats on the House Veterans Affairs Committee and advocates for homeless veterans warned that fewer veterans will be able to find help now that emergency authorities have ended and called on Republicans to move forward with a bill to renew the aid.

"The rate that we receive for servicing a homeless veteran went from, last night, $164.67 to $64.52," said Clifton Lewis, executive director of U.S. Vets D.C., where the press conference was held. "How can you provide services to a veteran with just $64.52? Housing, food, case management services -- all the things that we do to service homeless veterans."

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Organizations that help homeless veterans nationwide are now "stuck with the decision [of] what resources do I cut," Lewis added.

First declared 1,195 days ago, the COVID-19 public health emergency in the United States formally ended just before midnight Thursday. While the virus continues to circulate -- the VA reported 2,200 active cases at its facilities as of Friday morning -- the Biden administration has said the crisis phase of the pandemic is over and allowed the emergency declaration to expire amid GOP pressure to end it.

For the VA, the public health emergency allowed the agency to provide homeless veterans with free rides from services such as Uber and Lyft so they could get to medical appointments, jobs or support programs. The pandemic authorities also gave the VA flexibility to redirect funding aimed at other programs to food, shelter, clothing, hygiene products, communications devices and other necessities for homeless veterans, as well as the ability to provide larger grants to community groups caring for homeless veterans in transitional housing.

Those extra authorities have been credited as one of the reasons veterans homelessness dropped 11% during the pandemic despite the economic hardships that most of the country faced.

The VA has pleaded with Congress to extend the pandemic authorities, but there has been little progress on doing so.

Bills have been introduced in both the House and the Senate that would extend the VA's pandemic authorities, but the House bill was voted down in committee along party lines last month.

The Senate bill, which is sponsored by Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Jon Tester, D-Mont., and Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, was just introduced last week, not enough time for the infamously slow upper chamber to act before the emergency expired.

In voting against the House bill, Republicans said they supported the underlying goal of extending the ability for the VA to provide more aid to homeless veterans. But they insisted the measure ran afoul of House rules prohibiting increases in so-called mandatory spending without some form of offset because of accounting complications caused by the sweeping toxic exposure bill passed last year.

"I support providing this type of assistance to homeless veterans," House Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Mike Bost, R-Ill., said at the April 28 committee meeting. "I will say it again, I support the assistance for homeless veterans. My concern is how this proposal would be funded. Unfortunately, this proposal is impacted by the toxic exposure fund that was created by the passage of the PACT Act."

In a brief interview with Military.com after Friday's press conference, Rep. Mark Takano, D-Calif., the ranking member of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, rejected Republicans' arguments that the math on the bill, which Democrats offered as an amendment to an unrelated measure, would not work. The bill costs an estimated $6 million, and the measure Democrats sought to attach it to had an extra $3 million in offsets to work with, Takano said, adding that he's "sure we could have found the other $3 million someplace."

"Americans care a lot about homeless veterans," Takano said. "They find it abhorrent, the idea that anyone who wore a uniform is on the streets. How can we call ourselves a decent nation if we allow that to happen? I just know that if enough of the American people knew about this situation, that the Republicans would come back to the table and say we have to do something."

-- Rebecca Kheel can be reached at rebecca.kheel@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @reporterkheel.

Related: Free Uber, Lyft Rides for Vets Program Will End in May. The VA Is Pleading with Congress to Extend It.

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Homeless Veterans Will Receive Less Help as Pandemic Aid Dries Up, Democrats and Veterans Groups Warn - Military.com

Democrats demand universal free breakfast, lunch, dinner, and a snack for kids in school – Yahoo News

Dozens of Democrats in the House and Senate proposed legislation this week that would give all students from pre-school through high school three free meals a day plus a snack regardless of income, a move they said is needed to cope with the "record numbers" of American kids who are struggling with hunger.

The bill makes no mention of how the program would be funded or what it would cost. Many bills include language saying that Congress will appropriate whatever money is needed to fund a new program, or that funding will come from spending offsets or higher taxes.

"It is an international embarrassment that today, in the richest country in the history of the world, we are seeing record numbers of children and youth struggling with hunger on a daily basis,"said Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., the sponsor of the Senate legislation.

"Universal school meals is not just commonsense policy; it is also extremely popular," said Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., the lead sponsor of the bill in the House. "Nearly 75% of Americans support permanent universal school meals including the majority of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents. Its time to listen to the demands of our constituents and at long last make school meals free and universal for all kids."

HOUSE DEMS PUSH LEGISLATION TO KEEP SERVING SCHOOL LUNCH EVEN WHEN SCHOOLS CLOSE

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., are proposing free school meals for all students.

Democrats say their bill, the Universal School Meals Program Act, would help put an end to the "school lunch shaming" that is seen under the current program, which requires kids to show they are eligible for a free meal.

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"Children have been publicly shamed for not being able to afford lunch, and as USDA reported, lunch shaming is a problem throughout the country, including withholding grades for school meal debt," according to a description of the bill. "Some schools resorted to heinous scare tactics to collect school meal debt; one school threatened to take away parents children and another school marked childrens skin with an I Need Lunch Money stamp."

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USDA HOPES $50M CAN MAKE SCHOOL LUNCH MORE APPETIZING, APPEALING

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., has also proposed legislation to ensure school meals are served even when schools are closed.

The bill also reimburses all schools for any delinquent school lunch debt that has accrued under the current system.

Democrats argue that by providing universal free meals to all students, the cost of providing these meals would fall. "Our bill puts an end to the burdensome application paperwork by no longer requiring a Free and Reduced Lunch Program application in order to participate in the program," according to the summary of the bill.

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Democrats say COVID showed that universal and free school meal programs are possible and should be made permanent.

Staff for both Omar and Sanders did not reply to questions about funding from Fox News Digital.

Democrats said the COVID-19 pandemic showed it makes sense to create a universal program that feeds all children, regardless of their economic circumstances. A statement from sponsors of the bill said offering schools the flexibility to deliver school meals to a wider range of kids helped tens of millions of kids stay fed and warned that the end of pandemic threatens that increased access.

"What weve seen during this pandemic is that a universal approach to school meals works," Sanders said. "We cannot go backwards. It is time for Congress to pass this legislation to ensure no student goes hungry again."

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Democrats demand universal free breakfast, lunch, dinner, and a snack for kids in school - Yahoo News