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Darius Kazemi: The Bot Scare
Darius Kazemi: The Bot Scare
It's clear upon inspection that the media narrative about an influx of Russian or otherwise foreign bots influencing politics in America is built on flimsy data and enormous leaps of logic. Further, the narrative empowers conspiracy theorists to make essentially whatever claims they want about anyone. The bots that do exist are drops of water in the ocean of social media, but I believe that the effect of constant front-page news stirring up fear about foreign influence can have far-reaching negative effects on any democracy.
·tinysubversions.com·
Darius Kazemi: The Bot Scare
Jia Tolentino: How We Came to Live in “Cursed” Times (The New Yorker)
Jia Tolentino: How We Came to Live in “Cursed” Times (The New Yorker)
Jia Tolentino writes on the uptick in uncanny or unpleasant things being described on Twitter, Reddit, and other social-media platforms as having “cursed energy,” a phrase that has come to signify anxiety and malaise. --- These are quite obviously cursed times: Donald Trump is somehow still the President; more than a quarter of the birds in North America have disappeared since 1970; and children keep having to take to the streets to plead with our lawmakers to protect their lives. But it is hard—given the sheer extent of what is crumbling around us, and also the natural limits of our individual scopes of vision—to take in the fullness of contemporary cursedness all at once. It’s easier, perhaps, to see dread in individual objects: an eBay listing for a Sonic costume photographed on a child-size mannequin; a drawing of Mickey Mouse with a flesh-colored skull, holding a black, ear-shaped cap; a photo of a brick of ramen being cooked in Mountain Dew.
·newyorker.com·
Jia Tolentino: How We Came to Live in “Cursed” Times (The New Yorker)
Sarah Jeong: Meet the campaign connecting affluent techies with progressive candidates around the country (The Verge)
Sarah Jeong: Meet the campaign connecting affluent techies with progressive candidates around the country (The Verge)
Meet the Great Slate — a fundraising campaign that raised nearly a million dollars in 2017, mostly through Twitter, for eight seemingly random Congressional candidates from across the country. The Great Slate has no splashy slogans, no slick logos: just a bare-bones website, a donate button, and a lot of jokes on Twitter.
·theverge.com·
Sarah Jeong: Meet the campaign connecting affluent techies with progressive candidates around the country (The Verge)
Paul Ford: A Defense of the Internet’s Absence of Meaning (The New Republic)
Paul Ford: A Defense of the Internet’s Absence of Meaning (The New Republic)
The lesson of that kind of reading is a simple one. It has taught me that my own life is ephemeral. Despite all the heroic myths about the unique, irreplaceable preciousness of our daily lives, I am absolutely convinced that someone, someday 50 or 100 years from now, will be working at a computer near where I am seated right now, and he or she will come across the address of my office mentioned in this article—902 Broadway—and will read with amusement or wonder or puzzlement about my experiences. I greet you, and the people who follow you, and the ones after them, and I hope that I give you a moment’s satisfaction, and that you take as much pleasure from your search as I did.
·newrepublic.com·
Paul Ford: A Defense of the Internet’s Absence of Meaning (The New Republic)