Media Search:



Why we need a public internet and how to get one – The Verge

For weeks, tech news has been dominated by billionaire Elon Musks attempts to buy (and subsequently avoid buying) Twitter. And since Musk announced his plans in April, people have debated whether its better for online social spaces like Twitter to remain publicly traded companies where theyre under pressure from shareholders or be owned by a single wealthy figure like Musk.

But Ben Tarnoff, author of the upcoming book Internet for the People, believes theres a better way. Tarnoffs book outlines the history of the internet, starting with its early days as a government-run network, which was parceled out to private companies with little regard for users. It discusses common proposals like lessening the power of internet gatekeepers with antitrust reform, but it also argues that promoting competition isnt enough: there should also be a political movement advocating for local, noncommercial spaces online. I spoke with Tarnoff about what that means and why its not as simple as breaking up (or cloning) Twitter.

This interview has been condensed and lightly edited for clarity.

Were in this ongoing saga of Elon Musk buying Twitter and turning it from a public company to a private company run by a billionaire which feels like our two basic models for the way that information services can operate right now. Do you feel like thats made people think more about the issues that your book raises?

I certainly hope so. I think it is a powerful illustration of the vulnerability of the spaces where our conversations particularly political conversations take place to private capture and control.

Twitter, as you point out, is already a privately owned company, although one that is traded on public markets. The prospect of Musk taking it private raises the possibility of a single man having near-total control over one of the most important social networks in the world. I know its fashionable to say sometimes that Twitter is not real life, and of course thats true but it can be quite influential in matters of policy and matters of culture. I think the short answer is I hope that it stimulates a broader conversation about what is at stake when it comes to the private ownership of the spaces where our conversations take place. But Im not sure Ive seen it quite yet.

It was interesting that I saw Mastodon get an uptick in signups, but Im unclear on how much thats been sustained.

I think Mastodon often enjoys a little surge of popularity when certain things happen, and I think thats cool. There are all sorts of difficulties in running and maintaining an open-source project, but hopefully it pushes people to seek out alternatives and at minimum, even if they dont migrate permanently to Mastodon, simply to have their imagination enlarged is constructive. To know that there are different models out there that there are communities that are experimenting with different ways of being online together is a positive step. Its not sufficient, but I think its a necessary condition.

Your book mentions lots of things that have been around for a while communities like Mastodon, municipal broadband efforts but theyve never broken through to the mainstream. Im curious if you think thats because of a lack of resources or if there are technical barriers or if theyre never going to be massively mainstream.

I think the core problem is that these alternatives tend to attract a fairly niche, typically more technical audience. And its difficult for those types of alternatives to really become mainstream without significant public investment and without a broader political movement that makes clear what the stakes actually are.

So I see those spaces and those alternatives as really cool and inspiring and creative technical experiments. But technical experimentation, as weve learned, isnt enough to generate a radically different arrangement. Its important but we need politics. We need public policy. We need social movements. We need all these other ingredients that we cant get from a code base.

You talk about how the bigness of sites like Facebook is a problem so we cant just make a publicly funded version of Facebook and expect it to work well. But its also difficult to get people to go somewhere else when theres not one obvious option you can direct them to. How do you thread that needle?

To my mind, the point is not simply to trade Facebook for a decentralized Facebook and to trade Twitter for a cooperatively owned Twitter. I think those are constructive first steps towards imagining a better internet, but we have to understand that the architectures of modern platforms were developed with certain incentives in mind and were developed to optimize certain behaviors in the service of profit maximization. We cant simply organize them a bit differently and expect substantially different results.

We need to create brick-and-mortar spaces where ordinary folks without technical backgrounds can come in and get connected with technical expertise and resources to actually build the types of online spaces and tools that would meet their everyday needs. And that, I know, sounds a bit utopian. But there is an interesting precedent from London in the 1980s, where the Labour Party-led local government opened a lot of what we would today think of as makerspaces or hackerspaces and had this aspiration to democratize the design and development of technology.

So I think thats where I place much of my hope: that further horizon of, if you could really stimulate peoples creativity at scale, what new online worlds could we create?

