Zuckerberg On Facebook's Role In Ethnic Cleansing In Myanmar: 'It's a Real Issue' (vox.com) 136
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Vox: Facebook's fake news problems extend far beyond Russian trolls interfering in U.S. elections. Overseas, false stories have turned into tools of political warfare -- most notably in Myanmar, where government forces have carried out a campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Rohingya, the country's Muslim minority group. In an interview with Vox's Ezra Klein, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed Facebook's role in fueling and inciting anti-Muslim and anti-Rohingya sentiment. "The Myanmar issues have, I think, gotten a lot of focus inside the company," Zuckerberg said. "And they're real issues and we take this really seriously."
He recalled one incident where Facebook detected that people were trying to spread "sensational messages" through Facebook Messenger to incite violence on both sides of the conflict. He acknowledged that in such instances, it's clear that people are using Facebook "to incite real-world harm." But in this case, at least, the messages were detected and stopped from going through. "This is certainly something that we're paying a lot of attention to," Zuckerberg continued. "It's a real issue, and we want to make sure that all of the tools that we're bringing to bear on eliminating hate speech, inciting violence, and basically protecting the integrity of civil discussions that we're doing in places like Myanmar, as well as places like the U.S. that do get a disproportionate amount of the attention."
He recalled one incident where Facebook detected that people were trying to spread "sensational messages" through Facebook Messenger to incite violence on both sides of the conflict. He acknowledged that in such instances, it's clear that people are using Facebook "to incite real-world harm." But in this case, at least, the messages were detected and stopped from going through. "This is certainly something that we're paying a lot of attention to," Zuckerberg continued. "It's a real issue, and we want to make sure that all of the tools that we're bringing to bear on eliminating hate speech, inciting violence, and basically protecting the integrity of civil discussions that we're doing in places like Myanmar, as well as places like the U.S. that do get a disproportionate amount of the attention."
The Zuck needs to follow the adivce of his lawyers (Score:2)
Keep your damn mouth shut!
Zuckerberg's mouth is like on of those gigantic backhoes in strip mines that you see on EXtreme TV documentaries . . .
. . . he keeps digging himself deeper, and deeper . . . and deeper . . .
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Zuck's so glib about it.
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Much as I dislike Zuck, I do sympathize with him insofar as he is between a rock and a hard place. Keep his mouth shut, and someone else can take control of the narrative and successfully smear him as dangerously uncaring on top of that. Open his mouth, and the issue gets more complicated and stays in the news.
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Much as I dislike Zuck, I do sympathize with him insofar as he is between a rock and a hard place. Keep his mouth shut, and someone else can take control of the narrative and successfully smear him as dangerously uncaring on top of that. Open his mouth, and the issue gets more complicated and stays in the news.
Poor lad. He took the worst of both. He is dangerously uncaring, has lost control of the narrative, and isn't going to be out of the news for a long time. If he hasn't spoken to Mueller's team yet, I'm sure he will be summoned soon. He's probably a bit frightened, and he almost certainly has a damn good reason to be.
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Frightened of what? He isn't going to get dragged away in handcuffs, that doesn't happen to C-level people.
And if Basefuck went tits-up tomorrow he's probably got more money down the back of the couch than most people make in a lifetime.
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Does he though?
It's literally all in the terms and conditions that the idiot's accept so that they can share cat photos and talk about what they had for lunch.
It's kind of tiring to see fads make such impact because lol farmville like omg.
It's what people do with the data. Let's say I'm a Typical Youtube user. So I've given them my age, where I went to school, my address, my interests. Now this is probably not too good, but it is what it is.
So now Facebook has that data. They sell the data to people. So let's say they sell data to Cambridge Analytica. The issue was that the 2016 election wasn't the first time FB and CA were in bed together. And CA was supposed to wipe the data. They didn't. And they targeted ads to specific places and peo
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the idiot's accept
Oh dear.
Re:The Zuck needs to follow the adivce of his lawy (Score:5, Interesting)
He is probably getting a bit desperate there. Obviously this is one more attempt at distracting people from the extreme political mess he just had a part in. But selecting something this stupid as a distraction is impressive. Well, in the end, the harder he falls, the better for everybody.
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Boz says that death squads shooting and raping and torturing is a small price to pay for the De Facto Good of connecting the world under the caring wings of FB. In fact, it is so good that FB will cheerfully swindle users out of their personal data with purposefully confusing language around permissions and authorization. FB lies to us for our own good. We should be grateful...
