CNN Contributor Urges: Stop Calling Facebook a Tech Company (cnn.com) 157
An anonymous reader quotes a CNN opinion piece by Stanford business school lecturer David Dodson:
"Senator, we run ads." That's what Mark Zuckerberg told Senator Orrin Hatch earlier this year during his congressional testimony when asked to describe Facebook's business model. The 84-year-old senator was later mocked on social media for not understanding modern technology. But I'd argue that the wily senior senator understood Facebook's business quite well. Hatch was simply getting Mark Zuckerberg to say it out loud. Sometimes it takes an old guy to call out a youngster....
For media companies that run ads, especially ones that use public networks, we tell them that they can't lie or mislead, that it's not okay to advertise cigarettes to children or push prescription drugs without including the risks. We have laws governing deceptive advertisements and Truth in Advertising laws. Companies that run ads can't say a car gets 40 miles per gallon unless it's true. They can't say a movie won an Academy Award unless it did. If you say the wool comes from New Zealand, it must.... When nearly half of Americans get their news from Facebook, its newsfeed should be subjected to the same standards of fairness, decency and accuracy as newspapers, television and other media outlets....
Calling Facebook a tech company is how we got into so much trouble. It's also why, when Zuckerberg answered Hatch, the 34-year-old billionaire smiled in a way that was interpreted by many as smug. As if the senator was too antiquated to grasp the complexities of Facebook's revenue model. I see it differently. The company founder was offering a grin of acknowledgment. The jig was up. Facebook places ads just like most media companies do and should be held to the same overall standards.
For media companies that run ads, especially ones that use public networks, we tell them that they can't lie or mislead, that it's not okay to advertise cigarettes to children or push prescription drugs without including the risks. We have laws governing deceptive advertisements and Truth in Advertising laws. Companies that run ads can't say a car gets 40 miles per gallon unless it's true. They can't say a movie won an Academy Award unless it did. If you say the wool comes from New Zealand, it must.... When nearly half of Americans get their news from Facebook, its newsfeed should be subjected to the same standards of fairness, decency and accuracy as newspapers, television and other media outlets....
Calling Facebook a tech company is how we got into so much trouble. It's also why, when Zuckerberg answered Hatch, the 34-year-old billionaire smiled in a way that was interpreted by many as smug. As if the senator was too antiquated to grasp the complexities of Facebook's revenue model. I see it differently. The company founder was offering a grin of acknowledgment. The jig was up. Facebook places ads just like most media companies do and should be held to the same overall standards.
Facebook has ads? (Score:4, Insightful)
Users are the product! Facebook doesn't need to run ads, the companies and political parties already know to come to Facebook to buy users!
And they really do invent tech. (Score:3)
So did significant improvements to HBase, PyTorch, Haxl, PHP compilers, and much more.
And Facebook is inventing sophisticated AI hardware (https://code.fb.com/ml-applications/the-next-step-in-facebook-s-ai-hardware-infrastructure/ [fb.com]) including semiconductor design (https://www.networkworld.com/article/3268974/hardware/is-facebook-looking-to-build-its-own-data-center-chips.html [networkworld.com]). and is the primary contributor to the Open Compute Project's work on
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Facebook also created a compression standard, zStandard or zstd. This is being used as a mainstream compression algorithm, replacing LZMA/xz for a number of applications. It doesn't get as much compression as "xz -v9e", but it is a lot faster, so achieves a better balance, and decompression is also faster.
Are banks tech companies? (Score:3)
Big banks & financial firms develop tons of cutting-edge tech as a platform to support their core business. Not to mention governments.
Does that mean banks and the gov't are tech companies?
(Open sourcing is an unrelated matter. Note that plenty of true "tech" companies don't open source anything, but the US government does so big-time.)
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I was suggesting that they are more scary because they are a technology leader.
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In that case I suggest you go a little easier on the superlatives next time, because you may not have meant it, but it looked as if you were praising them.