It seems like the core issue isnt necessarily that people cant develop these things; its that they dont want to spend a bunch of time trying to find new online spaces like a substitute for a thing that, say, lets them invite people to their birthday party. They just want to use Facebook for that because its easy.

I think in terms of: how do we make the technologies usable enough to attract a mass audience while also clarifying to that audience the stakes of using Facebook? And thats where I think politics has a role to play. Its not simply about giving alternatives a better user interface which is important, and I think probably only possible through public investment. Its also to clarify to that less technical user of Facebook: Here are the consequences of your use of the platform. Heres what the platform contributes to the world. Here is what the platform is recording about your everyday life.

Peoples awareness of that has grown significantly over the past few years, to the point that a number of folks are leaving Facebook because of it. But I think you need the politics piece as well as the technical piece in that conversation.

You mention an idea from Darius Kazemi that libraries could run local social networks.

Darius has this idea of: what if every library in the United States had a social media server in its basement, and they were all federated together using a project like Mastodon? I like this model for a lot of reasons. Probably above all, its the possibility of creating a face-to-face deliberative space in which very difficult issues around content moderation can be resolved through a local democratic process.

Moderation goes pretty deep into the values that people hold about how we should treat one another. To my mind, those are conflicts about values that can only be fleshed out in spaces of democratic deliberation, and those spaces work better when theyre smaller.

I try to caution in the book against making a fetish of the community because, particularly in the United States, theres a long racist history to local control in particular. And in the case of the internet, we cant afford to simply be local because the internet is not local. But its not local to the exclusion of the regional or the national its local as a promising site of governance because of the richness of the interpersonal interaction that it promotes.

Do you think there are ways to organize small communities that have some level of self-governance that arent geographical?

Yeah I think a possible objection would be: isnt the whole point of the internet and computer networking more broadly the ability to form affiliations that arent place-based? What I liked about the internet when I discovered it as a kid in the 90s was precisely that it wasnt based in my local community, and I could talk to people from all over. But the appeal of having local structures is that I want to be able to put two or three dozen people in a room and have them debate, discuss, and argue about what to do about a certain thing. That type of democratic decision-making works best in a smaller, in-person context.

That makes sense but youre right: an exciting thing about the internet was that you didnt have to be bound to a place you were born in or moved to and didnt necessarily want to be.

I think were in a situation now in which people have a lot of [online] associations, but not many [physical] associations. And it feels a bit lopsided. Its very easy to live in an American city, not know your neighbors, not really know anybody in your other community, not really have relationships with your coworkers, but live much of your social life through the internet with people youve never met.

I wouldnt moralize and say thats bad I think people create arrangements that work for them. But I think there is probably something to be said for creating a more balanced arrangement where in-person, place-based, workplace-based affiliations could be restored.

You point to moments in the history of internet privatization where there were intervention points, like proposals for a public lane in the information superhighway. How much do you think that any of those paths would have changed the course of the internet if theyd been taken?

Im not sure that they would have prevented the worst abuses of the modern internet, but I think all of them would have changed the future of the internet.

Privatization was the plan all along the federal government did not want to run the internet indefinitely. They knew that the internet would pass into private hands. But there were, as you indicate, a number of proposals for the government to carve out public footholds of different kinds in this new private network. And those proposals were defeated by the private sector. They established a total corporate dictatorship over the physical infrastructure of the internet.

So those points in history that could have gone a different way, they would not have contested privatization. But they would have produced less extreme forms of privatization, which I think would have been a constructive thing and would have given us much more space in the contemporary internet to imagine an alternative.

To bring things back to the beginning: we talked about the scenario of Elon Musk controlling Twitter. What is the ideal alternative for you? Theres the version where Elon Musk doesnt control Twitter, for example, because the government controls Twitter. Or a world where theres no such thing as Twitter because theres no one platform that big or powerful. Whats the setup you think would be the most pro-social?

What I would like to see, above all, is an internet that is populated by spaces that are truly designed, developed, implemented, and governed by their users. Thats my North Star.

I think that implies a much more polycentric internet, a much more heterogeneous internet, an internet that mimics the complexity and diversity of our online life, although that has diminished with gentrification. And some of the things weve been discussing today are steps in that direction, small steps or large steps. But thats an internet that I think would be for the people because an internet for the people would be one in which people have the opportunity to participate in the decisions that most affect them when it comes to their online life.

