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2019-12-09 Cyber
"Don't Be Evil": Last Refuge of a Tech Oligarch Scoundrel = "Because CHINA!"
A taste:
[TheFederalist] Why Big Tech companies can’t stop being ‘evil’: Rana Foroohar's new book, 'Don't Be Evil,' paints an alarming portrait of Silicon Valley tech companies that need to be reined in before they start to affect our lives in even more insidious ways.

In 1998, in an academic paper titled “The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine,” Stanford University students Larry Page and Sergey Brin described how their project, which they had named Google, worked. Until Page and Brin published, their work had been shrouded in secrecy, much to the consternation of the Stanford faculty. However, their mentor was eventually able to convince Page and Brin to publish some of their work—it was an academic project, after all—and the two relented.

In the paper, Page and Brin outlined how search could be monetized—via advertising—and noted the danger of such a funding model, writing, “The goals of the advertising business model do not always correspond to providing quality search to users.” Indeed, such a model lead to what the two labeled “search engine bias” a phenomenon they identified as “particularly insidious.”

Financial Times writer Rana Foroohar includes the Google origin story in her scathing indictment of the two tech titans and, at least in her opinion, the road of moral compromise its two founders traversed to essentially take over the internet. Through stunning self-deception and adherence to a self-serving principle that “information wants to be free,” it wasn’t long before Google’s two founders succumbed to investor pressure and embraced an ideology of “data exists to be monetized.”

THE INTERNET PROBLEM
The title of Foroohar’s book is Don’t Be Evil: How Big Tech Betrayed Its Founding Principles—and All of Us, a pithy nod to the company’s early motto. Foroohar is not only trying to be clever, she believes that “don’t be evil” was Google’s model from the outset because Page and Brin knew the “insidious” potential of the technology they had created. Writes Foroohar, “When Google advised its employees not to be evil, it did so because it knew full well that evil was more than a powerful temptation. Evil was baked into the business plan.”

Capitulating to the demands of investors to monetize by employing the advertising business plan they had previously denounced was merely their first sin. As Foroohar tells it, the company copied goto.com and Yelp, and cut off traffic to foundem.com, funneling users to Google’s results instead. This trend of big companies getting bigger and cutting off the ability of smaller firms to operate is at the heart of what Foroohar sees as the “the internet problem.”

BECOMING THE VILLAIN
...Foroohar expertly and succinctly lays out the problems with Big Tech, drawing on her decades of experience covering the industry for the Financial Times. As noted before, her solutions are generally practical, varied, and for the most part modest.

And perhaps her most prescient ideas are already proving to be true. Foroohar retells Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony before Congress in the wake of the 2016 election and highlights a photograph that caught a glimpse of Zuckerberg’s notes telling him to mention China when questioned about Facebook’s monopolistic characteristics. Foroohar calls out Google and Facebook for crying “China” when pressure picks up against them:

Big Tech firms have responded to the growing public concern about privacy and anticompetitive business practices by playing to a long-standing American fear: It’s us versus China. Companies like Google and Facebook are increasingly trying to portray themselves to regulators and politicians as national champions, fighting to preserve America’s first-place standing in a video-game-like, winner-take-all battle for the future against the evil Middle Kingdom.
Posted by Lex 2019-12-09 00:00|| || Front Page|| [14 views ]  Top

#1 Lex, a stray gamma ray ate your clever headline, which I did my best to reconstruct from memory. What was it intended to be?
Posted by trailing wife 2019-12-09 00:36||   2019-12-09 00:36|| Front Page Top

#2 "Don't Be Evil": Last Refuge of a Tech Oligarch Scoundrel = "Because CHINA!"
Posted by Lex 2019-12-09 00:39||   2019-12-09 00:39|| Front Page Top

#3 Whew! Fixed. Thank you, kind sir.
Posted by trailing wife 2019-12-09 00:42||   2019-12-09 00:42|| Front Page Top

#4 Danke, Milady
Posted by Lex 2019-12-09 00:54||   2019-12-09 00:54|| Front Page Top

#5 "Power has a tendency to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts absolutely"

Grant every citizen perpetual copyright to his/her data. Any and every use of that other than the absolutely necessary data needed by the government to comply with the Constitution and laws (not regulations), must be compensated to the copyright holder.
Posted by Procopius2k 2019-12-09 05:16||   2019-12-09 05:16|| Front Page Top

#6 Does the need for this latest excuse mean they're going to start making stuff here?
Posted by Thing From Snowy Mountain 2019-12-09 09:05||   2019-12-09 09:05|| Front Page Top

#7 These guys don't make stuff. They're media companies.

