Author Topic: The Goolag, Facebook, Youtube, Amazon, Twitter, Gov censorship via Tech Octopus  (Read 136695 times)

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Twitter goes after Babylon Bee
« Reply #552 on: September 26, 2020, 11:07:12 AM »
A message from The Babylon Bee
 
In case you hadn't heard, Twitter recently suspended our account. In an email to us, they claimed we violated their rules against "platform manipulation and spam." The email included a warning that that if we tried to open another account, that new account would be suspended, too.
 
We published screenshots of the email and our suspended Twitter page, and called on our followers to make some noise. We started trending almost immediately and Twitter responded by reinstating us, saying we'd been suspended "by mistake." So we're back on Twitter, at least for the time being. But we share the concerns of others who've rightly observed that these "mistakes" tend to work in one direction.
 
We're grateful to have followers who aren't afraid to speak up and hold these big tech companies accountable. But there are no guarantees. We couldn't be sure they'd reinstate our account. And we can't know if they will the next time they make a "mistake." But we can do our best to prepare for a worst-case scenario. At least we can if we have your help.
 
When we first launched our subscription service, the primary reason we gave for supporting us was to help us become less dependent on big tech companies. We explained:
 
We depend on Facebook and Twitter to drive traffic, and Google Ads to monetize it. Without these networks, we'd have no revenue to cover our expenses. And as you're probably aware, none of these companies are friendly to Christians or conservatives. In fact, that's a severe understatement. The control these companies exercise—and the outright hostility they display toward those with more traditional views and values—has us deeply concerned about our future as a publisher of Christian satire. But here's the thing: If just a small fraction of our readers become paid subscribers, we'd have enough funding to survive without running ads, effectively eliminating our dependence on these big tech companies.
 
The more subscribers we have, the less we have to worry about our dependence on Twitter and the other big tech companies. If you want to see us prevail against Twitter, Snopes, and anyone else who might seek to discredit or deplatform us, please consider becoming a subscriber. Your support will make a difference.
 
From our whole team, thank you for your consideration and support.
 
Seth Dillon
CEO

Crafty_Dog

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DougMacG

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Checking my gmail spam, I am quite impressed how thoroughly Google keeps conservative and Republican groups from reaching ... anyone.

I wonder if they screen 'progressive' groups that efficiently.

Crafty_Dog

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FB bans QAnon
« Reply #555 on: October 07, 2020, 07:22:47 AM »
By Sarah E. Needleman
Updated Oct. 6, 2020 7:50 pm ET
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Facebook Inc. said it would step up its crackdown on QAnon, removing more groups and pages devoted to the fast-growing conspiracy-theory movement that has thrived on social media.

The move builds on Facebook’s efforts announced in August to remove QAnon pages and groups that included discussions of potential violence. The company will now ban any pages or groups dedicated to QAnon across Facebook, as well as Instagram accounts focused on QAnon content. The new policy doesn’t ban individuals from posting about the movement.

The company said the new policy was based in part on an increased understanding of how QAnon messaging is evolving. “We aim to combat this more effectively with this update that strengthens and expands our enforcement against the conspiracy theory movement,” the company said. Facebook also said it expects renewed attempts to evade detection and that it could update its content policies as needed.

The QAnon conspiracy theory centers on the idea that a powerful group of child traffickers control the world and are undermining President Trump with the help of other elites and mainstream news outlets. Last year a Federal Bureau of Investigation field office warned that QAnon and other conspiracies could spark violence in the U.S., and QAnon adherents have discussed future plans to round up or kill members of the supposedly evil cabal.

President Trump in August welcomed the support of QAnon followers and said while he knew little about the movement, he suggested those who subscribe to it are “people who love our country.”

Social-media companies have received mixed reactions to their policies around rule violators, with some arguing that the companies are stifling free speech and others wanting them to take a tougher stance.

LinkedIn, owned by Microsoft Corp., has recently taken steps to remove QAnon posts with misleading information in response to more supporters going public on the career-networking platform. Twitter Inc. has also pledged to increase enforcement against QAnon conspiracy followers.

Policing QAnon content is just one of the broad content-moderation issues that the world’s largest social-media companies are facing. Platforms have been grappling with the spread of misinformation related to the coronavirus pandemic as well as groups connected to the boogaloo movement. Its adherents views’ are wide-ranging, with a focus on overturning authority, according to researchers who track extremist organizations.