And doing technology as a byproduct of your actual goal is not new, so no matter their technological prowess, they are an advertising company.
Mad magazine has ads. The Onion has ads (Score:2)
Mad Magazine has ads. The Onion has ads. The *ads* are held to a certain "truth in advertising" standard. That does NOT mean the stories in Mad magazine have to be approved by the administration, or any other government entity.
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Huh? Mad magazine is well known for not having ads so as to satirize without fear. To quote publisher Bill Gaines, "We long ago decided we couldn't take money from Pepsi-Cola and make fun of Coca-Cola."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Never seen an actual Onion magazine
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Onion publishes a newspaper, freely available on the street in some cities.
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Yes, that's why I mentioned never seeing one.
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They used to publish a newspaper - that ended in 2013 unfortunately :(
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Oh, that's too bad. I moved away, but used to like getting them as I got on the subway in NYC.
Re:Mad magazine has ads. (Score:2)
I didn't know about their unusual policy of not advertising unrelated products, but they have advertised products related to Mad, and those ads are subject to truth in advertising laws. The point is we don't have similar "truth in articles" laws that allow the government to come after you for printing things it doesn't agree are true. Having ads doesn't mean the articles have to be true.
(Though if you engage in outright libel, the *victim* can sue.)
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True. What Mad shows is that private enterprise can have a lot of power over what is said as well. While not put in jail power, it can be take away means of making a living power.
Irony (Score:1, Funny)
Stop calling CNN a news company.
Found the Fox News retard. (Score:1)
Compared to Fox or Breitbart, Sesame Street is a news company AND more fact-based, and probably employs more trustworthy actors even if they have to wear muppet outfits - as they do so knowingly.
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Do you disagree with the relevant studies [politifact.com]? Or are you just unable to read them?
Free speech should not include fraud and misrepresentation, which is what Fox delivers under the rubric of "News." We are cutting our own throats as a society by allowing them to do that.
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While I agree that Fox is the worst of the bunch - though not by much over MSNBC - I should point out that you are defending CNN, which according to your own link lies 22% of the time. A supposed "news" network lying 1 out of every 5 times they open their mouth is disqualifying IMHO. TV cable news channels make you dumber and cater to the worst part of you - all of them.
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Yes, I get that. But if you are using the numbers presented in the linked story, then CNN is guilty of the same things as Fox - just not quite to the same extent. If you personally are willing to tolerate 22% failure on Politifact checks, and someone else is willing to tolerate 58% failure, then you are both doing the same thing except with a different threshold of tolerance.
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If you read back you'll see I say "... I agree Fox is the worst of the bunch". So, yeah.
But if you "like facts" you'll just stop watching cable news.
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Fox never did either.
Did Fox News Sue for the ‘Right to Lie’? [snopes.com] FALSE
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How do Google and Facebook stack up in terms of tech that they have introduced to the world?
My guess is that google has produced more technologies that have been picked up and used by others. They also failed to become a big "social media" player (google+ going away soon). So one might argue that they are a bit of a tech/media hybrid.
Extra credit: how do those two compare with other "tech" companies of the pa
Anonymous Slashdot contributer urges: (Score:1)
Stop Calling CNN A News Channel
They have a point... (Score:1)
"Data theft company catering to the clueless" is less buzzy but more honest.
This is like art (Score:5, Informative)
You can argue all day about whether a creative work has merit, but arguing about whether it's art is ridiculous. Facebook sure as hell isn't in the hospitality business, or manufacturing. Their technology is all in advertising, but technology has been used in advertising as long as there's been advertising. Of course Facebook is a tech company, just like an advertisement in a magazine is art.
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... factual statements from some conservative populists (e.g., Ann Coulter) ...
Ann Coulter made factual statements in public? I'd like to see the video. How big an ocean of lies and strategically convenient omissions were those little factual statements floating in?
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TFA is stupid. There are no special restrictions on "media companies". Laws and regulations on fraudulent and misleading ads apply to ANYONE doing advertising, whether it is a Madison Avenue advertising firm, Facebook, or an individual posting a Craigslist ad.
