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14 votes
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Report: Potential New York Times lawsuit could force OpenAI to wipe ChatGPT and start over
75 votes -
Four former VICE Motherboard journalists founded an independent news company
41 votes -
‘Not for machines to harvest’: Data revolts break out against AI
40 votes -
Canadians will no longer have access to news content on Facebook and Instagram, Meta says
50 votes -
Speed trap | Google promised to create a better, faster web for media companies with a new standard called AMP. In the end, it ruined the trust publishers had in the internet giant.
14 votes -
BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150%
8 votes -
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman discusses how he wants every subreddit to be its own media company and he wants to see money being exchanged from users to users and users to subreddits
35 votes -
The impact of digital media on children’s intelligence
10 votes -
Does anyone else feel like Tildes gets less effective at surfacing new stuff the longer you're on it?
I notice this primarily with the YouTube videos. I've started to notice that the videos I see posted in here I have already had recommended to me by YouTube. And I realize it must be because when...
I notice this primarily with the YouTube videos. I've started to notice that the videos I see posted in here I have already had recommended to me by YouTube. And I realize it must be because when I watch a video here, the YouTube algorithm decides I'm interested in that kind of thing. So, functionally, by posting and interacting with content in Tildes we are tuning the various algorithmic recommendation feeds that we interact with to view us all similarly.
It's just an interesting side effect I noticed and some food for thought about the effectiveness of a link aggregator or discussion forum at surfacing novel, interesting content we might not find otherwise. In part, this could just be an effect of Tildes being kind of small and having lots of self-selection biases for its user population. Perhaps if it was more diverse we'd be exposed to more things that break the mold and recommendation algorithms won't be able to pin it all down as easily. In fact, we may be able to use this effect as a way to test the breadth and diversity of content and types of people a site is attracting.
11 votes -
The Verge is updating their public ethics policy "to be clearer in our interactions with public relations and corporate communications professionals"
11 votes -
Former US president Donald Trump launches 'TRUTH' social
24 votes -
The day I almost decided to hold the press to account
8 votes -
What newsrooms still don’t understand about the internet
4 votes -
Substack is selling soap operas
8 votes -
Spotify claims it’s dominating the podcasting market because of a million-plus tiny podcasts
8 votes -
The historical amnesia of culture warriors
7 votes -
Slate Star Codex and Silicon Valley’s war against the media
16 votes -
From context collapse to content collapse
8 votes -
America needs a ministry of (actual) truth
10 votes -
Facebook and Google refuse to pay revenue to Australian media
10 votes -
Are social networks polarizing? A Q&A with Ezra Klein | The Interface with Casey Newton, Issue #464, Feb 27
5 votes -
Are there any personalized recommendation engines/sites that you trust?
In the 2000s I used to use a service called last.fm (originally called Audioscrobbler) that would track the music I listened to and give me recommendations based on that. It was able to give me...
In the 2000s I used to use a service called last.fm (originally called Audioscrobbler) that would track the music I listened to and give me recommendations based on that. It was able to give me some really great personalized suggestions, but that came at the expense of me handing over significant amounts of personal data.
In prioritizing privacy, I feel like I've stepped away from a lot of the big recommendation engines because they're tied to data-hungry companies I am in the process of disengaging with (e.g. Goodreads is owned by Amazon). I can still find stuff I like, but it's often the result of manual searching that turns up popular recommendations that work for me, rather than less well-known or acutely relevant things. last.fm was good at giving me less "obvious" recommendations and would find music I was unlikely to find on my own. I want that, but for all of my media: books, movies, etc.
There's a second concern in that I also feel like I can't trust platforms like Netflix, who seem to prioritize their content over that of other studios. Their recommendations feel weighted in their favor, not mine.
What I want is an impartial recommendation engine that gives me high quality personalized suggestions without a huge privacy cost.1 Is this a pipe dream, or are there examples of this kind of thing out there?
1. I don't mind handing over some of my specific interest data in order to get good recommendations for myself and help a site's algorithms cater to others, as I get that's how these things work. I just don't like the idea of my interests being even more data for a company that already has thousands of intimate data points on me.
18 votes -
Forty rebuttals to the media’s smears of Julian Assange – by someone who was actually there
8 votes -
There's An Underground Economy Selling Links From The New York Times, BBC, CNN, And Other Big News Sites
12 votes -
Plex makes piracy just another streaming service
20 votes -
You can sue media companies over Facebook comments from readers, Australian court rules
13 votes -
Should the media quit Facebook?
3 votes -
I have forgotten how to read: For a long time Michael Harris convinced himself that a childhood spent immersed in old-fashioned books would insulate him from our new media climate. He was wrong.
19 votes -
How an investigation of fake FCC comments snared a prominent DC media firm
7 votes -
YouTube breeds sociopaths and monsters. Not through audience’s demands but how the platform itself is designed.
24 votes -
Disappearing movies and games: How safe is your digital collection?
33 votes -
Time is different now
12 votes -
In the age of AI, is seeing still believing?
7 votes -
Internet taxes are sweeping sub-Saharan Africa — and silencing citizens
9 votes -
This Panda Is Dancing
10 votes -
El Paquete, Cuba's answer to digital content distribution
7 votes -
In order to cultivate an environment where the truth wins out in the end, you have to be biased against falsehoods
8 votes -
Intellectual dark web psyop [part 1]
5 votes -
Is Facebook a publisher? In public it says no, but in court it says yes
6 votes -
Facebook's retreat from the news has been painful for publishers
11 votes -
The messy fourth estate
5 votes