Hi All, Looks like the Muskpocalypse has indeed happened. I've headed over to Mastodon and the platform seems basically viable so far. The federated server design is appealing, as it avoids a single company calling the shots and defining a business model. Could be worth a try? Do we want to set up a shared Google Doc with AOIR folks mastodon handles so we can find and follow each other? - Andy Famiglietti New Media Scholar, Intermittent Wikipedian, Vaguely Humanoid On Thu, Oct 27, 2022 at 11:57 PM S.A. Applin via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Hi Everyone.
I pitched and wrote a piece today and they also just put it up today. I couldn’t get all of the issues in such a short article, but I hope you enjoy it:
https://www.fastcompany.com/90802723/hello-elon-goodbye-the-twitter-we-once-...
Sally
Sally Applin, Ph.D. ………. Voted one of Lighthouse 3’s '100 Brilliant Women in AI Ethics for 2020" ………. Research Fellow HRAF Advanced Research Centres (EU), Canterbury Centre for Social Anthropology and Computing (CSAC) .......... Research Associate Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) Yale University .......... Member, Shortwave Collective Member, IoT Council .......... http://www.posr.org http://www.sally.com ……... ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-5530 .......... sally@sally.com | 650.339.5236
I am based in Silicon Valley
"If you think technology will solve your problems, you don’t understand technology — and you don’t understand your problems.” - Laurie Anderson, 2020
On Oct 21, 2022, at 4:43 AM, Shulman, Stu via Air-L < air-l@listserv.aoir.org> wrote:
Will academic Twitter exist under Elon Musk? Will there be more or less data? More or less urgent issues to study? Will the "Fail Whale" show up again after 75% of the staff is gone? Who will do content moderation? Is this a FastTrack to the next violent uprising in the US?
I am curious what people on this particular list think is about to happen. After 12 years featuring the formal study of Twitter data I am completely burned out. Not on the challenges, nor the art and science of the tasks. I still love talking to students and faculty who have chosen Twitter as the object of their research. The data has never been more widely available and the positive uses of it can be inspiring.
It's the voluminous amounts of hate I see in my own research. Also the systemic weaponization of Twitter against democratic systems of government globally. As an original Board Member and the Treasurer of a 501 (c)(6) called "The Big Boulder Initiative" I was working as a liaison to academia with a group of industry people on the "long term preservation of the social data industry." The industry survived, but the ideals aspired to have not. We offered this 2-minute Lawrence Lessig-inspired vision of the challenges about 7 years ago:
"Why Texifter Joined the Big Boulder Initiative" https://vimeo.com/129423037
Lessig was right. On the Internet, architecture is the most powerful regulator. The architecture of Twitter, with corporate ads featured on insurrectionist and other problematic timelines, is now a persistent threat to democratic systems of government without a single day of Musk governance. The insurrection January 6, 2021 was planned in the open on Twitter. There were advertisements from familiar brands in every seditious timeline. Evolving tactics using Twitter trains (tagging 30 like-minded users), notification-rich replies, the ReTweet functionality, gamification, domestic and foreign meme warfare, the idolatry of influence via misinformation, bots and trolls, as well as paid amplifiers of all manner and variety. The "digital soldiers" we found in the Canadian election of 2019 (fake Americans who hated Trudeau but liked RT, Russia Today and Southfront) were openly planning a QAnon-inspired "storm" which ultimately was the first coup attempt in two centuries of American democracy. I briefed the US/UK Intelligence Community (staff from the Joint Chiefs, JSOC, etc.) February 12, 2020 via the Strategic Multilayer Assessment using open source information from Twitter. Things have since gotten much worse, not better, since that briefing. These were the slides in early February 2020:
https://tinyurl.com/huntingbotsandtrolls
Looking at the current threat-relevant data, I have a sick-to-my-stomach feeling about the next 60 days in U.S. history. We may be late to notice the end of small "d" democracy is imminent or inevitable because of the Internet effects we cannot fully see, capture, measure, or control.
-- Dr. Stuart W. Shulman Founder and CEO, Texifter Editor Emeritus, *Journal of Information Technology & Politics* _______________________________________________ The Air-L@listserv.aoir.org mailing list is provided by the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org Subscribe, change options or unsubscribe at: http://listserv.aoir.org/listinfo.cgi/air-l-aoir.org
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