Posted on 06/27/2019 8:15:06 AM PDT by Monrose72
Edited on 06/27/2019 8:47:22 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]
After multiple sources corroborated the longstanding accusation that Google stealthily infuses its political preferences into its products, the company has continued to claim neutrality, leading to incongruous answers by its executives to lawmakers questioning.
A June 24 exposé by Project Veritas showed several Google employees and a cache of internal documents describing methods Google has used to tweak its products to surreptitiously push its users toward a certain worldview.
One employee even appeared to say, when caught on hidden camera, that Googles goal was preventing President Donald Trump, or anybody like him, from being elected againan assertion confirmed by another employee who spoke under the condition of anonymity.
Google spokespeople have failed to produce an official response, but two of its executives were questioned about the revelationsone at a June 25 Senate hearing and one at a House hearing the following day.
During the June 26 House Homeland Security Committee hearing, Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.) confronted Derek Slater, Googles global director of information policy, with one of the leaked documents on algorithmic unfairness
Imagine that a Google image query for CEOs shows predominantly men. Even if it were a factually accurate representation of the world, it would be algorithmic unfairness, the document says, explaining that in some cases it may be desirable to consider how we might help society reach a more fair and equitable state, via product intervention.
What does that mean Mr. Slater? Lesko asked.
Im not familiar with the specific slide, he said. But I think what were getting at there is when were designing our products, again, were designing for everyone. We have a robust set of guidelines to ensure were providing relevant, trustworthy information. We work with a set of Raters around the world, around the country, to make sure those Search Rater Guidelines are followed, those are transparent, available for you to read on the web.
All right. Well, I personally dont think that answered the question at all, she replied.
Similarly, Maggie Stanphill, Googles head of Digital Wellbeing, was questioned by Senate Commerce Committee member Ted Cruz (R-Texas) the day before.
He asked whether Stanphill agreed with a quote from one of the leaked documents saying that Google should intervene for fairness in its machine-learning algorithms. Stanphill said she didnt agree with it.
But Google has already put the fairness doctrine into practice, based on what the employees and the documents in the Project Veritas report say.
Our goal is to create a company-wide definition of algorithmic unfairness that establishes a shared understanding of algorithmic unfairness for use in the development of measurement tool, product policy, incident response, and other internal functions, says a document last updated in February 2017.
What theyre really saying about fairness is that they have to manipulate their search results so it gives them the political agenda that they want, the unidentified insider said.
For instance, when one types in the Google search bar men can and makes a space, the search engine suggests phrases like: men can have babies, men can get pregnant, and men can have periods.
When one types in women can and makes a space, the suggestions would show phrases like: women can vote, Women can do anything, and women can be drafted.
This isnt because these phrases are so popular among users, but because the fairness algorithm pulled them from so-called sources of truththey reflect the political narrative Google desires, the insider said.
Moreover, Google has adopted the doctrine while keeping its users in the dark, he said. One of the document says it is not a goal at this time to release this definition [of algorithmic unfairness] externally.
Known Bias
Google and other tech platforms, including Facebook and Twitter, have publicly endorsed a model of content policing that reflects certain political leanings.
All of them, for instance, prohibit hate speech, a concept much more broadly adopted by the political left, a 2017 Cato survey (pdf) showed.
Moreover, the concept is so subjective its impossible to enforce fairly and impartially, said Nadine Strossen, a law professor and former president of the American Civil Liberties Union.
Even if we have content moderation that is enforced with the noblest principles and people are striving to be fair and impartial, it is impossible, she said, testifying at the June 26 House hearing. These so-called standard are irreducibly subjective. What is one persons hate speech is somebody elses cherished loving speech.
I did read every single word of Facebooks [content policing] standards and the more you read them, the more complicated it is. And no two Facebook enforcers agree with each other and none of us would either. So that means that we are entrusting to some other authority the power to make decisions that should reside in each of us as individuals, as to what we choose to see and what we choose not to see and what we choose to use our own free speech rights to respond to.
Though private companies, even the ones as large and influential as Google and Facebook, are not bound to protect free speech for the individual, it is incredibly important that they be encouraged to do so, she said.
Ranking member Mike Rogers (R-Ala.) added his own skepticism regarding Googles impartiality, given that YouTube, which is owned by Google, took down the Project Veritas exposé the same day it was published, due to privacy complaints that appear to have been filed by one of the Google employees caught on camera by a Project Veritas reporter.
