• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Europe Breaking News

Breaking News Stories from Europe and Around the World

  • Business
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Travel

Big Tech’s Favorite Excuse for Letting Hate Go Viral Is a Great Argument Against Big Tech

March 15, 2019 by gizmodo.com

Every horrifying moment amplified by social media follows the same basic script, and Friday’s livestreamed deadly terrorist attack in New Zealand, which left at least 49 people dead and dozens injured, hits all the usual plot points of hate going viral online.

The gunman posted a livestream of his massacre on Facebook, ultimately streaming for 17 minutes. Facebook eventually removed the stream after police flagged it, but the video spread beyond its initial audience across YouTube, Reddit, Twitter, and other platforms, where it was reposted unnumbered times, spreading violence and the gunman’s hateful ideology to unknown millions of people. The companies, of course, say they’re working furiously to take down the reposted videos.

Advertisement

We’ve seen this time and again, so now we have to ask: Why are these big tech companies so bad at keeping the New Zealand mosque shooter’s videos off their platforms? Why do they fail at keeping the radicalizing, racist, and hateful content from saturating their sites? Why does Silicon Valley effectively fail to police their platforms? The problem goes way beyond one video of mass murder—and it goes straight to the heart of Silicon Valley’s wealth and power.

“The scale is the issue,” writer Antonio Garcia Martinez, a former Facebook advertising manager, said on Twitter on Friday when asked why.

For Silicon Valley, the scale of their platforms is what makes them multibillionaires. The unprecedented scale is an intentional creation designed for unprecedented profit. For executives, shareholders. and engineers looking for a bonus and raise,

Scale

By their own admission, these companies are too big to succeed at effectively moderating their platforms, particularly in a case like Friday’s explosive video of mass violence. So if they’re too big to solve this problem, perhaps it’s time to reduce their scale.

Advertisement

“The rapid and wide-scale dissemination of this hateful content—live-streamed on Facebook, uploaded on YouTube and amplified on Reddit—shows how easily the largest platforms can still be misused,” Senator Mark Warner said in an email to Gizmodo. “It is ever clearer that YouTube, in particular, has yet to grapple with the role it has played in facilitating radicalization and recruitment.”

Advertisement

The exact scale of these companies is difficult to know fully because of their lack of transparency. Facebook didn’t respond to a request for comment on the issue, but the company says it has 30,000 workers and artificial intelligence tasked with removing hateful content. YouTube, which apparently sees 500 minutes of video uploaded every second, said in its latest quarterly report that in the fourth quarter of 2018, the site removed 49,618 videos and 16,596 accounts for violating our policies on promotion of violence or violent extremism. They also removed 253,683 videos violating our policies on graphic violence.

Just last week, YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said much the same thing when journalist Kara Swisher asked the executive why neo-Nazis continue to thrive and grow on YouTube and why the website’s comments are a notoriously vile place recently reported, for one example, to be used by pedophiles to

Advertisement

Defending her company, Wojcicki said over 500 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every single minute and that millions of bad comments are removed every quarter. “But you have to realize the volume we have is very substantial, and we’re working to give creators more tools as well for them also to be able to manage it,” she said.

Wait, exactly whose responsibility is it to manage the proliferation of groups like Nazis and pedophiles across sites like YouTube? Is it the users? On YouTube, at least, the answer is apparently yes.

Advertisement

When YouTube’s Twitter account posted early Friday that the company is “heartbroken” over the New Zealand killings, it provoked a reaction.

“I’m sorry, but no one cares if YouTube is heartbroken,” Jackie Luo, an engineer in the Silicon Valley tech industry, said. “Lives were lost, more will be. YouTube is complicit—not so much because of yesterday’s footage, but because of the huge role it’s played and continues to play in normalizing and spreading this kind of violent rhetoric. It’s infuriating to see a company that profits enormously from sending regular people down rabbit holes that radicalize them into having these kinds of beliefs then perform sorrow on social media when that model produces real and terrible consequences. It’s a hard ‘no’ from me.”