Calling Facebook a "media company" instead of a "technology company" makes no difference whatsoever.
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They are not a media company or a tech company, everyone is being quite explicit, they are a direct delivery advertising agency. They are an advertising platform, that uses social media as bait to get people in and then uses psychological manipulation techniques to keep them hooked. They pretty much are a dickbrain corporation, not giving one fuck about what they do or they harm they cause, as long as they generate maximum profits. They should be held legally liable for the advertisements they show, if fals
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Calling Facebook a "media company" instead of a "technology company" makes no difference whatsoever.
Well, a "tech" company will have an easier time getting H-1B visas granted, as opposed to a "media" company.
But I can't imagine that Facebook would need any H-1Bs . . .
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This has no legal weight, but the author seems to be arguing that this is how we need to start thinking about Facebook if we want to put into m
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I think the argument is that we should categorise companies according to how they generate their revenue. In that sense Google and Facebook are ad agencies, Apple is a consumer electronics company, and Microsoft is a software/business IT services company.
Okay, but you can be an ad agency without being technical like Facebook or Google are. Both of them are major OSS contributors, both of them actually develop new algorithms to push the state of the art of what they are doing... they're not merely using others' tech, they are actively developing technology used by others, which is why they are technology companies. They are also advertising agencies. These things aren't exclusive! But I reiterate, arguing that Facebook or Google aren't tech companies is well
Just as much as google (Score:3)
Google is an ad company too. That's where they make their money.
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Google is an ad company too. That's where they make their money.
More than Google, actually, because Google (er, Alphabet) has been diversifying. As a percentage of revenue, Alphabet's ad income has been falling steadily for years. It's on track to fall below 80% in the next year or so. Ad revenues are still rising, mind you, but the revenue from other areas is rising faster. Waymo, in particular, is poised to start generating many billions annually in the next few years. It wouldn't surprise me if ad revenue falls below 50% by 2023.
Facebook gets more than 98% of its
Re: Just as much as google (Score:3)
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That's an optimistic assessment of Waymo's technology. All reports are they still aren't able to send cars out without human drivers, unfortunately. It's good in most cases, but getting the last few percent is harder than the first 90 percent.
No, many people have ridden in Waymo cars with no one behind the wheel. Waymo is being conservative and the now-operational commercial service is still using safety drivers, but that won't last long, at least in the current area of operations.
And it isn't necessary to get the last few percent to offer a useful service. Imagine, for example, that the cars can safely pull over when they need to, until a remote driver can address whatever situation the car is unable to handle unassisted.
Re: Just as much as google (Score:2)
Re: Just as much as google (Score:1)
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They also make money from businesses that use G Suite.
And consumers that pay for extra online storage on Google drive (I do).
And Google Fi, their wireless cell service (I use this, too, sooo much better and cheaper than verizon).
And Google Fiber, their internet service (I don't use this but would if it was offered in my area).
I also use Google domains and pay for registration through them and Virus Total which Alphabet owns and is an invaluable free service.
So yeah, they sell ads, but they are not wholly de
I think its worse than that (Score:5, Interesting)
Facebook is not a newspaper. Its more like a town square where people are going about browsing in various shops, gossipping with their neighbors and hanging out. To shout fire in such a place and cause a stampede which leads to deaths is not an exercise of the first amendment. We need to go after Facebook with public order laws not just truth in advertizing laws
Christmas in the Park (Score:3)
Think of all the Christmas Markets which get setup around this time. They need permits and its the job of the organizer to provide security (or pay the police dept for it). Facebook has setup the largest Christmas in the Park and not spent anything on security. So yeah we need to take their permit away and shut them down till they spend enough on security to ensure the safety of the general public attending.
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It's a long read, but please teach yourself about the origins of "Fire in a crowded theatre" before using it to try and hack down the First Amendment again.
https://www.popehat.com/2012/0... [popehat.com]
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Because it is none of the things you characterise it as.
