![]() ![]() Relationships formed by algorithms surpassed relationships formed by human introductions in 2013. Very large-scale experiments have shown that social media can change voting behavior, can change how we exercise, certainly how we shop, how we date. It's something that actually changes us.ĪRAL: Absolutely. MARTIN: You're saying that social media isn't something that just we experience. I thought it was appropriate to have a book that asks, what can we do to really fix the social media morass we find ourselves in? ![]() I've seen its evolution and also the techno utopianism and dystopianism. ![]() Why I wrote the book - I've been researching social media for 20 years. We showed that was true of false news as well. And if you read the sociology literature, we gain in status when we share novel information because it looks like we're in the know or because we have access to inside information. So if you read the cognitive science literature, human attention is drawn to novelty. The why is because of what we called the novelty hypothesis. And we found that false news traveled farther, faster, deeper and more broadly than the truth in every category of information that we studied. So, first of all, why is that? And is that what made you want to write this book?ĪRAL: Well, in that study, which we published in Science, we found - we studied all the verified true and false news that spread on Twitter over 10 years. MARTIN: So people who follow tech probably know your work and may know your name because in 2018, you and two colleagues made headlines when you published a study that found that lies travel faster than truth online. His new book is called "The Hype Machine: How Social Media Disrupts Our Elections, Our Economy, And Our Health - And How We Must Adapt." And Sinan Aral is with us now to tell us more. And he uses this experience to describe in lay terms how social media actually works. He's also invested in tech companies and consulted with some of the most prominent tech companies in the world. Sinan Aral teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT. And to reap the benefits of these technologies and to avoid being victimized by them, we need to better understand them. A new book from a data scientist and entrepreneur argues that that is by design, and thus, social media, like any powerful tool, has both promise and peril. Related: is another site that aggregates MP3 blog posts and links (it’s searchable too).In recent years, many of us have been thinking about and, in fact, worrying about how social media is affecting our daily lives, everything from how we vote to how we think we should look. But does Mark have a point? Anthony from the Hype Machine responds, “I’ve created this site to let people find something new and to also facilitate discovery of quality bloggers, but in my case it happens in a sequence which seems to make some people uncomfortable: people listen to music first then read the posts.” He’ll also remove a blog if the author doesn’t want it included in the site. MP3 bloggers bitching about having their content hijacked? Hmmm. We get special permission from bands and labels to post what we do, and then this douche comes along and hijacks our shit.” Nonetheless, some MP3 bloggers feel like, well, I’ll just quote Robot Mark’s comment: “As an mp3 blogger, I personally don’t really like it. This means that bloggers’ bandwidth is not used. The songs are served via Coral, a service that caches frequently accessed files across a widely distributed network of servers. It’s like having an online radio station made up of MP3 blog selections. The site takes individual songs posted at various MP3 blogs and then links the tracks to its database, displays them on the front page, and pops ‘em all into a Flash player (or your own media player if you prefer). The Hype Machine aggregates songs posted at MP3 blogs - as Stereogum puts it, it’s “audio RSS for Generation Lazy.” “Audio RSS” at the Hype Machine Matt 7 comments ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |