How TikTok Sees Inside Your Brain (axios.com) 37
A new video investigation by the Wall Street Journal finds the key to TikTok's success in how the short-video sharing app monitors viewing times. From a report: TikTok is known for the fiendishly effective way that it selects streams of videos tailored to each user's taste. The algorithm behind this personalization is the company's prize asset -- and, like those that power Google and Facebook, it's a secret. WSJ created a batch of individualized dummy accounts to throw at TikTok and test how it homed in on each fake persona's traits. TikTok responds most sensitively to a single signal -- how long a user lingers over a video. It starts by showing new users very popular items, and sees which catch their eyes.
TikTok doesn't see inside my brain (Score:5, Funny)
Re:TikTok doesn't see inside my brain (Score:4, Funny)
my fucking brain.
Don't have it, don't use it,
LOL
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I can. Hey why's it so dark in here?
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At first I thought you meant your brain. Sorry.
Inside "Your" Brain (Score:1)
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And this is why I wear my tinfoil hat. It's great at blocking this stuff.
Wow, some secret algorithm (Score:5, Insightful)
So the longer someone watches a video the more interested they probably are in it? Amazing, who knew?
Re:Wow, some secret algorithm (Score:4, Insightful)
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Like interpreting hashtags like #kittens #cute is difficult?
The users mark them up.
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I tick not (Score:2)
..nor do I tock.
I use social media as a tool, on a desktop computer.
This phone-based nonsense is useless to me
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It's a whole lot of very short videos (Score:4, Insightful)
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What is a "show hop"?
I'm not familiar with that term.
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LOL...this is gonna kill ya.
I don't know what Chill Hop is either....
ditto Instagram (Score:1)
Instagram does the same. It suggests posts based simply on what I watch, non what I actively "like". And no, I don't have any scars around my skull area
Dummy Accounts and Fake TikTok users? (Score:2)
Well...
No need to create dummy accounts to test, TikTok users already filled that role and the other one as well.
That's an easy feat (Score:2)
What Tiktok sees inside Tiktok users' brains is a big great blank.
After watching a couple TikTok videos (Score:2)
I can say that this probably means that TikTok sees a lot of static noise...
Should be declared a "digital drug". (Score:1)
While Facebook might be cheap booze, TikTok is definitely crack. Just like Zynga "games" of FB, back in the day.
And while we're at it: Deliberately designing something so you can't get out, whether via a wall, or via neural input that triggers the pathways that starve the "GTFO" pathway, is also some kind of abusive crime.
The only difference is that, back in the psychological dark ages, harming the brain on an information/input level was considered "not real harm". Because independent-from-body "soul", dama
In my case ... (Score:2)
Solving human attention (Score:1)
They are looking into *your* brain even if you don't have TikTok because guess what, you are a human, and the drivers of your attention start from the same place as every other human. Sex, faces expressing emotion, places you've been, music you've heard, things tha
Chinese propaganda (Score:3)
I had TikTok for a good while, just to watch, not generate content, but I deleted it because I noticed how every so often, out of the blue, there would be some content that I'd class as Chinese propaganda. It was what all effective propaganda is, subtle, well-produced information that promotes or publicizes a particular political cause or point of view, but in a way that the recipient doesn't really notice. In my case, (and every TikTok stream is customized so you may see different stuff), I'd get charming videos on what it was like to live in China, mixed with "white guy in China" raving about how great it was that he could drink a beer walking down the street, but in the USA with its apparently "land of the free" status you couldn't. Each had a good load of comments - "yeah, that's right", "wonderful", etc. Throw in the "China street fashion" videos and, other "there's no crime here in China" videos, and it was a very nice pro-China marketing campaign mixed in with dance, comedy, etc. I am attuned to this because of my work. They've done a good job there.
Re: Chinese propaganda (Score:1)