Internet for the People will go on sale on June 14th from publisher Verso.

See the article here:
Why we need a public internet and how to get one - The Verge

Fans React to Hutchinson, Williams Donning Full Lions Uniform – Sports Illustrated

Detroit Lions fans got their first glimpse of rookies Aidan Hutchinson and Jameson Williams donning their full uniforms.

The reaction online from supporters was favorable and filled with excitement, especially with both rookies expected to part of the long-term future.

Every year following the draft, a chosen group of drafted rookies is selected by Panini to be part of a trading card set named the Rookie Premiere.

Last week, 42 rookies descended upon Los Angeles to take part in the three-day event. The invited guests participated in networking meetings with the hopes of further capitalizing on the business of football and to be put in front of those influential in the endorsement market.

The event was hosted by the NFLPA and NFL Players Inc., the leaguesmarketing and licensing division.

Scroll to Continue

Recommended Lions Articles

Per an NFLPA release, "Following two years of virtual engagement, 42 top rookies from the 2022 NFL Draft will again gather in Los Angeles on May 19-21 to learn the business of football and jumpstart endorsement careers at the 28th annual NFL Players Association (NFLPA) Rookie Premiere presented by Panini America, the exclusive trading card partner of the NFLPA. Hosted by the NFLPA and its marketing and licensing arm, NFL Players Inc., the annual event for many of the games marketable rookie stars will feature the unveiling of each rookies official jersey presented by Fanatics and Saturdays all-day live action and studio shoot for Panini trading cards."

Here is a sample of the reaction online to seeing Hutchinson and Williams wearing a full Lions uniform.

Join the AllLions Community

Become a premium AllLions member, which grants you access to all of our premium content and gets you a FREE subscription to Sports Illustrated! Click on the link below for more.

BECOME A MEMBER

See the article here:
Fans React to Hutchinson, Williams Donning Full Lions Uniform - Sports Illustrated

TWTR, FB, and PIN among top social media stocks to explore in May – Kalkine Media

Social media stocks are always in the trend. Tesla CEO Elon Musks deal to acquire Twitter only adds to the zing of social media stocks.

The recent reported earnings by some big names in the social media sector have drawn more investors.

It is a rapidly growing sector, which gathered steam during the Covid-19 pandemic. More and more people got hooked to social media websites during the lockdown.

Here, we explore some of the top social media companies that may continue to grab headlines in the coming months.

Also Read: Pi Network (PI) crypto: What do we know about its price?

Alphabet is a leading multinational firm that focuses on internet-related services including search engines, social media, cloud services, and other related solutions. It is based out of Mountain View, California.

Its shares closed at US$2207.68 on May 19, down 1.35% from their previous closing price of May 18. Its stock value decreased by 23.87% YTD.

The firm has a market cap of US$1.45 trillion, a P/E ratio of 19.97, and a forward one-year P/E ratio of 19.60. Its EPS is US$110.56.

The 52-week highest and lowest stock prices were US$3,030.93 and US$2,196.49, respectively. Its trading volume was 1,707,220 on May 19.

The company reported a revenue of US$68.01 billion in Q1, FY22, an increase of 23% YoY. Its net income came in at US$16.43 billion, or US$24.62 per diluted share, compared to US$17.93 billion, or US$26.29 per diluted share in the year-ago quarter.

Also Read: Why is Ethereum Name Service (ENS) crypto rallying?

Source: Pixabay

Meta Platforms, formerly known as Facebook, is part of the technology conglomerate and a social media giant. It is the parent company of social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp and is based in Menlo Park, California.

Meta stock closed at US$191.29 on May 19, down 0.49% from its previous closing price. The FB stock fell 43.21% YTD.

The market cap of the company is US$517.69 billion, a P/E ratio of 14.47, and the forward one-year P/E ratio is 16.45. Its EPS is US$13.22.

The stock saw the highest price of US$384.33 and the lowest price of US$169.00 in the last 52-week period. Its share volume on May 19 was 24,446,940.