Facebook and Twitter both moved Tuesday to place limits on posts by President Trump in which he claimed the coronavirus isn’t as deadly as the common flu. The statement is widely considered false by medical professionals. Facebook removed Mr. Trump’s comment, while Twitter appended a notice to his tweet explaining that it violated its rules on spreading harmful information related to the virus. Twitter said it didn’t remove the tweet because it “may be in the public’s interest” to remain accessible.

A report last month from research firm Graphika Inc. draws a connection between QAnon’s online activities and those who strive to play down the importance of health matters such as vaccinations.

“The QAnon worldview has acted as a catalyst for the convergence of online networked conspiracy communities, anti-[vaccination] and anti-tech alike,” Graphika said in its report. “In our Covid-19 maps, the core QAnon community and the Trump support group were both deeply interconnected on a network level and mutually amplifying each other’s content and narratives.”

—Jeff Horwitz
contributed to this article.



Crafty_Dog

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Turkey vs. FB
« Reply #558 on: October 09, 2020, 03:30:21 AM »


Facebook Tests Turkey's Resolve by Defying Its New Social Media Law
5 MINS READ
Oct 9, 2020 | 10:00 GMT

Facebook’s decision to defy Turkey’s controversial social media law could result in it being effectively banned from the country, as the Turkish government ramps up pressure on U.S. and European content platforms to comply with its censorship demands. This aggressive approach will further stain Ankara’s standing in the West, forcing it to deepen its ties with Russia and China.
According to reports released on Oct. 6, Facebook has allegedly decided not to comply with the law’s requirement that it appoint a local representative to oversee government requests to take down content deemed as offensive or inappropriate. The new regulations, which went into effect Oct. 1, also require social media companies to store Turkish data locally and respond to court orders to take down content within 24 or 48 hours.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) passed the law in July with an aim to reduce government control and oversight of the social media platforms used in the country.

Critics say that the Turkish government will use the new regulations to stifle political opposition to the AKP and limit public discourse against its policies.

Noncompliant companies could see large fines and their website bandwidth for Turkish traffic slowed by 90 percent.
As part of its internet control and social media strategy, the Turkish government will use the new law to aggressively force Facebook and other platforms to take down a broader range of content, but will refrain from effectively banning popular platforms altogether.

Despite its history of internet regulation and cracking down on social media, Ankara knows these platforms are crucial to not only Turkey’s domestic economy, but its ability to spread propaganda supporting the AKP and its policies. So while the new law enables the government to effectively shut down platforms by throttling their bandwidth, Ankara is unlikely to outright do so. Instead, the Turkish government will likely use the threat and intermittent use of throttling bandwidth to shape social media behavior and fine companies for noncompliance.

Turkey’s attempt to control the domestic internet has increased significantly over the past decade. That process has been further accelerated since a coup attempt in 2016 exposed domestic challenges to Erdogan and the AKP.

Out of 65 countries assessed in Freedom House’s 2019 survey and analysis of internet freedom around the world, Turkey was ranked 46 for online freedom, classifying its internet as “not free.”

Facebook’s noncompliance with Turkey's new social media law could result in it being effectively banned from the country, as Ankara ramps up pressure on U.S. and European platforms to censor their content.

Facebook and most other social media companies will likely focus on complying with less egregious local demands on content censorship in order to maintain flexibility and avoid permanent shutdowns. These companies have so far refrained from complying with Turkish authorities’ demands to block content from outside the country. But under the new law, Facebook, Twitter and other internet companies operating in Turkey will continue to face a high number of legal and government requests to take down content. The Turkish government will likely also unveil even more expansive regulations in the future, further fracturing the country’s internet from the rest of the world.

Turkey has a long history of blocking and unblocking popular social media sites, such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Ankara’s heated disputes with YouTube, in particular, have resulted in months- and even year-long bans on the popular video-sharing platform.

Turkey is already one of the most active countries requesting social media companies to take down content. As a part of its transparency reports, Twitter reported that in 2019, Turkey accounted for 41 percent of global legal demands to take down content.