I have serious questions about Googles ability to be fair and balanced when it appears that it colluded with YouTube to silence negative press coverage, Rogers said in his opening statement. Regulating speech quickly becomes a subjective exercise for government or the private sector. Noble intentions often give way to bias and political agendas.
Trump briefly commented on the issue during a June 26 Fox Business interview.
Theyre trying to rig the election, he said, suggesting Google should be sued.
Strossen suggested that rather than by censorship, offensive and false content should be as much as possible countered by media literacy, counterspeech, user empowerment tools, and through radically increased transparency.
Recycled news for blog clicks.
Leftists often label their actions neutral or unbiased because they regard their opinions as unquestionable, objective truths. It a telltale of zealotry typical of cults.
The stunning lack of self-awareness by Google staff - 2 of the 3 people smeared as alt-right Nazis are orthodox Jews (Ben Shapiro, Dennis Prager).
This is proof that liberals smear anyone they don’t like with the term.
Grubering
Nadine Strossen, a law professor and former president of the American Civil Liberties Union.
Even if we have content moderation that is enforced with the noblest principles and people are striving to be fair and impartial, it is impossible, she said, testifying at the June 26 House hearing. These so-called standard are irreducibly subjective. What is one persons hate speech is somebody elses cherished loving speech.
I did read every single word of Facebooks [content policing] standards and the more you read them, the more complicated it is. And no two Facebook enforcers agree with each other and none of us would either. So that means that we are entrusting to some other authority the power to make decisions that should reside in each of us as individuals, as to what we choose to see and what we choose not to see and what we choose to use our own free speech rights to respond to.
Though private companies, even the ones as large and influential as Google and Facebook, are not bound to protect free speech for the individual, it is incredibly important that they be encouraged to do so, she said.
Nailed it.
It's no longer a free speech issue, it's a deceptive advertising issue. If a product's marketing is deceptive, it's false advertising and illegal.
If Google's contract is that, for the "price" of letting Google mine your data you get a service that lets you get superior search results, and then Google reneges on that by tilting those results in their favor to manipulate you, that's deceptive.
It's almost like old-time subliminal advertising where you think you are paying for a movie, but you don't know that frames of product were spliced into the film such that you were being manipulated into wanting the product.
In the Google case, you're being manipulated into thinking you're getting a true search result, when in fact you're being socially manipulated by those results.
It's subliminal, and it was made illegal in the past.
-PJ
No, she didn’t nail it. They aren’t private companies.
They used venture capital money from the US government.
They used DARPA research. They hold massive government IT contracts (ask a university, or city police department if they can ignore civil rights if they accept Federal money.
They benefit from a raft of special laws passed specifically to protect them. In return, they meet with government to receive instructions on things the government wants done like censorship.
Facebook doing government censorship so the government can claim innocence is like claiming sending someone to Jordan to get tortured so you can claim you don’t torture.
It’s a fascist arrangement. Facebook and Google get what they want from government, and Government uses them for projects to execute government policies of suppression of dissent and domestic spying. Both sides claim innocence.
It’s a classic fascist government/private partnership.
There is almost nothing “private” about the tech industry.
Google no longer has a superior search result. The quality has truly become abysmal in the last 2 years.
I search for specific things that I know are out there, and get results only tangentially related.
Search terms are completely ignored.
Google is really no longer useful as a search engine unless you want to find a business selling product X.
-PJ
George Orwell could not have foreseen google and facebook, but he got it right about thought control and harassing people for their views.
By your definition neither are any defense contractors, aerospace companies, service firms who have government contracts, manufacturing companies who may have benefited from NASA or other government research, any pharmaceutical companies, or anyone doing business on the DARPA internet.
That leaves probably 5% of the economy not in public hands.
And then you bring up fascism.
p
The last word in title is questionable .....
More along the spelling of begins with mas
“By your definition neither are any defense contractors, aerospace companies, service firms who have government contracts, manufacturing companies who may have benefited from NASA or other government research, any pharmaceutical companies, or anyone doing business on the DARPA internet.”
And every one of those have to abide to all government civil rights and labor law.
And you miss the point. Government can and does enter into contracts with private corporations. There is nothing fascist about that. But government providing venture capital, and enacting legislation to protect a company from lawsuits, in return for that company executing things forbidden to the government is indeed fascist.
Facebook and Google are fascist constructs, meeting with government to conduct operations forbidden to government, and government protects them from negative consequences for doing so.
1/7 th healthcare
Good catch
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