The company's revenue increased by 7% YoY to US$27.90 billion in Q1, FY22. Its net income was US$7.46 billion, or US$2.72 per diluted share, compared to US$9.49 billion, or US$3.30 per diluted share in Q1, FY21.

Also Read: MSFT to GME: Five top gaming stocks to explore in Q2

Twitter is a microblogging and social networking services firm that enables users to post or interact with each other through its platform. It is based in San Francisco, California.

Its shares closed at US$37.29 on May 19, up 1.19% from their closing price of May 18. Its stock plunged 12.59% YTD.

The firm has a market cap of US$28.49 billion, a P/E ratio of 162.13, and a forward one-year P/E ratio of 37.67. Its EPS is US$0.23.

Twitters 52-week highest and lowest stock prices were US$73.34 and US$31.30, respectively. Its trading volume was 32,000,300 on May 19.

The company reported a revenue of US$1.20 billion in Q1, FY22, an increase of 16% YoY. Its net income came in at US$513.28 million, or US$0.61 per diluted share, compared to US$68.00 million, or US$0.08 per diluted share in the year-ago quarter.

Also Read: Five Chinese internet tech companies to watch: BABA, JD to WB

Snap is a camera and social media firm based in Santa Monica, California. Its offerings include Snapchat, Spectacles, etc.

Its stock closed at US$23.20 on May 19, up 2.07% from its previous closing price. The SNAP stock declined 50.2% YTD.

The market cap of the company is US$37.96 billion, and the forward one-year P/E ratio is -53.95. Its EPS is US$-0.36.

The stock saw the highest price of US$83.34 and the lowest price of US$20.95 in the last 52 weeks. Its share volume on May 19 was 30,700,770.

The company's revenue increased by 38% YoY to US$1.06 billion in Q1, FY22, while its daily active users surged 18% YoY to 332 million. It reported a net loss of US$360 million, as compared to US$287 million in Q1, FY21.

Also Read: Will Quant (QNT) crypto see a price boost after website launch?

Pinterest is an image sharing and social media firm where users can discover and personalize visual content known as Pins. It is based in San Francisco, California.

Its shares of closed at US$23.14 on May 19, up 4.75% from their closing price of May 18. Its stock value dropped 39.33% YTD.

The firm has a market cap of US$15.35 billion, a P/E ratio of 48.21, and a forward one-year P/E ratio of 60.89. Its EPS is US$0.48.

The 52-week highest and lowest stock prices were US$81.77 and US$18.32, respectively. Its trading volume was 17,709,890 on May 19.

Pinterests revenue ascended 18% YoY to US$575 million in Q1, FY22. Its GAAP net loss came in at US$5 million, compared to a loss of US$21.67 million in the same quarter of the previous year.

Also Read: NVDA to AMD: Will these 5 semiconductor stocks ride out supply crunch?

Various macroeconomic factors like elevated inflation, Fed's anticipated interest rate hikes, and other market uncertainties have kept investors away from growth stocks. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 communication services sector fell 27.39% YTD, decreasing 21.60% over the past 12 months. It is one of the worst-performing indexes in recent months.

So, investors should exercise due diligence before investing in the equity market that is currently shaky.

The rest is here:
TWTR, FB, and PIN among top social media stocks to explore in May - Kalkine Media

Youth must engage responsibly on social media – The Hans India

Requesting students to use social media platforms for its benefits rather than wasting time scrolling aimlessly. To be safe, you need to think. Social media is the new idiom of communication. Follow good creative pages, engage in social media platforms for learning creative arts and educating yourselves rather than aimlessly scrolling and not getting the most out of it. Students should be encouraged to double check before sharing any information on social media platforms.

Guwahati Police Commissioner Harmeet Singh on Friday urged youth to engage responsibly on social media and only with its positive aspects, underlining that they cannot be expected to remain off it altogether as networking sites are the new means of communication.

He also requested students to use social media platforms for its benefits rather than wasting time scrolling aimlessly. "To be safe, you need to think. Social media is the new idiom of communication. We must navigate to stay safe," Singh said at the launch of a digital literacy and awareness programme for adolescents and youth in Assam.