Re:The Zuck needs to follow the adivce of his lawy (Score:4, Interesting)
There is not escaping the reality. It was a plan to push the truthiness of Facebook, a reality social media forum, pushing it's users to accept Facebook content as real and true, so the users accept the idea and put more of the real lives onto Facebook, so that the content could be data mined and to hook people into keeping logged in as much as possible to keep up with what is going on in their digital lives. They pushed hard to make Facebook reality based for datamining and to create a real sense of consequence and risk of loss in not keeping up to data and continually posting, a pretty sick plan.
Even Facebook had chosen to go more fun, more make believe, more pleasantly social, social media, the hooks would not have dug as deep, the reaction to content would mostly be humour and they would have had a whole lot less to data mine. Facebook was made as dangerous as it is, on purpose as a business model, to sell the mind control of it's users to advertisers. Now it is trying to whine about how what it set up on purpose to do, was abused by others, yeah, they were not meant to do that, by design only Facebook executives and the advertising department were meant to do that.
Facebook ain't a social media company, it is a psychopath media company, a company run as psychopath alternate reality media company, an extremely dangerous and disruptive media company. Remember MySpace, that was just ugly on the outside, horrible to look at, clearly Facebook is ugly on the inside, looks pretty but seriously socially ugly on the inside. A closet supporter of terrorism because it generates huge numbers of page views, likely a criminal closet supporter of terrorism, I wonder if they have numbers for how much profit, what kind of terrorist attacks generate, so many died, so many views, so many ads served, most profitable attack locations, most profitable methods of attack.
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And if that were true, it would be really bad. But the idiot here is you: FB had a very small part in this thing and it did not really play an active role. Hence it is fundamentally different.
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I don't like Trump much, but as far as I can tell this is far worse. Whatever happened in the US did not cause the military and para-military death squads to start killing all the Mexicans or force them back over the border and burn their neighborhoods.
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No doubt this is bad. But FB did not cause it, it had a small part in some of the propaganda that was used to start it and purely as a communications platform. You are missing the point here.
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Keep your damn mouth shut!
Zuckerberg's mouth is like on of those gigantic backhoes in strip mines that you see on EXtreme TV documentaries . . .
. . . he keeps digging himself deeper, and deeper . . . and deeper . . .
Zuck called me a minute ago. He says that's a real issue.
"protecting the integrity of civil discussions " (Score:5, Insightful)
What a joke. You can't police so called 'hate speech' whatever that is and also protect anything, the more they stick their fingers into things the worse it gets.
Protection of speech means allowing everything and letting us decide for ourselves, we are fully capable of telling the wingnuts and assholes from reasoned discussion.
They are so desperate to control the narrative 'for your protection', its scary. Go ahead and cull the outright incitements to immediate violence but leave the rest and let us decide.
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What a joke. You can't police so called 'hate speech' whatever that is and also protect anything, the more they stick their fingers into things the worse it gets.
Protection of speech means allowing everything and letting us decide for ourselves, we are fully capable of telling the wingnuts and assholes from reasoned discussion.
They are so desperate to control the narrative 'for your protection', its scary. Go ahead and cull the outright incitements to immediate violence but leave the rest and let us decide.
We have a natural right to make use of our pens as of our tongue, at our peril, risk and hazard. - Voltaire
Pretty sure "Here's a pen, some letterhead with my name on it, and borrow my soapbox too." was said by no one, ever.
Until the Internet Entitlement Age it was also not expected.
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What a joke. You can't police so called 'hate speech' whatever that is and also protect anything, the more they stick their fingers into things the worse it gets.
Protection of speech means allowing everything and letting us decide for ourselves, we are fully capable of telling the wingnuts and assholes from reasoned discussion.
They are so desperate to control the narrative 'for your protection', its scary. Go ahead and cull the outright incitements to immediate violence but leave the rest and let us decide.
Doesn't work that way laddie. That nasty accessory to a crime is kinda a sticky point. Remember that free speech allows you to say anything you want. But people have free speech to react, and free speech is not an insulation for breaking laws. Or extradition to a country where you enabled it. Has very little to do with protecting "us"
Bummer that, but hey, he took the money for the news and ads.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
(a) Whoever aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures the commission of an offense, is punishable as a principal.
(b) Whoever willfully causes an act to be done which if directly performed by him or another would be an offense, is punishable as a principal.
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Re:"protecting the integrity of civil discussions (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, I don't know who you are, so I can't judge the truth of the statement that "we" are able to tell the difference between reason and hate-mongering propaganda, but if by "we" you mean "people in general", your argument doesn't hold up.