They're in the advertising business. They interpose themselves between you and information, collect info on your behaviors and sell that info to advertisers.

If they really wanted to make themselves useful to this country they would turn their tech skills to something more important than showing relevant ads to people.

Like helping cure illness, or locating and deporting people here illegally.
Posted by Lex 2019-12-09 09:11||   2019-12-09 09:11|| Front Page Top

#8 ^ Imagine how many diseases we'd have cured if, instead of shoveling over a trillion dollars into finding ever more ingenious ways to show ads to people and enable teenagers and morons to share photos with each other we had invested that money into:
medical research,
next-generation military technologies,
desalinization plants,
border security,
biometric and other forms of reliable identification for security purposes...

Ah but we have Da Twitter 'n' Snapchat 'n' Instagram and Da Facebook.

Happy proles, we.
Posted by Lex 2019-12-09 09:17||   2019-12-09 09:17|| Front Page Top

#9 Whew, talk about a punchcard operator!
Posted by Skidmark 2019-12-09 09:21||   2019-12-09 09:21|| Front Page Top

#10 Merchants have been bedazzled by the dreams of the Vast China Market™ for years centuries millennia. Missionaries, too. The Chinese have an entire system of drawing in the "foreign barbarians", corrupting them and turning them into agents.

Ralph D. Sawyer has made a career of translating ancient Chinese military works and The Tao of War(2002) a 9th century Chinese Warlord Wang Chen discusses using trade and diplomacy to turn barbarians into puppet states. Ninth Century...
Posted by magpie 2019-12-09 09:36||   2019-12-09 09:36|| Front Page Top

#11 ^ Where's the Golden Horde when you need them?
Posted by Lex 2019-12-09 09:41||   2019-12-09 09:41|| Front Page Top

#12 Yes, Skidmark. That has always been one of my favorite Rantburg graphics. But it isn't just the legs. At my age I have a certain nostalgia for that 1970s computer room.
Posted by Abu Uluque 2019-12-09 13:58||   2019-12-09 13:58|| Front Page Top

#13 OK AU, you can have the room; as for me......
Posted by USN, Ret. 2019-12-09 14:36||   2019-12-09 14:36|| Front Page Top

#14 The lassie is bonny, but drop a box of Holerith Cards before you got them on tape would pi$$ off even Smiling Jack. I can attest to that.
Posted by Alaska Paul 2019-12-09 17:12||   2019-12-09 17:12|| Front Page Top

#15 Hollerith Cards... Take a straight edge and a magic marker and draw a diagonal line across your deck. Learned that back in the day running Fortran G programs at the University.
Posted by magpie 2019-12-09 23:16||   2019-12-09 23:16|| Front Page Top

#16 Their goal is not advertising, it is data collection. Advertising is just one way to make money off of the collection.

What's the olde saying; if it is free, you are the product.
Posted by swksvolFF 2019-12-09 23:22||   2019-12-09 23:22|| Front Page Top

#17 And, in addition to said diagonal line (lines if the deck was very large), make sure to keep the cards in good shape. The operators tended to be short-tempered with decks with ratty cards that jammed the reader.
Posted by James  2019-12-09 23:29|| https://idontknowbut.blogspot.com  2019-12-09 23:29|| Front Page Top

11:17 Besoeker
11:15 Abu Uluque
11:10 Silentbrick
11:04 swksvolFF
11:02 swksvolFF
11:00 M. Murcek
11:00 SteveS
10:57 M. Murcek
10:55 SteveS
10:50 Grom the Reflective
10:45 Whiskey Mike
10:28 Chesney+Sleting4519
10:28 Chesney+Sleting4519
10:25 Mullah Richard
10:23 Mullah Richard
10:22 swksvolFF
10:17 Mullah Richard
10:02 Rex Mundi
09:57 NN2N1
09:54 Frank G
09:48 Skidmark
09:48 Skidmark
09:43 Skidmark
09:40 Skidmark









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