SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Non-Tech : Franklin, Andrews, Kramer & Edelstein -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: scion who wrote (11534)12/5/2018 11:26:04 AM
From: scion  Respond to of 12881
 
EU raises funds to fight 'disinformation war' with Russia

European commission to help member states recognise work of Kremlin ‘troll factories’

Daniel Boffey in Brussels Wed 5 Dec 2018 14.51 GMT
theguardian.com

The EU has launched a “war against disinformation” spread by the Kremlin in an attempt to protect next year’s European parliament elections.

As new funding and measures were announced in Brussels, the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, was accused of spending more than £1bn a year to “spread lies” as part of a military strategy to cause division in Europe.

“There is strong evidence pointing to Russia as the primary source of disinformation in Europe,” said Andrus Ansip, vice-president of the European commission.

“Disinformation is part of Russian military doctrine and its strategy to divide and weaken the west. Russia spends €1.1bn a year on pro-Kremlin media. You will also have heard of the ‘troll factory’ based in St Petersburg and the bot armies.”


The commission said it would set up a rapid alert system to help EU member states recognise disinformation campaigns, and increase the budget set aside for the detection of disinformation from £1.69m to £4.4m (€5m). It will also press technology companies to play their part in cracking down on fake news.

Major social media platforms have already signed up to a code of conduct, but they were told by the British security commissioner, Julian King, to “get serious” on living up to their commitments. He said the EU would not stand for “an internet that is the wild west, where anything goes”.

“No excuses, no more foot-dragging, because the risks are real,” he said. “We need to see urgent improvement in how adverts are placed. Greater transparency around sponsored content, fake accounts rapidly, effectively identified and deleted”.

Facebook has admitted there are between 60m and 90m fake Facebook accounts, accounting for between 3-4% of users on the platform, King said – “and some of those accounts are the most active”.

Longer term, the EU needed to invest in media diversity and educate the public to be aware of the news they digest, King said, but that in the short term Brussels needed to see an “improvement in how we detect and call out disinformation”.

“We have said publicly, and we repeat it here today, that if the necessary progress is not made we will not hesitate to reconsider our options including eventually regulation,” he said.

The commission will issue a progress update in January on social media companies’ attempts to close down accounts disseminating disinformation, and there will be further monthly reports up to next May’s elections to the European parliament.

Ansip, a former prime minister of Estonia, said he did not believe the increased budget of €5m was large enough to deal with the extent of disinformation, saying that one St Petersburg troll factory, known as the Internet Research Agency, has 1,000 full time workers.

“But in comparison with €1.9m it is a little bit better,” he said. “Our aim is not to create something like they have already in Russia.

Ansip said the Russian disinformation campaigns started “during the KGB time” and that sources said about 85% of the KGB’s budget was spent “not to get some secrets from somewhere but to spread lies”.

“We will not create some kind of propaganda machine in the European Union,” said Ansip. “We would like to detect the disinformation and then we have to understand where those threats are coming from, who is behind the disinformation and then debunking, using facts to expose lies.”

Mariya Gabriel, the commissioner for digital economy, who joined Ansip, King and the justice commissioner Vera Jourová in a joint press conference, compared the attempts to deal with Russian disinformation to a war.

Putin and his government have repeatedly denied claims that it has sought to interfere in foreign elections, including the US campaign that delivered the White House to Donald Trump.


theguardian.com



To: scion who wrote (11534)12/5/2018 1:14:44 PM
From: scion  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12881
 
6. Targeting competitor Apps

Exhibit 44 – Shutting down Vine’s friends data access

Facebook email 24 January 2013

Justin Osofsky – ‘Twitter launched Vine today which lets you shoot multiple short video
segments to make one single, 6-second video. As part of their NUX, you can find friends via
FB. Unless anyone raises objections, we will shut down their friends API access today. We’ve
prepared reactive PR, and I will let Jana know our decision.


MZ – ‘Yup, go for it.'

Page 15 of 250
parliament.uk

Zuckerberg's 'Yup, go for it' (in that mass data dump c/o parliament) is one of the most brutal lines I have ever read in any email.

THREAD
twitter.com



To: scion who wrote (11534)1/22/2019 5:13:49 AM
From: scion  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12881
 
If Mark Zuckerberg Wants to Talk, Britain Is Waiting

Facebook leadership has a history of lashing out instead of opening up.