When I was a teenager I had dinner at the house of an older Jewish couple; the other guests were an elderly German couple who knew my Jewish friends through classical music circles. The German couple was old enough to remember living under the Nazis, and when the conversation turned that way these very nice people made it very clear that in the 1940s they'd have turned in any Jews they'd known were hiding. They wanted me to understand that even respectable, cultured, intelligent people can be brainwashed.
Look around you. People are perfectly willing to go along with stupid, vicious, even incoherent ideas as long as there are a lot of other people doing it. Most people's behavior isn't governed by religion, or their professed philosophical principles; it's governed by what appears normal to them.
The reason that government censorship doesn't work isn't because people are wise and thoughtful; it's because government censorship spitting into the wind of perceived normalcy. However, shaming racist bullshit and shunning the people repeating it is very effective.
World without facebook (Score:2)
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IME, you are about 10X to find intelligent discussion on NetNews and threaded discussions, than feeds like FB. Now 10X a very small number is not exactly a big number, but it counts for something.
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Fair point. NN was not always exactly nice, which I know you know, from your question.
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You didn't have a portable device capable of multimedia content, sending notifications always with you, in an easily digestible format, specially built to hook you and overfill you with advertising.
The information bubble you were creating there wasn
This is what happens... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is what happens when you destroy the original culture of the internet and replace it with a centralized authoritarian model which by the way is built to feed on narcissism.
Which happens to be exactly what FB did. And what 2 billion people and counting happily voted for.
It's NOT ethnic cleansing! (Score:2, Informative)
These people are invaders from another country, and the government has every right to send them back to where they came from. Something goddamn Europe should do with the foreign invaders claiming to be 'refugees'. please!
Re:It's NOT ethnic cleansing! (Score:4, Interesting)
A bunch of squatters set up camp, and invited a bunch more squatters to come join them. The government razes the camp like what is done countless other times across the globe with other squatters. But for some reason because they are Muslim, they somehow need to be left alone???
Re: It's NOT ethnic cleansing! (Score:1, Insightful)
So proud of their knife and acid attacks, female genital mutilation, stoning homosexuals to death, religious sanction of rape, car bombs, beheadings, hatred, racism, and fascism!
Yay Islam!
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but he is rigth
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We are talking about the RAPE ARSON and KILLINGS done by bhuddist govt supported reaver gangs in rakine province.
In the face of all that Myanmar has closed off the region to anyone who wants to see, which proves they are doing all of this and more. Time to meet your demon, min aung hliang
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Rohingya are not "refugees from another country". They are native to the Rakine region of Burma , speak their own language unique to the Rakine/Arakan region and have been there for at least 5000 years (The age of the oldest known Rohingya temples in burma).
Religiously, they are mostly Sufi (Sufi is kind of the 'hippy' wing of Islam, meditation, mysticism etc, peaceful people) but there are christians, budhists and hindus there.
And the army is hell bent on killing them all.
Re: It's NOT ethnic cleansing! (Score:4, Informative)
Donâ(TM)t just make shit up. The Rohingya have been there at least 5000 years in the regi M of Burma that was once the kingdom of Arakan (the other word for Rohingan are Arakans). The Rohingans had 200 documented generations of Kings , and the earliest Rohingan/Arakan temples in Burma are dated to at least 3000 BC.
They are native and have no ancestors anywhere else outside of the old Arakan kingdom , what we now call Rashin state , Burma
So please before you post again I suggest you read some more
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They are sensitive to wahabistic fundamentalism like all muslims. Birma sees what happens in the west and all other countries with a large amount of muslims and understandable does not want that happen there so they remove the threat. "Moderate" islam is not a stable condition, look at where the only countries where that ruled for some time, Turkey and Indonesia, are going.
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Facebook's business model... (Score:5, Insightful)
...is to encourage behaviour from its users that is as divisive as possible. Or what Facebook calls "engagement.' Inciting indignant outrage and creating conflict between users and groups of users keeps them on the platform so that they see more adverts and so the money rolls into Facebook's coffers. Facebook's business model is the opposite of the Silicon Valley mantra "Making the world a better place."
The famous philosopher of science who gave us the modern scientific method, Karl Popper, had a great insight into intolerance, i.e. that we should be intolerant of intolerance: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] I think we can arguably view Facebook's business model as just one gigantic "meta-troll" that cultivates troll-like behaviour in its users (Not everyone becomes a troll but everyone is exposed to extreme, divisive troll-like episodes).
If we want to have more constructive public discourse in areas of conflict, it's probably better to ban Facebook in them. And if we want to make the world a better place, how about banning Facebook altogether. Let's be intolerant of a platform that breeds intolerance.
