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Maybe along with trump and win eleven ..

Closing the Stanford Internet Observatory will edge the US towards the end of 
democracy

By John Naughton  Sun 30 Jun 2024
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jun/29/closing-the-stanford-internet-observatory-will-edge-the-us-towards-the-end-of-democracy


The organisation responsible for monitoring digital falsehoods is reportedly 
being wound down after pressure from Republicans and conspiracy theorists

All developed societies have a media ecosystem, the information environment in 
which they exist. Until comparatively recently that ecosystem was dominated by 
print technology. Then, in the mid-20th century, broadcast (few-to-many) 
technology arrived, first as radio and later as television, which, from the 
1950s to the 1990s, was the dominant communication medium of the age.

And then came the internet and the technologies it has spawned, of which the 
dominant one is the world wide web.

Each of these pre-eminent technologies shaped the societies that they 
enveloped. Print shaped the world for four and a half centuries, followed by 
broadcast, which ruled for 50 years or so. None of this would have surprised a 
biologist, who would see human culture as something that grows in an enveloping 
nutrient. Change the nutrient and you change the culture that grows in it.

We’re now early into the period of internet dominance of our media ecosystem 
and have no real idea of how that will play out in the long term.

But some clues are beginning to emerge. One relates to the idea of public 
opinion. Until Gallup invented the opinion poll in 1935, there was in effect no 
way of measuring what the public as a whole thought about anything.

For the next 70 years, improved polling methods and the rise of broadcast 
television meant that it was possible to get a general idea of what public 
opinion might be on political or social issues.

If you were a malign superpower that wanted to screw up the democratic world, 
you’d be hard put to do better than this. The arrival of the internet, and 
particularly the web in the 1990s, started the process of radical fragmentation 
that has brought us to where we are now: instead of public opinion in the 
Gallup sense, we have innumerable publics, each with different opinions and 
incompatible ideas of what’s true, false and undecidable.

To make things worse, we also invented a technology that enables every Tom, 
Dick and mad Harry to publish whatever they like on opaque global platforms, 
which are incentivised to propagate the wildest nonsense. And to this we have 
now added powerful tools (called AI) that automate the manufacture of 
misinformation on an epic scale.

Again, if you were a malign superpower that wanted to screw up the democratic 
world, you’d be hard put to do better than this.


Fortunately, scattered through the world (and mostly in academia) there have 
been organisations whose mission is to conduct informed analyses of the nature 
and implications of the misinformation that pollutes the online world. Until 
recently, the Stanford Internet Observatory (SIO) in California was one such 
outfit.

Among other things (it was the first to out Russian support for Donald Trump 
online in 2016), it raised China spying concerns around the Clubhouse app in 
2021, partnered with the Wall Street Journal in a 2023 report on Instagram and 
online child sexual abuse materials, and developed a curriculum for teaching 
college students how to handle trust and safety problems on social media 
platforms.

But guess what? After five years of pioneering research, it has been reported 
that the SIO is being wound down. Its founder and director, Alex Stamos, has 
departed and Renée DiResta, its research director, has not had her contract 
renewed, while other staff members have been told to look for jobs elsewhere.

Stanford, the SIO’s institutional home, denies that it is dismantling the unit 
and loudly proclaims its commitment to independent research. On the other hand, 
according to DiResta, the university has run up “huge legal bills” defending 
SIO researchers from harassment by Republican politicians and conservative 
conspiracy theorists, and may have decided that enough is enough.

At the root of all this are two neuroses. One is the Republicans’ obsessive 
conviction that academic studies, like those of DiResta and her colleagues, of 
how “bad actors – spammers, scammers, hostile foreign governments, networks of 
terrible people targeting children, and, yes hyper-partisans actively seeking 
to manipulate the public” use digital platforms to achieve their aims is, 
somehow, anti-conservative.

The other neurosis is, if anything, more worrying: it’s a crazily expansive 
idea of “censorship” that includes labelling social media posts as potentially 
misleading, factchecking, down-ranking false theories by reducing their 
distribution in people’s social media feeds while allowing them to remain on a 
site and even flagging content for platforms’ review.

If you think such a list is nuts, then join the queue. As I read it, what came 
to mind was Kenneth Tynan’s memorable definition of a neurosis as “a secret you 
don’t know you’re keeping”. The secret in this case is simple: the great 
American experiment with democracy is ending.


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