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The original phrase is "falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic." To this day, that is still banned in the US. That is, false speech directed to and likely to incite imminent lawless action (IE, a riot). Now, it's a tortured leap of logic to say that justifiably banned speech also justifies banning anti-war advocacy, as the 1919 verdict held. It was the latter ban that was struck down decades later, not the former.
Facebook is a ... (Score:5, Funny)
... personal data whore.
The other big box data stores like Apple, Google, Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter are particularly pleased that Facebook is at the lead of the media and legislation bow shock.
Well doh! (Score:5, Informative)
Of course FB is an advertising company that tries to hide behind the fiction of "we're just connecting people!" Isn't that the BS that every marketer since the snake in the garden has pushed?
Wake up sheeple, our economy, our nation (and every other industrial nation), and our very existence depends on consumerism, and therefore marketing. This is a doublethink that makes it nearly impossible to perceive the true insidious nature of marketing -- lies for profit.
But it'snot their ads (Score:2)
Facebook's model is not that dissimilar to
Re:But it's not their ads (Score:2)
I understand I'm getting old and it's getting harder and harder to monitor this stuff. But seems to me if you use your resources to broadcast such blatant bullshit then the resulting avalanche of crap needs to, and will, fall on your head.
Oh, the company that bought the ad time went broke yesterday? Guess what. They planned to do that. You chose to take their money and
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There's some reading about the basics (from Kansas of all places). First one that came up on the search, so there it is. Places that carries ads (such as a newspaper or like Facebook) have the right to refuse anything they deem might be offensive. That's not too hard to understand, and if you are getting old, you should already know that. That doesn't mean the medium (whether it's a newspaper or Facebook) has an obligation to check the veracity of every ad that comes
The fun of doing more than ads (Score:3)
Let the users be the "publishers" and have the full protection of been a "utility".
Now that big tech wants to ban, report, detect and curate users they have become more than just an ad company.
Wonder when the full protection of the Communications Decency Act stops when a platform becomes a publisher?
Want art great Section 230 to stay? Just let your users content pass.
Start to publish and take political sides? Become a partisan censor?
What was government protected allowed platforms to grow.
Try for algorithmic and human political censorship and the gov free expression legal protections stop as the "ad" company is now just another publisher.
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Thats what made US tech grow and stay fun and free. US tech had legal tools like the Communications Decency Act to ensure they could keep working rather than stop to get legal questions over ever users comment, link, image, cartoon.
For that utility like protection, a user is the publisher not the "ad" site.
Can a "utility" say they won't connect a service as they don't like the past "politics" of a consumer?
Does the wat
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I agree completely, but they're a cab company "with an app".
Have cab companies realized they should build apps too? Maybe they have. I don't take cabs very often.
And if the cab companies can't develop their own apps, why can't a 3rd party step in and deal out fares to several cab companies? I don't particularly care if my cab driver is from Yellow Cab or some other cab company. I just want the one who will get here first. They can display available fares to cab drivers and they can click that they're
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But Uber was the first one with an app as far as I'm aware.
They were one of the earlier ones, but by no means the first. Uber was the first however to have an almost unlimited stream of VC money and a willingness to simply break the law until it won.
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Which raises an interesting question. What was it about Uber that got them the investors over companies like Lyft and others?. I've only used one of those jitney services once and it wasn't either Uber or Lyft and I don't recall their name.
But the driver arrived promptly which is probably why I didn't call an actual cab company. Those bastards have left me hanging or "ghosted" me too many times in the pas
The cynical side of me thinks it's just that they had no morals and were willing to beg forgiveness
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Which raises an interesting question. What was it about Uber that got them the investors over companies like Lyft and others?. I've only used one of those jitney services once and it wasn't either Uber or Lyft and I don't recall their name.
Well, in the case of Uber vs Lyft, Uber was simply first. They launched their modern service in SF in 2011, it was 2013 that Zimride changed its name to Lyft and basically started competing with Uber. Lyft also started out in Cornell, while Uber was a Bay Area company, and being so close to the California tech scene probably gave Uber an initial boost.