Advertisement

YouTube’s notorious radicalization problem is fuel for

“This is not because a cabal of YouTube engineers is plotting to drive the world off a cliff,” the academic Zeynep Tufekci wrote last year. “A more likely explanation has to do with the nexus of artificial intelligence and Google’s business model. (YouTube is owned by Google.) For all its lofty rhetoric, Google is an advertising broker, selling our attention to companies that will pay for it. The longer people stay on YouTube, the more money Google makes.”

Advertisement

Driving users to the next radical voice business—eyeballs plus hours equals ad dollars.

At a time when Washington lawmakers are talking about breaking up big tech, it’s very interesting to see a tech executive acknowledge that their platform is too big to handle the responsibility its brought on itself.

Advertisement

I’ve got my own small experience with YouTube’s radicalization business model, albeit in a much more innocuous way. I’m a runner who, until the last few years, loved quick 5K races. When I began to use YouTube more to watch running videos, the recommended and auto-play videos kept pushing me further and further along. Strangely, it assumed that a 5K runner would want to run marathons and then ultramarathons. I dutifully watched and watched before I ran a half marathon last month.

Advertisement

If it means watching more videos, YouTube aims to make ultramarathon-running radicals of us all because, presumably, radicalization makes for reliable and profitable consumers of content.

On Friday, over 12 hours after the event itself, videos of the gunman in Christchurch, New Zealand, killing Muslims praying at a mosque continue to spread across the internet on sites like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter as it’s used as a propaganda tool for far-right white nationalists.

Advertisement

“Scale is the chief problem for both FB and YouTube,” media scholar Siva Vaidhyanathan tweeted. “They would be harmless at <50 million [users].”

The reaction from New Zealand, where the attack occurred, is less forgiving.

“The failure to deal with this swiftly and decisively represents an utter abdication of responsibility by social media companies,” Tom Watson, the deputy leader of the UK’s Labour Party said. “This has happened too many times. Failing to take these videos down immediately and prevent

Advertisement

The argument that scale is the problem and can never be completely solved comes implicitly packaged with the idea that the way things are is the way things have to be. The excuse aligns nicely with the fact that rapid speed, growth, and scale happens to make these already wildly profitable companies even more money.

‘I’m sorry that the status quo, which happens to make us wildly rich, can be so god awful,’ they seem to say. ‘But what can we possibly do?’

Advertisement

Scale is a Rorschach test in Silicon Valley. On one hand, it’s a goal when a tech executive is on an earnings call. On the other hand, it’s an excuse if it’s a tech spokesperson apologizing to media about the company’s failures.

Advertisement

If tech executives themselves are, in their own roundabout way, acknowledging that their companies are too big, maybe we should listen to them.

In Europe, regulators are looking closely at fining social media platforms that fail to remove extremist content within an hour. “One hour is the decisive time window in which the greatest damage takes place,” Jean-Claude Juncker said in last year’s State of the Union address to the European Parliament.

Advertisement

“We need strong and targeted tools to win this online battle,” Justice Commissioner Vera Jourova said.

The problem is attracting attention in the United States as well.

Advertisement

Increasingly, American politicians want to do something about the scale and power of tech companies. Recently, Democratic presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren proposed breaking up the big tech firms. Breaking up America’s big tech firms would push “everyone in the marketplace to offer better products and services.”

Silicon Valley companies “have a content-moderation problem that is fundamentally beyond the scale that they know how to deal with,” Becca Lewis, a researcher at Stanford University and the think tank Data & Society, told the Washington Post. “The financial incentives are in play to keep content first and monetization first. Any dealing with the negative consequences coming from that is reactive.”

Advertisement

Right now, the incentives line up so Silicon Valley will continue to be bad at policing the platforms they created. Incentives can be changed. In the language that Silicon Valley can understand, there are innovative ways to disrupt the social media industry’s downward spiral. One is called regulation.

Correction: An earlier version of this article misidentified Tom Watson as the deputy leader of New Zealand’s Labour Party. He is deputy leader of the UK’s Labour Party. We regret the error.

