22 Matching Annotations
  1. Last 7 days
  2. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. Matt Stopera. Monica Lewinsky Has Been Making Jokes About The Clinton Impeachment For Years, And It Really Is Funny Every Single Time. BuzzFeed, September 2021. URL: https://www.buzzfeed.com/mjs538/monica-lewinsky-twitter-comebacks (visited on 2023-12-08).

      This article is a compilation of lots of Tweets made by Monica Lewinsky. The writer praises her humor and says she is a "light" in the cesspool of Twitter. I appreciate how she makes light of a bad situation. She knows that there are many eyes on her and she isn't fazed by it. I think this is a positive example of using social media for good. She uses it to make people laugh, instead of using it to tear people down.

    1. Sourdough bread is made by baking something called a “starter,” which is a mix of flour, water, and a colony of microorganisms (like yeast).

      I like the analogy of sourdough for the Internet. It seemed silly to me at first, but it actually is quite accurate. The sourdough starter grows and develops over time. In the same way, a meme or an online joke starts with one user / one event, and morphs depending on who interacts with it. People can put viral topics in new contexts and give them a new light. The sourdough starter can be used into multiple different loaves.

  3. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. Arvind Narayanan. TikTok’s Secret Sauce. Knight First Amendment Institute, December 2022. URL: http://knightcolumbia.org/blog/tiktoks-secret-sauce (visited on 2023-12-07).

      In summary, this article explains TikTok's algorithm and why it is superior to other platforms (such as YouTube Shorts and Instagram Reels). The ability to easily scroll through videos makes the user not as perceptive to the fact that they are consuming a lot of content they don't like. Scrolling makes it easy to quickly find what they do want to watch. TikTok also has a vertical layout, which aligns with how users hold the phone and use their thumbs to scroll. Differently, most YouTube shorts creators are clipping longform horizontal content into shorts. TikTok also allows each video to have an audience by giving each video a chance to go viral even if the creator has minimal subscribers. This motivates consumers to also be creators and builds the TikTok empire further. Lastly, TikTok shows users videos from niches that they have never seen before. They are able to take this risk, because of the easily swipe-able format.

    1. Automated reminders can go well in a situation such as when a user enjoys the nostalgia of seeing something from their past. Automated reminders can go poorly when they give users unwanted or painful reminders, such as for miscarriages [k7], funerals, or break-ups [k8]

      An example of this is the photos app. It automatically puts together collections of memories from certain locations or time periods and then shows them when you open the photos app. This can be problematic, because sometimes the "memories" are not pleasant. It might be a collection of photos of you and your ex, a collage of your homework from middle school, or from a funeral.

  4. Oct 2025
  5. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. David Robson. The women with superhuman vision. BBC, February 2022. URL: https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20140905-the-women-with-super-human-vision (visited on 2023-12-07).

      This article talks about Antico - a woman who sees the world a little differently. She is a tetrochromatat, which means she can see more colors than the rest of us. She uses this to her advantage in her work as a painter, creating unique interpretations of ordinary objects or landscapes that are filled with unique colors. She is an example that disabilities are not a bad thing. Instead, they are a superpower.

    1. Another way of managing disabilities is assistive technology [j13], which is something that helps a disabled person act as though they were not disabled. In other words, it is something that helps a disabled person become more “normal” (according to whatever a society’s assumptions are). For example:

      Another example of this is the speech to text function on iMessage. If users are unable to use their hands to type and create a text, users can instead speak and the phone will convert the speech to text and send it. This also works in the opposite way, allowing users to hear a verbal replaying of a text instead of having to read it on the screen if they are unable to.

    1. Jacob Kastrenakes. Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords in plain text. The Verge, April 2019. URL: https://www.theverge.com/2019/4/18/18485599/facebook-instagram-passwords-plain-text-millions-users (visited on 2023-12-06).

      This article explains how Facebook was storing a list of millions of Instagram passwords. They advertised it as tens of thousands, hoping to make the issue seem less intense. However, the number was truly in the millions. They stored the passwords in plain text, even though they were supposed to be encrypted. Records show that 20,000 Facebook employees had access to these passwords. Even though the situation seemed dire, Facebook didn't urge users to change their passwords and barely called attention to the incident. This shows how as users we must take privacy precautions into our own hands. The company will usually not be looking out for our privacy, so we must do it ourselves.

  6. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. In some cases we might want a social media company to be able to see our “private” messages, such as if someone was sending us death threats. We might want to report that user to the social media company for a ban, or to law enforcement (though many people have found law enforcement to be not helpful), and we want to open access to those “private” messages to prove that they were sent.