By stifling dissent, Turkey’s expansion of internet controls will further damage its relations with the West, driving Ankara to increase cooperation with Russia, China and Iran. Sporadic throttling of Western internet companies’ operations in Turkey will result in diplomatic spats with the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom and the European Union. This will, in turn, prompt Ankara to more fervently back Russia, China and Iran’s calls for increased digital sovereignty for international regulations on the internet and in establishing cyber norms – thus accelerating Turkey’s drift away from the West.

Ankara will use the new social media regulations and hardline internet policy to target the operations of non-government and human rights organizations active in the country as well — especially those that work closely with opposition parties, Kurdish groups or any other factions of Turkish society seen as adversaries to the AKP.

Turkey will continue to back the creation and growth of domestic alternatives to international social media platforms, though such Turkish platforms have so far struggled to grow their userbases. Ankara will also try to build out its own capacity in terms of physically controlling the internet via stricter data localization requirements and controlling access points into Turkey, though it’s unlikely to adopt a hardline of a policy to build a domestic internet akin to China’s, given Turkey’s greater dependency on online commercial transactions with the West.

Crafty_Dog

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G M

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Back at FaceHugger...
« Reply #563 on: October 14, 2020, 07:22:36 PM »


DougMacG

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https://nypost.com/2020/10/14/facebook-twitter-block-the-post-from-posting/?utm_source=&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=13652

We've been asking this question about the networks and the newspapers for decades, now the goolags, how can they be a 100% monopoly and only serve 40% of the market?  And they are serving that 50% side of the market badly, not keeping subscribers informed of the top stories of the day.

I'm always amazed at what major stories, facts and analyses my highly informed Leftist friends have never seen.  Don't they ever feel betrayed by their screened sources?  I want to hear the bad news about my side - if it's out there.  I hate being wrong, being last to know and putting foot in mouth.  The Left includes the people with the highest degrees.  Don't they want to be in the know?

AOL, MySpace, I mean Facebook, Google, Twitter, could never be replaced by a newer entrant to the market that provides a superior product.  Or could they?

DougMacG

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Goolag, Facebook, Twitter: The revolving door is back
« Reply #566 on: October 15, 2020, 01:13:15 PM »
Twitter Public Policy Director Carlos Monje left the social media company to join the transition team for Joe Biden.  - Source: Linked In, Breitbart

Democrats and media gatekeepers, one and the same.

https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2020/10/15/facebook-and-twitter-censor-biden-bombshells-weeks-after-execs-join-his-transition-team/


ccp

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Dan Bongino has right idea. - drudge turns benedict arnold

so Dan starts his own site where we can read latest news
from our perspective

Drudge which I rarely go to is nothing more then huff report now looked again briefly this am - astonishing how Drudge has suddenly just turned leftist crap and propaganda

I still wonder if Dem operatives threatened Matt to expose he is gay or something like that - just weird.






G M

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Behind the social disease media blackout
« Reply #571 on: October 18, 2020, 02:45:10 PM »

DougMacG

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Orwellian Tech Octopus, twitter vs Biden corruption story
« Reply #572 on: October 20, 2020, 05:55:39 PM »
Glenn Reynolds, the article USA Today would not publish:

BIG TECH BURNED BY BIDEN BLUNDER

Glenn Harlan Reynolds

In my 2019 book, The Social Media Upheaval, I warned that the Big Tech companies — especially social media giants like Facebook and Twitter — had grown into powerful monopolists, who were using their power over the national conversation to not only sell ads, but also to promote a political agenda. That was pretty obvious last year, but it was even more obvious last week, when Facebook and Twitter tried to black out the New York Post’s blockbuster report about emails found on a laptop abandoned by Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s son Hunter.

The emails, some of which have been confirmed as genuine with their recipients, show substantial evidence that Hunter Biden used his position as Vice President Joe Biden’s son to extract substantial payments from “clients” in other countries. There are also photos of Hunter with a crack pipe, and engaging in various other unsavory activities. And they demolished the elder Biden’s claim that he never discussed business with his son.

That’s a big election-year news story. Some people doubted its genuineness, and of course it’s always fair to question a big election-year news story, especially one that comes out shortly before the election. (Remember CBS newsman Dan Rather’s promotion of what turned out to be forged memos about George W. Bush’s Air National Guard service?)