Technology Company Meta, erstwhile Facebook Inc, partnered with the Assam Police to roll out the initiative with an aim of creating a safer online environment, a release said. "Follow good creative pages, engage in social media platforms for learning creative arts and educating yourselves rather than aimlessly scrolling and not getting the most out of it," the senior officer said. Singh added that the Assam Police would always lend support to people reporting cybercrimes. Speaking on the occasion, Ghanshyam Dass, Secretary, IT Department of Assam, said

In a similar vein, Satya Yadav, Head, Trust and Safety, Facebook India (Meta), said, "When it comes to young people, our platforms are designed to ensure responsible empowerment along with age appropriate safeguards."We are constantly innovating technology to ensure that youth benefit from our platforms while they continue to feel safe.

Continue reading here:
Youth must engage responsibly on social media - The Hans India

The Depp-Heard trial has played right into the hands of far-right extremists. – Vox.com

Around the third or fourth time I logged into Twitter to find #AmberHeardIsAPsychopath at the top of the trending list, I realized that there was no longer any pretending that the Depp-Heard defamation trial was not a terrible, foreboding reflection of our cultures worst impulses.

The media has covered the degree to which this trial has served as a referendum on the Me Too movement and a siren call to domestic abusers.

The narrative of the trial has been shaped in part by what appears to be, according to multiple researchers, an army of bots spreading rhetoric favorable to Depp. One researcher found more bots favorable to Heard, but said most of those bots were from third-party apps trying to capitalize on the trial; meanwhile, they found the highest pro-Depp bot post was shared nearly 20,000 times. The work of those bots has been further amplified by mens rights activists the part of the far-right-leaning extremist manosphere that seems to have decided discrediting Amber Heard is the key to destroying every woman who accuses men of abuse or domestic violence.

Conservative media outlets have also promoted a one-sided narrative of the case; Vice recently reported that Ben Shapiros popular conservative news platform the Daily Wire has spent nearly $50,000 promoting ads about the trial on Instagram and Facebook most of it trashing Amber Heard. The presence of these bad actors has, if anything, only exacerbated the vitriol Heard has received within the mainstream.

Trial memes almost universally weighted against Heard have taken over every corner of the internet, from TikTok to Twitch to Etsy. Even Saturday Night Live has lampooned what have been portrayed as the many excesses and absurdities of the trial testimony, and social media users have similarly found the trial ripe for parody. On TikTok, for example, totally unrelated accounts seem to have given themselves over to full-time Depp-Heard trial mockery, to the point where the actual substance of the testimony seems completely irrelevant beside the need to mine the proceedings for entertainment. Sure, Amber Heard cried while on the stand, but did you see how ridiculous she looked while doing it?

To put it mildly, this surreal explosion of internet culture vilification of Heard feels dispiriting and troubling. What made so many millions of people feel so justified in treating such a personal, toxic relationship like popcorn fodder? At what point before the bot armies and mens rights activists poisoned the well of discourse around this trial could a reasonable assessment of the evidence and the facts have been made? Did that point ever exist?

Most of the reporting on these memes has placed the blame for their sensationalist tone squarely on the evolution of fandom content creation. But recall that the white supremacist alt-right movement has a long history of memeifying everything they want to normalize and legitimize, and keep in the forefront of your mind that the alt-right latched onto this case as its bulwark long before fandom and the internet at large did. By now, after years of political disinformation campaigns, were used to social medias natural ability to contort reality. Rarely, however, has it bent this far, this rapidly, for this many people, in service of something this vile.

Again and again over the course of this trial, basic human empathy seems to have completely flown out the window. More than that, nuance feels impossible, and there doesnt seem to be room for even the reality of the situation. The contours of the abuse were well-established before the 2018 opinion column Depp is suing over was published. The basic facts of the case have gotten their day in court once already, having been heard in a British court in 2020, with the judge finding in Heards favor. But the basic, well-established facts do not seem to matter.

They do not seem to matter to people who would normally care about facts, truth, and nuance. They do not seem to matter to the tabloid media gleefully reporting on every aspect of this case. They do not seem to matter to the TikTok creators who seize every chance to parody a tearful Heard, turning her objectively harrowing trial testimony into a farce of over-the-top fake weeping.