      This example surprised me. Usually when I think of the idea of privacy, I think of it as something that needs to be respected at all costs across social media, especially by the company running the site. Each user's information and habits are their own and should not be easily viewable by the company. However, this example of death threats and harassment is something that most definitely has happened before and will happen again. In this instance, I would 100% want the company to be able to access my private messages. In this case, a disruption of privacy would be ethical, because it is in the intention of creating safety and protection. Instances like these should be the exceptions to the general rule of privacy.

  7. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. Greg Miller. Researchers are tracking another pandemic, too—of coronavirus misinformation. Science, March 2020. URL: https://www.science.org/content/article/researchers-are-tracking-another-epidemic-too-misinformation (visited on 2023-12-05).

      This article explains how researchers at UW who created the center for the Informed Public are trying to approach the Covid misinformation. At the end of the article, Kate Starbird said something that surprised me. She explained how she believes social media platforms should not punish their users for spreading misinformation, because that is what dictators and authoritarian states do. This is interesting and makes me wonder how she would rather the problem be solved. If the posts can't be taken down and users can't be stopped, how will we be able to tell what information is correct?

    1. Are you surprised by any of the things that can be done with data mining?

      The thing that surprised me the most was that companies are allowed to see what sites you view and then put their ad on those sites. The book explained that advertising companies can see who views their ad, then what that person also looks at. This seems to be a step too far and a violation of privacy.

  8. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. s It Funny or Offensive? Comedian Impersonates FBI on Twitter, Makes MLK Assassination Joke. January 2020. URL: https://isitfunnyoroffensive.com/comedian-impersonates-fbi-on-twitter-makes-mlk-assassination-joke/ (visited on 2023-12-05).

      This article explains how comedian Jackie King pretended to be the FBI on Twitter and tweeted, "Just because we killed MLK doesn't mean we can't miss him." Personally, I don't think this is a funny joke. MLK's assassination was a tragedy, not a spectacle. He doesn't deserve to be the punchline in a Twitter joke years later or a mechanism for Jackie King to make money or become more famous.

      Trolling on the Internet is rarely funny. When we post, we must think about the real-world implications. How might this "joke" about MLK effect his grieving family or folks at the FBI who respect MLK?

    1. We can trace Internet trolling to early social media in the 1980s and 1990s, particularly in early online message boards and in early online video games.

      It's interesting to me how trolling was a thing even at the beginning of social media. This shows how everything that humans create can become corrupted. What is intended for good can always be twisted and mistreated, because we are imperfect creatures. Social media might have started as a place for people to connect with each other, but even from the beginning people also used it to "troll" each other (substituting genuine connection for trickery and hate).

  9. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. Jonah E. Bromwich and Ezra Marcus. The Anonymous Professor Who Wasn’t. The New York Times, August 2020. URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/04/style/college-coronavirus-hoax.html (visited on 2023-11-24).

      This story is absolutely wild. A woman named BethAnn pretended on Twitter to be a Native American queer woman who was a professor at ASU and who was a victim of sexual harassment. She used the account for her own personal gain. She used it to give credibility to herself (the fake account would post praise about BethAnn), lead MeTooSTEM, and even raise $75k through a gofundme. One day BethAnn announced that the woman behind the account had died of Covid and she even held a funeral for her. This level of deception is insane. It shows that of course, we can't believe everything we see on the Internet. It also serves as a warning to us of the level of deceit and manipulation that the Internet can be used to create.

  10. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. Social media spaces have allowed humor and playfulness to flourish, and sometimes humor and play are not, strictly speaking, honest. Often, this does not bother us, because the kind of connection offered by joke accounts matches the jokey way they interact on social media. We get to know a lot about public figures and celebrities, but it is not usually considered problematic for celebrity social media accounts to be run by publicist teams. As long as we know where we stand, and the kind of connection being offered roughly matches the sort of connection we’re getting, things go okay.

      This idea plays out often in short-form video content (such as TikTok, Youtube shorts, or Instagram reels). Creators like hayleyybaylee and janeinsane exemplify this idea. They made sarcastic and satirical videos that at first appear to be reality. Hayleyybaylee makes videos about a day in her life as a "billionaire's girlfriend," where she does absurd tasks around her fancy New York apartment dressed in full glam. Janeinsane makes videos about Utah moms. She exaggerates their stereotypical qualities (for instance, using Stanley cups). Both creators are playful and fun, and their audiences aren't mad that they aren't completely authentic. The purpose of their content isn't to inform or teach, it's simply to make others laugh. That is where it's excusable to let authenticity slide.

