Monday, 12 August 2019

Articles about the dubious uses of online private data

HOW CAMBRIDGE ANALYTICA SPARKED THE GREAT PRIVACY AWAKENING
https://www.wired.com/story/cambridge-analytica-facebook-privacy-awakening/


NETFLIX'S THE GREAT HACK BRINGS OUR DATA NIGHTMARE TO LIFE
https://www.wired.com/story/the-great-hack-documentary/amp.


Is Netflix’s The Great Hack the most important documentary of our time?
https://www.stylist.co.uk/long-reads/netflix-the-great-hack-facebook-cambridge-analytica-personal-data-hacking-scandal-documentary/281783

The conclusion of the final article on our list:

CA may have exposed voters to a carpet bomb of biased ads and news reports, but it didn’t force them to check those ballot boxes. They weren’t bullied, or threatened, or coerced into making the choices they did. Their agency was not wrested from them.

It has always been up to us to read beyond the headlines. To do more than skim through the comments on Facebook. To do our own research, to ask questions, to challenge our opinions. To, above all else, form a more well-rounded view of the world – one which allows us to see past the fakery and the falsities when they are forced under our noses by politicians, shady institutions and social media trolls.

We are much more inclined to believe statistics that support our point of view – something that scientists call the confirmation bias – and we’re very energetic in demolishing those that do not. As former NY Times editor Trish Hall previously explained to Stylist: “We are much more inclined to believe statistics that support our point of view – something that scientists call the confirmation bias – and we’re very energetic in demolishing those that do not.

“If we are going to become more cohesive and more able to move the world forward,” she continued, “then we need to understand other points of view. We can do that [by seeking] out media with which we do not agree.”

It is up to us to break the bubble. Because – while we can slap legislations on Cambridge Analytica, and while Facebook may have since updated its privacy laws – we will never be able to get at the whole truth if we allow ourselves to exist within echo boxes of our own making. People will always share their opinions, and we will always be exposed to fake news. And, unless we make smarter, savvier choices about the media we consume, we will always be susceptible to manipulation.

Unless we recognise this enormous responsibility, democracy will die – not with a bang, but with a whimper. And that, friends, is The Great Hack’s most important takeaway.

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