Advertisement

  • DNC And Big Tech Team Up To Ding Alleged Misinformation Ahead Of Democratic Debates
  • SF supervisors change tune on Big Tech: City is ‘not just a place to be mined’
  • From AirPods to Surface Earbuds, why are big tech’s earbuds so ugly?
  • Big Tech Lawyer Earns His Paycheck Arguing Google Doesn't Dominate Search
  • LG V30 review: A good smartphone that could've been great
  • Civil rights activists slam Facebook's 'insufficient' attempts to tackle hate on its platform
  • Steve Wozniak Says Big Tech Companies Like Apple Should Be Broken Up
  • Big 12 preview: Kansas on top once again
  • Hating parts of
  • How I Learned to Stop Hating and Love Esports
  • As mass shooting spreads online, social media users tell tech to do better
  • How To Stream Great Music While Keeping Your Work Groove
  • Facebook CEO says he'd fight Elizabeth Warren's plan against tech mergers
  • Digital Trends favorite movies of 2017
  • These are the arguments against net neutrality and why they’re wrong
  • The “Terminator” Franchise Has Let Sarah Connor Down
  • Facebook, Twitter, YouTube praised for “steady progress” quashing illegal hate speech in Europe
  • Snapchat’s big redesign bashed in 83% of user reviews
  • Dealmaster: All the best Amazon Prime Day 2019 tech deals we can find
  • Patreon raises big round at ~$450M valuation to get artists paid
Big Tech's Favorite Excuse for Letting Hate Go Viral Is a Great Argument Against Big Tech have 1741 words, post on gizmodo.com at March 15, 2019. This is cached page on Europe Breaking News. If you want remove this page, please contact us.

Filed Under: News you did this to yourselves on purpose, Content Moderation, facebook, google, youtube, twitter, reddit, let the great world spin, Big Brothers Big Sisters of America, big brothers big sisters, big brother big sister, big brothers and big sisters, Big Brothers Big Sisters Canada, Big Tech, big big, Great Big World, Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann, pleasant goat and big big wolf, The Great Big Tree Climbing Company, The Great Big Pressure Cooker Book, big tech companies, How Big Is Big, big big world, great big war game, Our Great Big Backyard, Tech Tech, great big canvas

Primary Sidebar

RSS Recent Stories

  • Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker ‘MARRY’ in Santa Barbara one month after unofficial Las Vegas ceremony
  • Kardashian fans think Kylie Jenner posted unedited photo of her driver’s license to shut down claims she uses photoshop
  • Kardashian fans beg Khloe to stay ‘healthy’ as she poses in bikini again after star sparked concern with ‘thin’ frame
  • ‘What she has accomplished is historic’: Praise for Queen as Platinum Jubilee celebrations begin
  • Ukraine war: The successful defence of Kharkiv means Ukrainians can threaten Russia’s ambitions in Donbas
  • Depp v Heard: ‘Who is really telling the truth and who may be merely acting out a role?’
  • Water scarcity: Major world cities including London face ‘increasing danger of drought’, report warns
  • Ben Affleck looks dapper in a black suit on a lunch date with fiancee Jennifer Lopez and her mother in Malibu
  • Labour MPs are accused of deafening silence over booing of Prince William by Liverpool fans at FA Cup final
  • Jeremy Hunt refuses to say whether Boris is an ‘honest man’ amid leadership speculation

Sponsored Links

  • Today’s Best Deals – Friday 27th September
  • Step Right Up: Doordash Is The Latest To Report A Data Breach
  • Hanes Men’s 4-Pack FreshIQ Black T-Shirts For $5 From Amazon!
  • HURRY! Get A Free 1 Year Subscription To Popular Science!
  • Today Only: Save On Motorola Smartphones From Amazon
  • RAVPower 60W 6-Port USB Charging Station For $15.79 From Amazon
Copyright © 2022 Europe Breaking News. Power by Wordpress.
Home - About Us - Contact Us - Disclaimers - DMCA - Privacy Policy - Submit your story