The facts do not seem to matter to any of the people who have gleefully latched on to the image of Heard as a manipulative villain, as if she split her own lip, punched her own face, and pulled out clumps of her own hair.

What were witnessing here are the dramatically compounded effects of internet researcher Alice Marwicks theory of morally motivated networked harassment, which holds that a group of social media users can justify any amount of abuse directed at a target if they feel their cause is morally right. At scale, this looks like, and effectively is, millions of people around the world lining up to eagerly subject one woman to untold amounts of abuse, public humiliation, and violent rhetoric. (Incidentally, this is exactly what Depp wanted to happen to her so even if he loses the case, he still wins.)

To be clear, this isnt an easy story of good and evil. Its impossible to completely absolve Amber Heard, who has her own alleged history of violence, or frame Depp as a monster incapable of kindness, charity, and the positive energy that amassed him millions of fans to begin with. Yet you dont need to do either of those things to acknowledge that this is a case about the deeply unfunny topic of intimate partner abuse and that the major points of this trial have already been decided in one court of law. The judge at the first trial in 2020 found Heard had proven 12 of 14 allegations of abuse. So far none of the trial testimony has substantially contradicted anything in Heards original claim of being a domestic violence survivor.

Culture critic Ella Dawson has a Twitter thread compiling reporting on the myriad ways in which this trial is not only destroying years of progress made against domestic abuse in the US, but also laying the groundwork for a culture in which bots and bad actors harass, vilify, and eviscerate all other prominent women who publicly name their abusers like Gamergate, but times tens of millions of participants, and gleefully endorsed by people all across American culture.

That, above all above the TikTok cat memers mocking Heard and Saturday Night Live dismissing the whole trial as for fun is whats absolutely jawdropping here. This trial, which amounts to a simple yes/no question over whether Heard had the right to call herself a victim of domestic abuse in a single sentence from that 2018 opinion piece, has somehow united far-right misogynists with middle-of-the-road liberals and geeky progressive fandom acolytes of Depp.

People who have spent the last decade hashtagging #believewomen, fighting online harassment campaigns, and, especially, resisting white male supremacy have, over the course of this trial, crawled into bed with the vilest kinds of internet refuse at least 11 percent of whom dont actually exist, according to one bot researcher possibly all because they really like Captain Jack Sparrow.

The sheer volume of this cultural takeover by Depp acolytes has created a seismic value shift to a degree that may be unalterable. Trial watchers seem to be welcoming misinformation about the trial while doing everything they can to reject or undermine actual documented facts of the case.

Some of the arguments made against Amber Heard sound like QAnon-level conspiracy rabbit holes. (Amber Heards trial outfits, for example, have somehow become part of a sinister narrative in which Heard is a manipulative abuser attempting to rattle and intimidate Depp by mimicking his own trial suits.) This trial has accomplished what our enraged, paranoid ideological fringe could not: a complete dismantling of the ideological breakdown that has divided us politically, and the general public acceptance of a narrative created and controlled by bad actors and far-right extremists.

The Depp-Heard trial has refined the Gamergate playbook in a way that will haunt us for years to come. It has proven to extremists that if you rally around the right beloved public figure or institution, blanket them in a protective sphere of outrage and misinformation, and weaponize fandom culture already so prone to ideological radicalization and irrational groupthink you can successfully push whatever media narrative you want into the mainstream.

Theres no coming back from this. The actual trial verdict is all but irrelevant now. Its not just that Amber Heard will forever be an imperfect accuser whose own volatile history was used to help destroy a revelatory movement in Me Too. Its that there will be other Amber Heards, and many of them will be marginalized, with far fewer resources to withstand this onslaught of hate.

Its not a coincidence that this spectacle is playing out against a backdrop of perpetually escalating racist violence and the rapid erosion of decades of human rights for women, queer, and trans people. The Depp-Heard trial has just trained millions of people to discard their own empathy, their own rational judgment, in exchange for the gleeful mockery, rejection, and belittlement of a woman making herself vulnerable in public. If you dont think that training will be weaponized against vulnerable targets, you havent been paying attention.

Read the original post:
The Depp-Heard trial has played right into the hands of far-right extremists. - Vox.com