deadryn

the stars set in the west.

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posts from @deadryn tagged #politique

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Campster
@Campster

What makes this real fun is when you realize that TikTok quietly hides comments with external links by default to keep people in its ecosystem, but doesn't tell you. So if you try to, say, cite a source to prove disinformation your comment appears to you but no one else. This further confuses threads and makes pointing to factual data or debunking someone's bullshit all but impossible.

I've become convinced that TikTok is an amazing platform for misinformation, if only because it is built to destroy context. Videos appear out of order via an algorithm, no one can link to anything external to cite sources or point to authority, and surrounding discourse is frayed and scrambled. It's shockingly easy for absolute nonsense to take root and spread among people who want to believe it unchallenged.

This is part of how you get the "Venezuelan gangs have taken over multiple apartment complexes in Colorado, the cops have ceded the ground to them, and our only hope is the Hell's Angels who have promised to come in and solve the problem with racialized violence" story in right wing circles. It's also how you get the "Chase Bank Glitch" story where dozens upon dozens of TikTokers posted about how gullible rubes are doing a viral check fraud scheme en masse when there's no real evidence of that ever happening.

It's an entire platform built to facilitate stories of people eating tide pods or that someone put razorblades in Halloween candy.


vectorpoem
@vectorpoem

Eventually all for-profit social media is just going to have a bar along the bottom:

YOU SHOULD BE ANGRY           YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID           YOU ARE UNDER ATTACK           YOU SHOULD BE ANGRY           YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID           YOU ARE UNDER ATTACK           YOU SHOULD BE ANGRY           YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID           YOU ARE UNDER ATTACK           

(thanks @sirocyl for the correct CSS for the chyron scroller!)


sirocyl
@sirocyl

YOU SHOULD BE ANGRY           YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID           YOU ARE UNDER ATTACK           YOU SHOULD BE ANGRY           YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID           YOU ARE UNDER ATTACK           YOU SHOULD BE ANGRY           YOU SHOULD BE AFRAID           YOU ARE UNDER ATTACK           



fullmoon
@fullmoon

The primary problem is that while the answers which ChatGPT and other generative AI technologies produce have a high rate of being incorrect, they typically look like the answers might be good and the answers are very easy to produce. There are also many people trying out ChatGPT and other generative AI technologies to create answers, without the expertise or willingness to verify that the answer is correct prior to posting. Because such answers are so easy to produce, a large number of people are posting a lot of answers. The volume of these answers (thousands) and the fact that the answers often require a detailed read by someone with significant subject matter expertise in order to determine that the answer is actually bad has effectively swamped our volunteer-based quality curation infrastructure.



76f0e4667ed32667d2bfc063699b246e
@76f0e4667ed32667d2bfc063699b246e
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deadryn
@deadryn

It's hilarious what companies think they can get away with irt volunteer and unpaid labor while also like... being soley made up of that labor. Like even reddit didn't lean so heavily on their mods as to have entire pieces of site infrastructure held up by them.



Coati
@Coati

From illegal mining operations to an on-going coup attempt, what is happening between Twitter and Brazil?

Why was Twitter Suspended?

It started when Twitter refused to follow orders from the STF (Federal Supreme Court, headed by the minister Alexandre de Moraes) to take down accounts that spread misinformation during the 2022 elections and participated in the 2023 coup attempt (more on that later). By refusing to cooperate, Twitter infringed laws of national security and accumulated a fine equivalent to U$3,2 million.

Musk also refused to pay the fine. STF threatened to arrest the Twitter representatives in Brazil if the fine didn't get paid, which caused Musk to remove Twitter offices from Brazil. It goes without saying that having a company operating in Brazil without any legal representatives is another crime. Moraes gave Twitter 24h to elect a representative in the country, another offer that Musk refused. After this point, the suspension of Twitter was inevitable, and with it, the 20 million Brazilian users. The suspension should be lifted when Musk pays his fines and elects a company representative here. Masterful gambit, Elon.

It didn't help that Musk kept sharing epic memes comparing Alexandre de Moraes to Voldemort, and an AI generated image illustrating the Federal Judge behind bars.

Moraes suggested at some point that VPN apps should be taken out of App stores, and that anyone "caught" using a VPN to use Twitter (somehow) would be fined to an equivalent of U$8k. The measure was most likely taken to prevent big accounts - such as that of Brazilian politicians - to use the website. He later backtracked on both decisions.

All this debacle had some people talk about a supposed "judicial dictatorship". This term has a history.

Dictatorship??!!??

So, a bit of historical context.
2022 was a presidential election year in Brazil. The polls were disfavorable to Bolsonaro (the ex-military, far-right president at the time), indicating that Lula (a social democrat, ex-president from 2003-2011) had chances of winning it in the first turn. Bolsonaro's Brazilian military instincts kicked in and he summoned his ministers to plan a coup beforehand WHILE FUCKING FILMING THEMSELVES DOING IT.