But the way you debate whether a story is accurate or not is by debating. (In the case of the Rather memos, it turned out the font was from Microsoft Word, which of course didn’t exist back during the Vietnam War era.) Big Tech could have tried an approach that fostered such a debate. But instead of debate, they went for a blackout: Both services actually blocked links to the New York Post story. That’s right: They blocked readers from discussing a major news story by a major paper, one so old that it was founded by none other than Alexander Hamilton.

I wasn’t advising them — they tend not to ask me for my opinion — but I would have advised against such a blackout. There’s a longstanding Internet term called “the Streisand effect,” going back to when Barbara Streisand demanded that people stop sharing pictures of her beach house. Unsurprisingly, the result was a massive increase in the number of people posting pictures of her beach house. The Big Tech Blackout produced the same result: Now even people who didn’t care so much about Hunter Biden’s racket nonetheless became angry, and started talking about the story.

As lefty journalist Glenn Greenwald wrote in The Intercept, Twitter and Facebook crossed a line far more dangerous than what they censored. Greenwald writes: “Just two hours after the story was online, Facebook intervened. The company dispatched a life-long Democratic Party operative who now works for Facebook — Andy Stone, previously a communications operative for Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, among other D.C. Democratic jobs — to announce that Facebook was ‘reducing [the article’s] distribution on our platform’: in other words, tinkering with its own algorithms to suppress the ability of users to discuss or share the news article. The long-time Democratic Party official did not try to hide his contempt for the article, beginning his censorship announcement by snidely noting: ‘I will intentionally not link to the New York Post.’”

“Twitter’s suppression efforts went far beyond Facebook’s. They banned entirely all users’ ability to share the Post article — not just on their public timeline but even using the platform’s private Direct Messaging feature.”

“Early in the day, users who attempted to link to the New York Post story either publicly or privately received a cryptic message rejecting the attempt as an ‘error.’ Later in the afternoon, Twitter changed the message, advising users that they could not post that link because the company judged its contents to be ‘potentially harmful.’ Even more astonishing still, Twitter locked the account of the New York Post, banning the paper from posting any content all day and, evidently, into Thursday morning.”

This went badly. The heads Facebook and of Twitter, Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey, are now facing Senate subpoenas, the RNC has filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission, arguing that Twitter’s action in blacking out a damaging story constituted an illegal in-kind donation to the Biden Campaign, and most significantly, everyone is talking about the story now, with many understandably assuming that if the story were false, it would have been debunked rather than blacked out.

CNN’s Jake Tapper tweeted: ”Congrats to Twitter on its Streisand Effect award!!!” Big Tech shot itself in the foot, and it didn’t stop the signal.

Regardless of who wins in November, it’s likely that there will be substantial efforts to rein in Big Tech. As Greenwald writes, “State censorship is not the only kind of censorship. Private-sector repression of speech and thought, particularly in the internet era, can be as dangerous and consequential. Imagine, for instance, if these two Silicon Valley giants united with Google to declare: henceforth we will ban all content that is critical of President Trump and/or the Republican Party, but will actively promote criticisms of Joe Biden and the Democrats.

“Would anyone encounter difficulty understanding why such a decree would constitute dangerous corporate censorship? Would Democrats respond to such a policy by simply shrugging it off on the radical libertarian ground that private corporations have the right to do whatever they want? To ask that question is to answer it.”

“To begin with, Twitter and particularly Facebook are no ordinary companies. Facebook, as the owner not just of its massive social media platform but also other key communication services it has gobbled up such as Instagram and WhatsApp, is one of the most powerful companies ever to exist, if not the most powerful.”

He’s right. And while this heavyhanded censorship effort failed, there’s no reason to assume that other such efforts won’t work in the future. Not many stories are as hard to squash as a major newspaper’s front page expose during an presidential election.

As I wrote in The Social Media Upheaval, the best solution is probably to apply antitrust law to break up these monopolies: Competing companies would police each other, and if they colluded could be prosecuted under antitrust law. There are also moves to strip them of their immunity under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which protects them from being sued for things posted or linked on their sites on the theory that they are platforms, not publishers who make publication decisions. And Justice Clarence Thomas has recently called for the Supreme Court to revisit the lower courts’ interpretation of Section 230, which he argues has been overbroad. A decade ago there would have been much more resistance to such proposals, but Big Tech has tarnished its own image since then.

