Re: It’s the algorithms on trial [Hold Up Here, Chief]
From a previous post: ... actively push content to which you are not subscribed at you.
I'm not defending Big Electronic Media, and B.E.M. probably is doing most of the things they're accused of, but hold up here, Chief.
First, all this -- the lawsuit and many of the comments here -- totally disregard peoples' moral and legal responsibilities!
It does not matter how many people I hear ranting on soapboxes in the public square that I should kill people of sub-group X, nor how many of my (non-electronic) friends tell me I should kill people of sub-group X, nor how many printed posters I see on building walls telling me I should kill people of sub-group X, nor how many books or leaflets I read telling me I should kill people of sub-group X, nor how many electronic posts I read telling me I should kill people of sub-group X, nor how many videos I see telling me I should kill people of sub-group X, nor how many chatbots tell me I should go out and kill people of sub-group X. It does not matter whether or not I spent time in an "echo chamber" of people writing/saying I should kill people of sub-group X. If I go out and kill someone of sub-group X, I am held legally and morally responsible for having done so.
This should apply to everyone else, as well (in reality, rich, powerful, influential people receive special treatment, but it should apply to them, as well).
"He told me to do it." is neither a legal nor a moral defense.
Second, though B.E.M. is using all the psychological tricks available to it to encourage people to watch their recommended videos, posts, and adverts, the viewers are not strapped into a chair with some horror-movie-like contraption preventing them from turning their eyeballs aside from the screen. They're not being forced to watch. They can get up and walk away, or watch a different video, any time they choose to do so.
Third, from TFA: "By his own admission, Gendron, a vulnerable teenager, was not racist until he became addicted to social media apps and was lured, unsuspectingly, into a psychological vortex by defective social media applications designed, marketed, and pushed out by Social Media Defendants," If this teenager truly was as "vulnerable" (in other words, exceptionally dumb-ass, for even a teen-ager) as the lawsuit claims, he should have been advised and monitored by his parents regarding his social media use, just as with tobacco, drugs, alcohol, sex, and firearms. It appears they failed to do this, since if they had, they would have seen some warning signs and (should have) acted upon those warning signs.