  11. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. What is user friction? Why you're losing users and how to stop. August 2023. URL: https://www.fullstory.com/user-friction/ (visited on 2023-11-24).

      To summarize this article, user friction is anything that prevents someone from using the website or app in the way that it is intended and how they want. Emotional friction occurs when the user has a complex negative emotional reaction caused by the site and is hindered from completing the task. Interaction friction happens when the site is not easy to navigate. Cognitive friction is when the site isn't setup in the way that a user is used to, and so they give up on trying to figure out the new terms.

    1. While mainstream social media platforms grew in popularity, there was a parallel growth of social media platforms that were based on having “no rules”, and were sources for many memes and pieces of internet culture, as well as hubs of much anti-social behavior (e.g., trolling, harassment, hate-groups, murders, etc.).

      This makes me wonder, should we have restrictions on what can be posted on social media? Isn't that taking away freedom of speech? Is it the CEO's responsibility to ensure that the social media site is being used for good? Does the CEO carry that burden, or is it on the individual users?

  12. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. Matt Binder. The majority of traffic from Elon Musk's X may have been fake during the Super Bowl, report suggests. February 2024. Section: Tech. URL: https://mashable.com/article/x-twitter-elon-musk-bots-fake-traffic (visited on 2024-03-31).

      This article explains that during the super bowl in 2024, 75% of X's site visits were bots. This is wild to me. It makes me wonder, are social media sites like X even worth it anymore? If the vast majority of users are bots, we aren't even interacting with other humans anymore and the purpose of social media (to connect and share) is lost.

    1. One classic example is the tendency to overlook the interests of children and/or people abroad when we post about travels, especially when fundraising for ‘charity tourism’. One could go abroad, and take a picture of a cute kid running through a field, or a selfie with kids one had traveled to help out. It was easy, in such situations, to decide the likely utility of posting the photo on social media based on the interest it would generate for us, without thinking about

      Before reading this, I had never thought of this situation (the woman posting with kids from a different country) in this way before. However, it's so true. The woman should not be posting a child without their consent. Additionally, posting about the trip and taking advantage of the kids in that way almost devalues the original purpose of the trip. It makes me question the woman's motives. Did she really go abroad to raise money and help out? Or did she just want to take photos so the world would know she was a good person who goes abroad and volunteers. It's important to remember that social media is only one side of the picture. We see only what the person is showing us, not their intention behind it.

  13. social-media-ethics-automation.github.io social-media-ethics-automation.github.io
    1. arah Jeong. How to Make a Bot That Isn't Racist. Vice, March 2016. URL:

      In this source, Jeong discussed how a bot quickly became racist, even though it had filters on certain words it could say. This brought up the idea of context. The bot could be told not to use specific words (like slurs), but it had no awareness of how normal words (she used the example "boy") could turn offensive or racist depending on the context. This is an interesting problem that highlights humanity's complexity. What is right and wrong to a computer might be gray and nuanced in real life. When surfing on the internet, we need to remember that real life has depth, context, and emotions.

    1. ometimes people use “bots” to mean inauthentically run accounts, such as those run by actual humans, but are paid to post things like advertisements or political content. We will not consider those to be bots, since they aren’t run by a computer. Though we might consider these to be run by “human computers” who are following the instructions given to them, such as in a click f

      This makes me wonder...how many online accounts are actually bots? Is social media completely inauthentic? Are we all getting angry at or being led by bots run by people simply trying to make a profit?

  14. Sep 2025
    1. How do you think about the relationship between social media and “real life”?

      Social media is a way to create the life that we idealize. People post their best angles, biggest smiles, and cutest moments. They leave out the tears, bad hair days, and long commutes to work on a musty bus. Social media contains some snapshots of "real life," but cannot complete the picture. Online, people also become their most bold selves (debating people on topics they would be too scared to in mention person). Social media is a mechanism to tell people your top 1% is you 100% of the time.

    1. since all media are social and all society is mediated, we will find that much of what we observe is also common throughout the rest of human culture. In fact, moving parts of our social media experience into internet-based social media platforms might not make any fundamental changes to society. According to the Amplification Model of technology: “The Internet changes nothing on its own, but it can amplify existing forces, and those amplified forces might change something.”

      This idea that the Internet only amplifies what is already happening in "real life" fascinates and surprises me. Can nothing new be created on the internet? Is the Internet all a reflection of other movements happening face to face? Can't people collaborate in new ways online that they otherwise could not have in person?