The ministers were hesitant about the idea of a coup, citing mainly the lack of international support they'd have for it. A pitiful attempt at a coup was carried out in January 8th 2023, copy and pasting US' January 6th "insurrection", resulting in the partial destruction of government buildings followed by the arrest of the people who participated in it.

Suffice to say, the coup was unsuccessful.

The lesson was learned. Brazil wouldn't be able to support another military dictatorship without international support. Far-right pundits immediately started working towards building that support as soon as Lula got elected. The plan was to frame Brazil as a nation that abandoned democracy to become a left-wing dictatorship. Now every move the government did to enforce it's own laws against hate speech or punish those responsible for the coup attempt, would be denounced as an act of authoritarianism and violation of human rights.

In March this year, Eduardo Bolsonaro (one of Bolsonaro's sons and currently a congressman) lead an informal press release in front of Washington's capitol (he was barred from making a hearing inside the capitol, you see) advocating for American politicians to impose sanctions to Brazil due to it's "Judiciary dictatorship" and "violation of human rights" (read: The imprisonment of the people who trashed the congress buildings during the "coup attempt")

Here's Paulo Figueiredo, vlogger, and the grandson of a Brazilian military dictator, on PragerU spewing out the bullshit that Lula's election was illegitimate. The constant parallels he makes between Brazil and US, as well as the repetition of the mantra at the end "here, like in Brazil" make it a naked attempt to gather sympathy from the American far-right.

The propaganda efforts might be having some effect, since some Republican representatives have been regurgitating Brazilian conservative talk-point verbatim. Here's Maria Elvira Salazar doing just that (hey isn't that Paulo Figueiredo at the end?)

Be suspicious whenever you see the Brazilian dictatorship talking point being spread. It is an on-going attempt to undermine our democracy.

The far-right has a very clear strategy to spread their propaganda, and Twitter had a part in it. From the top 10 most used social medias in Brazil, Twitter was the least popular (losing to Whatsapp, Youtube, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, Linkedin, Messenger, Kwai and Pinterest). So the objective of the far-right factions working in there was to mainly shape the public opinion of Americans. Elon Musk never says anything about Brazilian law and government that a Bolsonaro supporter hadn't said before in the exact same words. The country's history with Starlink further supports the connection between Elon Musk and the far-right.

Starlink in Brazil

Starlink started it's operations in Brazil as of January of 2022. The only reason why they were able to operate here was because Bolsonaro's government interfered with Anatel (the National Telecommunications Agency) to approve the company's contract despite many irregularities. Musk promoted his company's presence in the country by saying he would bring internet access to 19 thousand schools in remote locations across the Amazon.

From March to July of this year, at least 50 Starlink antennaes were found in illegal mining operations in the Amazon. Starlink refuses to share information about their users even though they have precise data that would allow to identify and localize illegal mining activities; which is worrying because Starlink is the preferred tool of communication of the Amazon organized crime.

No schools have been connected to Starlink as of yet.

In conclusion

Twitter was the main site for many Brazilian artists to share and sell their creations, and it's suspension certainly impacts their lives. These people have the right to be upset; it's getting harder and harder to be an artist every day. But with how Twitter has been run, and it's growing support for nazi-adjacent groups and attacks against our government, I can't say that blocking Twitter was a bad thing.

What is happening to Twitter right now is just one chapter of an on-going narrative dispute, fueled by the desire of some political sections for the rise of the far-right once again. A far-right that has a lot to gain from being able to facilitate the illegal operations of logging and mining in the Amazon, and who can only get to power again by challenging the Brazilian democracy in the American public opinion.

I don't want this blog post to sound like an Alexandre de Moraes apologia. He is not a hero either and he's certainly only doing this to support his own interests; which right now just so happens to coincide with defending Brazilian sovereignty.

I'll echo the sentiments I said in a previous post and say that I hope that Brazil becomes only the first one in a wave of anti-Twitter sentiment across the globe.


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numberonebug
@numberonebug

something absolutely broke in me finding out that the Kohanim movement's plan for the third temple includes underground parking lol. That feels like satire. Car centric locus of national connection with the devine.


Also ahh I am concerned learning just how close to mainstream these fuckers are

Anyways yeah, anyone saying "oh Jews should be allowed to pray on the mount like Muslims can" is lying to you, they're trying to ensnare you. Their goal is to level everything there and put up a parking lot with a rigidly enforced theocratic order.

Jews should not be allowed up there until the Messiah comes and that's not fucking happening until we have peace


shel
@shel

American extremist theocrats: We must defend the sanctity of single family zoning

Israeli extremist theocrats: The Third Temple will be built on top of an underground parking garage, of course.


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