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And your proposed replacement is?
There are good reasons to not like Facebook, but failing to completely block intolerance is not one of them. Your "solution" to this relatively hard problem is to get rid of a company that has already spent sig
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You misunderstood me. The post I replied to said:
If we want to have more constructive public discourse in areas of conflict, it's probably better to ban Facebook in them.
Public discourse inherently requires a venue for public discourse. So that much is assumed by the post I was replying to. Whether that venue is social media or something else is completely irrelevant. As soon as you
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The language I am using is romanticizing murders? What are you smoking, and where can we get some?
Okay, here's a reality check for you, since you obviously need one. In the real world, people are killed every day, and for the foreseeable future, people will continue to be killed every day. To the extent that companies like Facebook are inadvertently playing a role in that, it is their responsibility to take steps to minimize that role. HOWEVER — and this is a BIG however — it is not possibl
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Ad hominem fallacy
Appeal to authority fallacy
Black-or-white fallacy
Appeal to authority fallacy
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May argument is not that Facebook have failed to block intolerance. It's that they are modulators of intolerance. Their business model is predicated on inserting itself into sensitive issues and making things worse. That's what drives user "engagement" and therefore Facebook's advertising revenue. There is no realistic incentive for Facebook to do anything to reduce or prevent intolerance.
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So is the business model of the entire news industry. Folks were complaining about "if it bleeds, it leads" way back in the 1990s. There is no realistic incentive for them to do anything to reduce or prevent the cycle of escalating anger between both sides of political situations, either, other than perhaps "... because if we don't do this, we'll help bring about the end of the world."
But that should be re
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Yes, there is an additional argument that news agencies nowadays are chasing reduced revenue because of the web. Headlines are being carefully crafted to attract clicks and the more sensational the headline the more clicks they're likely to get. It also shapes what news is reported and how. But at least professional journalists and their publishers can be held to account for publishing stuff that's not true. Journalists' credibility often rests on the principle of accountability, although we could also argu
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You: Do you want some tea?
Me: I'm not thirsty.
You: How about coffee?
Me: I'm not thirsty.
You: There's some lemonade in the fridge.
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Exactly. In other to be tolerant, you must be intolerant. It's the same with free speech. You have to severely limit it, or you do not have it.
Isn't Messenger end-to-end encrypted? (Score:3)
He recalled one incident where Facebook detected that people were trying to spread "sensational messages" through Facebook Messenger to incite violence on both sides of the conflict. He acknowledged that in such instances, it's clear that people are using Facebook "to incite real-world harm." But in this case, at least, the messages were detected and stopped from going through.
Hang on there, I thought that Messenger was end-to-end encrypted. Someone help me out here—I can see how FB could become aware of these messages (abuse reports), but how could messages in an end-to-end encryption setup be 'detected and stopped from going through'?
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It is only e2e encrypted when you specifically select a secret chat, just like Telegram but unlike WhatsApp. The normal mode of operation for Messenger and Telegram is that the operater can read everything.
Disinformation the modern way (Score:1)
Facebook spreads hates and help militias
Zuckerberg gets richer by the day
As Muslims oppress the Rohingyas
Burma-Shave
Good Management (Score:2)
Moral Agenda (Score:1)
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Phones? (Score:2)
Bad guys use infrastructure.
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By restricting communication. And I'm "Ivan"?
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Double standards (Score:1)
Ethnic cleansing in Myanmar: oh no!
Ethnic cleansing in South Africa: ?????
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Re: Cleanliness is next to Godliness (Score:2)
You sound an awful lot like a Nazi. Do you deserve death?
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You literally sound like a Nazi when you talk like that. Your grandfather would spit on you! Eliminate the diseases plaguing humanity!
You can't actually be this stupid, right?
South Africa (Score:2, Informative)
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fuck this bullshit (Score:2)
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There is no actual evidence that diversity is a strength(or positive) and in fact many examples of just the reverse..
Diversity is toughness against tailored attacks. Nothing more, nothing less. However, there has to be at least a minimal common base of cohesive attitudes among all elements of diversity for it to show the benefit. Intolerance, and attempts to segregate and purge, damages those cohesive attitudes if they existed. However, in some cases it is doubtful and subject to controversies if that minimum was there to start with, or if it is possible to build it. Most everyone, knowing nothing in advance, assumes that
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So?
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While satellite footage and tales from the many thousands of people rushing over each other to get the hell away, provide the obvious truth, they simply say, "no, we didnt"