radicalization

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  •  U.S. Senator Chris Coons (D-DE) attends a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on voting rights on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., April 20, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/Pool

    Senate hearing on algorithms will include Facebook, Twitter and YouTube execs

    by 
    Igor Bonifacic
    Igor Bonifacic
    04.23.2021

    Early next week, executives from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube will participate in a Senate Judiciary hearing on algorithmic amplification.

  • Olly Curtis/Future via Getty Images

    Study says YouTube 'actively discourages' radicalism

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    12.28.2019

    Politicians and others complain that YouTube fosters extremism, but how caustic is it, really? Not all that much, according to researchers. Data scientist Mark Ledwich and UC Berkley researcher Anna Zaitsev have published a study suggesting that YouTube "actively discourages" radicalism through its recommendation system. Their reviewers classified over 760 politics-oriented channels based on overall leaning, topics and proximity to the mainstream, and found that YouTube removed "almost all" suggestions for conspiracy theorists, white identitarians and "provocateurs" (read: purposefully offensive creators). For the most part, there's only a significant likelihood of being matched with questionable content if you're already watching that material.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Mark Zuckerberg: CEO, billionaire, troll

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    07.20.2018

    We imagine the scene at Facebook right now is like Kim Jong-il's funeral. Employees weeping in hallways, dripping anguished snot onto keyboards, beating their chests with unsold Facebook phones in an orgy of anguish at the injustice of media coverage regarding Mark Zuckerberg's unprompted defense this week of giving Holocaust deniers a voice on the platform. But I think we've finally figured out what's going on at Facebook after all.