Zuck an Online Marketer. (Score:2)
Shut down (Score:1)
I think the only real solution here is to shut down the internet.
Where lies the responsibility? (Score:2)
It seems to me the summary has misunderstood where the liability for lying in an ad is placed. It's with the advertiser, not the media where the ad is placed. You can't sue a newspaper for Ford running an ad in it that lies about mileage. If that were the case, that newspapers were required to fact check every ad someone pays them to print, it seems to me that would be the end of advertising.
Documentary exposes flaws in the Facebook system. (Score:3)
That's an excellent documentary, especially Part 2. The Facebook system is seriously flawed, Part 2 says. In several countries people have died because of Facebook posts by destructive people.
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Nobody ever died from a Facebook post. They may have died because of the actions of mentally ill individuals reacting to things they saw on Facebook, but they could have seen those things anywhere. Unstable buildings can kill people, but in order for Facebook to be involved in a death, unstable people are required.
Lots of people want to use Facebook as an excuse for their actions, but that is not how it works. It doesn't matter where you go, there are liars everywhere and checking up on things before reacti
"Nobody ever died from a Facebook post." Wrong. (Score:2)
Social media managers, especially the Facebook managers interviewed for the linked PBX Frontline documentary, say they have no responsibility.
"News" without an editor is a social problem that existed far less before the Internet became available because it was too e
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As is explained in the documentary, people are accepting social media as news.
I might accept a blog post as news, depending on the blogger. But blindly trusting any source is just daft, especially for media which is easily faked.
Most people aren't logically-minded. (Score:3)
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Bullocks.
Not taking the word of any rando on the internet as gospel fact without verification from a more legitimate source is damn near the first lesson one learns when getting on the internet for the first time. And that's been the case since the days of usenet, when it was mostly university and industry people who ostensibly should have been more reliable in their veracity than the general public. If, after the first week, you've not noticed that BS abounds, and you're not verifying or disregarding cla
um (Score:3)
When nearly half of Americans get their news from Facebook, its newsfeed should be subjected to the same standards of fairness, decency and accuracy as newspapers, television and other media outlets....
OK, first of all, "newspapers, television and other media outlets" are not in any way synonymous with "fairness, decency and accuracy".
That said, Facebook is nothing like those things anyway. A Facebook feed is a crazy quilt mix of stuff your friends posted, ads, random crap FB thinks you might be interested in, random crap that pushes their political point of view, etc.
None of this can end well. There is no way that regulation can ensure "fairness, decency and accuracy".
With a hat tip to Winston Churchill, free speech is the worst way of handling this ... except for all the other ways.
FB Urges.. (Score:1, Funny)
Stop calling CNN a news organization
How about instead (Score:2)
of labeling companies with a single arbitrary label we instead list the things they are involved in to help get a clearer picture of what companies are and aren't.
Calling Facebook a technology company instead of an advertisement provider is silly.
Calling Facebook an advertisement provider instead of a social network is silly.
Calling Facebook a social network instead of an open source software developer is silly.
Calling Facebook an open source software developer instead of a VR company is silly.
Legal precedence (Score:1)
Stop calling the people of CNN journalists (Score:2)
CNN is nothing but the left wing version of fox news.
Facebook is a databroker (Score:2)
"Facebook, longtime friend of data brokers, becomes their stiffest competition"
https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]
"Facebook, the new king of databrokers?"
https://www.wired.com/insights... [wired.com]
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The link you posted appears to have some facts comparing Vietnam to Mexico but then leaps to the illogical conclusion that it is the result of "culture and genetics."
I could see making the argument that it's at least partly due to "culture", but I don't believe it's "genetics" especially given the genetic diversity in places like Mexico which had a caste system [wikipedia.org] based on "race". In paintings they often portrayed 16 different classes of people based upon how "pure" their Spanish roots are.
But to some Americ