Had Facebook and Twitter approached this story neutrally, as they would have a decade ago, it would probably already be old news to a degree — as Greenwald notes, Hunter’s pay-for-play efforts were already well known, if not in such detail — but instead the story is still hot. More importantly, their heavy handed action has brought home just how much power they wield, and how crudely they’re willing to wield it. They shouldn’t be surprised at the consequences.

G M

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Crafty_Dog

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George Friedman: Social Media is old fashioned and radically destabilizing.
« Reply #574 on: October 23, 2020, 09:42:25 PM »
October 22, 2020
   

View On Website
Open as PDF
     
Social Media Is Old-Fashioned and Radically Destabilizing
Thoughts in and around geopolitics.
By: George Friedman

The New York Times has reported that the Justice Department is about to bring an antitrust suit against Google specifically targeting Google’s power in online advertising. There are two things to note before the courts issue their ruling. The first is that though Google, Facebook and Twitter all pride themselves on overturning the past – and from a technological point of view they do – their core business model is quite old. Like newspapers and television, they provide readers with free access to content, and in return they are able to advertise to them. By giving readers free content, they can analyze our habits and interests and sell the data to advertisers. Newspapers, radio and television did the same thing.

Second and more important, Google, Facebook and Twitter don’t really create their own content. Newspaper articles, radio programs and TV shows were produced for the readers. Publishers and networks were responsible for what they provided the public, and they had a substantial cost structure that had to generate revenue in a complex, symbiotic relationship. Google, Facebook and Twitter deferred the cost but claimed the responsibility for their content.

Google created a search engine that mapped out the internet, allowing readers to find content they were interested in. Facebook and Twitter simply allowed readers to use their platforms to state their views and read the views of others, and in doing so became the subject of advertising. The key for all three was that at the outset they claimed they were not responsible for their content.

The problem of monopoly in advertising is less critical than the means by which these companies attracted members. The cost for access to their service was zero. Twitter and Facebook were the most radical in this regard. Anyone could create an account without verification of identity. They argued that this was the technological revolution that perfected the first amendment’s right to free speech. Their motive had less to do with the Bill of Rights and more to do with encouraging as many people as possible to express their views, track what they said, and sell access to advertisers based on what they said.

The Bill of Rights does guarantee free speech, but it did not anticipate the notion of total anonymity. Free speech assumes that the speaker is known, that what is said depends on who the speaker is and what the speaker has said in the past – that is, the character of the speaker. All that is impossible through these new media. One person can pretend to be 20 people by opening multiple accounts, and each can have their real identities hidden or claim someone else’s identity. The founders did not expect speech to be divorced from responsibility. Social media specializes in it.

Social media, like TV or newspapers, flourishes on readership. Social media allows its readers to provide the content that attracts readers for free. There is no cost for stating your views, no means to compel the speaker to identify himself and no consequence for slander, lying or mounting campaigns with malicious intent. From their point of view, absent political pressure, the more people that come, the higher the advertising revenue, and the more accounts opened, the greater the claim for membership. The intellectual and moral mayhem that results generates more activity, and that activity is what drives advertising sales.

The key moment in all this was when social media decided to follow a business model from the 1960s. TV was no cost to the viewer, and money was made by the ads that were sold. But with TV, the viewer did not control the content, and we were aware of who produced it. In the social media model, the reader is also the writer, and the cost of entry is zero.

Had a more modern approach been taken, everyone wanting an account would have to pay a fee, however modest, and provide a credit card. To some extent, it could be known who said what, and potential consequences would follow for slander or lies, if not legal then social. But social media’s strategy was so deeply rooted in old media that charging users was verboten. It would cut down on the audience being sold to advertisers.

To me, the fundamental problem of social media is anonymity. It is a place where anyone can say anything and walk away. It was an efficient plan that now meets antitrust laws. But that is not the core issue. The fact that there is both total anonymity and no cost encourages bad-faith actors to use that media and leaves the reader with no way to measure the credibility of the statement or the speaker. It creates equality between dissent and insanity. And there is no one we can shame for what is said unless a speaker volunteers his or her identity. And that segment who wishes to believe what is said can drive the discourse of others in uncontrolled rage.

