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smoll | 6 years ago
Is it solely due to the weaponization of technology for this means? Or are there other reasons for “why now”?
smoll | 6 years ago
Is it solely due to the weaponization of technology for this means? Or are there other reasons for “why now”?
huffmsa|6 years ago
Up until 100 years ago, you could go town to town scamming people and there'd be little cross town communication. Each town would know it had been duped, but you wouldn't know about other towns.
jplayer01|6 years ago
2) There's always been some measure of manipulation by political leaders in order to achieve certain goals. Obvious examples are the US in drumming up support for WW2 or the Vietnam war or ... well, any war, really. I don't think anything has really fundamentally changed since the "good old days", except people have realized that they can subvert democracy by just telling people what they want to hear. We have decades of history where you can say something and then do something else entirely, and this is just the natural extension of that. Political leaders, businesses, etc. have realized that there are no consequences for being bad actors, only benefits. Even if they are found out, they can influence the news in ways to make it blow over in a day, or they can tie up courts for years and years if it ever does go there (rare).
All I see is an inexorable march which started decades ago, and it's not going to stop here.
paganel|6 years ago
This doesn't get mentioned as often as it should. I have read almost no critical analysis of the fact that cheap smartphones coupled with relatively cheap mobile Internet have brought the political discourse to lots and lots of more people, who otherwise most certainly would have switched the TV channel when the politics were on or who didn't read the politics section in the newspapers (if they used to read newspapers at all).
In other words, Facebook and Twitter by themselves would have meant nothing without the cheap Android phones.
lordnacho|6 years ago
Now because it's only been a short time since people could decide anything. Or at least were told that they could. How long since real parliamentary democracy, where say half of people who can currently vote were allowed to do so?
And in that time, the major outlets were few and gated by a journalistic system where you had to at least say something sensible and be judged by what some might call an elite, but others would call educated common sense.
Recently that status quo has fallen apart, and it's become clear that you don't need to have a message that is in any way cognizant of history, science, or any other established facts. The crazies at Speaker's Corner are now able to broadcast with a similar reach as people who've actually considered what to say.
Technology does indeed have a lot to do with this state of affairs, and is also alluded to in the article. That one nutter who says the world is flat online now causes others with the same inclinations to gain in confidence. Likewise with any number of ideas that would have quietly died.
rzmnzm|6 years ago
It would be nice to think that a news organisation's respectability would translate into a greater audience, but you only have to look at the Sun, Fox, et all to see that is not the case.
An interesting story is more appealing than one that is not, even if it is not true. And the cost of reporting false information is a small retraction printed weeks later on page 10.
The decline of news media profitability has led to the state of journalism today, which mainly consists of twitter gossip mongers, producing content not much better than the crazies at speakers corner (and often worse).
lm28469|6 years ago
Internet is probably part of it. You couldn't spread so much BS so far/fast/cheap even 30 years ago.
carry_bit|6 years ago
It's much easier to tell that someone else has been duped if you haven't been duped the same way. Until recently the main dupers were playing for the same team, so it was harder to notice since there was no mainstream "other". Now they've split into separate teams, so now there is a mainstream "other" that people can easily notice.
AnimalMuppet|6 years ago
Now, that's been going on for a while. I think it's been getting worse over time, as fewer and fewer people believe in actual truth.
And if you think that it's just Trump and Johnson - if you think the insanity is only on one side - you haven't been paying attention.
lucian1900|6 years ago
It always become more blatant as the contradictions of capitalism intensify and the status quo becomes untenable. You see the same in Western European propaganda from the 30s, particularly in the Weimar Republic.
smoll|6 years ago
There’s this saying that sunshine is the best disinfectant, but that somehow feels less true right now. It seems like you can be openly crooked in a democracy as long as you appeal to a sufficient majority for other reasons not related to your crookedness.