By Damian Collins Jan. 22, 2019
nytimes.com

Mr. Collins is a member of the British Parliament

This month, Mark Zuckerberg announced that his pledge for this new year is to “host a series of public discussions about the future of technology in society.” He added that he intends to “try different formats to keep it interesting,” and we in Britain would like to suggest such an event for him.

Perhaps he could present information in our Parliament to the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport select committee that I head — something he refused to do in 2018. Or if that doesn’t work for him, I would be happy to reconvene the special International Grand Committee, which met at the House of Commons in November and included lawmakers from Britain, Canada, Ireland, France, Latvia, Brazil, Argentina and Singapore.

Indeed, we offered Mr. Zuckerberg plenty of opportunities to have these discussions last year. These committees met with the intention of discussing the following with him: the Cambridge Analytica Facebook data breach scandal; the Russian government’s use of social media platforms to interfere in the politics of democracies around the world; the anti-competitive nature of some of Facebook’s business practices; and Facebook’s harmful content policies. He didn’t want to have these discussions then, but we hope that he’s sincere and wants to have them now.


Last year, Facebook lashed out instead of opening up. It criticized the investigations of this newspaper into the company, it criticized the investigatory work of my committee, and it claimed that both investigations demonstrated unfair bias against them. It refused to appreciate that its customers have genuine concerns about the way Facebook gathers data from its users and makes it available to other companies through advertising targeting tools or reciprocal sharing agreements.

Last November, my committee published documents from the California app developer Six4Three. These documents showed how some small tech companies have suffered thanks to the way Facebook handles its relationships with app developers, while big commercial clients of the company (like Airbnb, Netflix and Lyft) enjoyed privileged access to user data that was denied to most other companies. For example, these documents showed how with just four words — “Yup, go for it” — Mr. Zuckerberg gave the order to effectively shut down Vine, a competitor video sharing app, by denying it access to Facebook friends’ data.

It is a scandal that Facebook allowed a Russian internet agency to break election laws by buying advertising to target American voters during the 2016 election season. It is a scandal that they knew about the problems with Cambridge Analytica in late 2015 but informed their users about the data breach only after the whistle-blower Chris Wylie brought the whole story to the public’s attention. It’s a scandal that we still don’t know how many other companies managed to acquire Facebook data in a way similar to Cambridge Analytica’s.

Britain is ready to discuss “the future of technology in society” with Mr. Zuckerberg, whenever he’s ready. But we aren’t going to wait for him. We’re having those discussions now.

In fact, my goals for the year ahead aren’t very different from Mr. Zuckerberg’s. This month, my select committee will produce our final report in our inquiry into disinformation and the many issues we have examined related to Facebook and other social media companies. We also recently began an inquiry into the ethics and practices of addictive and immersive media.

I believe we should give tech companies limited liability for harmful and illegal content that has been posted on their sites. If a company has been notified of this content or should have reasonably been able to discover it on its own, then it should be required to take it down promptly or be held responsible for its still being there. This principle has already been established in Germany, where the government requires the tech companies to act against content that is in breach of the country’s hate speech laws.

As in industries like banking, telecommunications and broadcasting, we need regulators to oversee the systems that tech companies have in place to gather and manage user data, and act against harmful content. These regulators should have the power to go into tech companies and gain access to otherwise protected information to complete their investigations. If the companies are found to be behaving irresponsibly, then the regulators could act against them. In Britain, we have already established these powers for the data protection regulator, the information commissioner. However, we also need a regulator with similar powers to take enforcement action against poor content management.

I have taken a great interest in the debate in the United States relating to political advertising and the Honest Ads Act introduced by Senators Amy Klobuchar, Mark Warner and John McCain. Citizens should have the right to know who is buying political ads online, why they are being targeted with them and which candidates the ads are there to support. Social media companies have said that they will introduce these policies on their platforms, but they should be required to do so by law; we should not just rely on their good will. In Britain, the information commissioner has questioned the legality of Facebook’s allowing advertisers to target users based on their political views, and without their direct consent, by including them in the look-alike audiences they make available to campaigns.

So much of our lives is organized through social media, and many people use social media platforms as the main source of information about the world around them. We cannot allow this public space to become a complete wild West, with little or no protection for the citizen user. The rights and responsibilities that we enjoy in the real world need to exist and be protected online as well.

Damian Collins is a member of the British Parliament and the head of the House of Commons select committee for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

nytimes.com