An antitrust suit is based on the success of a business. The question here is liability, of creating a business that deliberately facilitates the right to speak without being responsible for what you said. Google uses its search engine, and the others use the platform for anonymous claims. The problem is not that they were successful but how they were successful: by selling access to others without being in any way responsible for what they say. That may be changing now, but the real answer is to charge users via a credit card. But that would hurt business.


ccp

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G M

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Not holding my breath waiting for the DOJ act on this...
« Reply #577 on: October 28, 2020, 05:29:06 PM »




ccp

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EFF
« Reply #581 on: November 02, 2020, 09:48:13 AM »
https://www.eff.org/issues/cda230

"EFF works to ensure strong legal protections for Internet intermediaries and endeavors to fight threats that would weaken such protections for intermediaries and users. We realize that a combination of technology policy and law protecting intermediaries ultimately helps uphold freedom of speech online."

Just the opposite has occurred:
as the intermediaries abuse this and THEMSELVES CENSOR FREE SPEECH WITHOUT ANY LIABILITY

 :-(

« Last Edit: November 02, 2020, 01:56:55 PM by Crafty_Dog »

G M

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Crafty_Dog

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ccp

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western journal shut down on google search
« Reply #585 on: November 11, 2020, 08:08:43 AM »
unless I put in www.westernjournal.com

in address box

when I search for it under google

it only comes up in "twitter " feed
which it self is leftist censor site

just another example of Democrat partisan propaganda

G M

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DougMacG

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Re: Imagine if I told you...
« Reply #587 on: November 15, 2020, 07:40:54 AM »
https://summit.news/2020/11/13/video-are-phone-networks-now-censoring-links-about-election-fraud/

We are so close to being communist China or worse. 

I thought by now the newest movement would be a revolution in privacy. 

ccp

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I remember being so skeptical at this idea when discussing with a friend in the very early 80s

that this could or would "happen here "

the socialist academics did there job well , while the Elephant slept for decades

some still sleep amazingly



ccp

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Apple
built in software to allow them to bypass firewalls and VPN

this is beyond outrageous

whey the hell won't legislatures do anything?

woops I forgot .  They do nothing while Trump is in office other then get him out .

these tech kings need to be tarred and feathered

G M

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Monopoly oppression
« Reply #592 on: November 19, 2020, 10:51:20 AM »


Crafty_Dog

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G M

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DougMacG

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Report: Google biased
« Reply #596 on: November 27, 2020, 06:46:49 AM »

ccp

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Google bias
« Reply #597 on: November 27, 2020, 07:05:32 AM »
who knew?

EVERYONE who keeps up with current events news and politics

who cares ?

only the right.

G M

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G M

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Re: Coming Soon...
« Reply #599 on: December 01, 2020, 07:47:11 PM »
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8994911/Town-halls-harvest-millions-personal-details-including-youre-unfaithful-debt.html

Good thing that can't happen here!

In case you were wondering when Chinese style Social Credit scores would be combined with "Minority Report" Pre-crime policing in the UK, well here we are!


https://www.cipfa.org/services/data-analytics/covid19-oneview-service

How does the service work?
Stage One: Local authorities provide xantura with an initial set of data extracts from different departments via a secure data transfer process. To lessen the impact on IT, existing, standard data sets are requested and these would typically include:

your Operation Shield local sub-set of the circa 1.5m individuals the government and NHS believe are most at risk
your revenues and benefits data – enabling you to see information across age, employment status and current benefits received
your adult social care data – enabling you to better understand pre-existing support services and medical conditions from both structured data and unstructured case notes
your census data – including education, attendance and exclusion enabling a better understanding of wider vulnerability.
Stage Two: Xantura run this data against an expanding set of pre-defined risk factors related to the virus and associated sanctions and provide you with a report that prioritises all households by number of risk factors and enables you to filter by each individual risk factor.

Stage Three: This report is delivered to you through a secure, online case management system that enables you to easily analyse the output, and support your staff with what further information they should gather when they contact households and individuals.

Stage Four: The case management system also enables your staff to input additional information and select what action they have taken with that household to create a robust audit trail of actions.

Stage Five: In addition to the case management system, xantura will provide you with a full suite of standard reports and dashboards that provide high level summaries by demographic, risk factor and geography.