Killing the Truth

Published in UDN
(Taiwan) on 2 January 2021
by Ruay-Shiung Chang (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Jennifer Sampson. Edited by Helaine Schweitzer.
During the presidential election a while back, Donald Trump supporters wearing T-shirts emblazoned with a large letter Q could be seen at campaign events. The shirts belonged to QAnon, a far-right organization that believes in unproven conspiracies and has no credibility. According to QAnon, a group of Satan worshippers is trafficking children across the globe and planning to overthrow Trump.

QAnon arose before Trump was elected in 2016. A conspiracy circulating on Twitter at #SpiritCooking asserted that Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton’s campaign director was an occultist who threw a dinner party that was actually a secret satanic ritual. #SpiritCooking later evolved into Pizzagate, which was based on the rumor that these satanic activities were centered on a pizza shop in the Washington, D.C., area. After #SpiritCooking circulated on the internet for only a month, a man walked into that pizza shop and fired an AR-15 rifle.

The rise of QAnon is not unique. Because the internet has no boundaries, false information and conspiracy theories can arise from anywhere. Many people worry that hostile foreign governments use such invisible weapons to attack and influence voters. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg initially declined to take responsibility for such attacks, but a number of investigations later revealed that social media platforms can indeed radicalize and harm people with differing views, especially those in psychologically fragile conditions.

Following advances in artificial intelligence and data tracking technology, the influential power of false information has increased. The algorithms that Facebook and YouTube use to recommend content allow people to view that content in an echo chamber. Once you fall down the hole of misdirection and hate, it’s as if your brain ossifies, and escape is difficult. Politicians know this. Trump has repeatedly used his large following on Twitter to spread racism and conspiracy theories, acts which have forced Twitter to flag credibility issues in some of his tweets.

Knowing they had to respond to these problems, social media companies modified their program logic, employed a large number of content moderators, developed automated systems to detect and remove extremist content or false information, updated their posting policies and changed their privacy rules. All these actions were in the hopes of banning, or at the very least reducing, hateful, bullying or untrue content.

To date, this kind of malignant content has overcome the resistance and the will of tech companies. Social media profit models depend on maximizing the amount of time users spend on platforms. Banning posts or randomly deleting them hurts the business model. As numerous studies have shown, false information comes disproportionately from right-wing groups. However, stifling such groups too much leads to charges of political bias. And so, social media companies are damned if they do and damned if they don’t.

Cyberbullying and false information are like climate change: global ecological disasters that have caused a current hell in which the truth has been killed. They are rooted in humans’ worst instincts and have a long history. (An ancient Chinese saying, for example, is that it only takes three people repeating a rumor to make it true.) Today, people’s thoughts have been poisoned by the omnipresence of technology. Yet, demanding that tech companies solve the problems they have created is not feasible. We can only count on people discerning the truth and waking up to it.

The author is president of the National Taipei University of Business.


科技.人文聯合講座/謀殺真相

前陣子美國大選川普總統的造勢場合中,時常看見一群穿著印有大寫Q運動衫的支持群眾,他們就是所謂的匿名者Q團體(QAnon,Anon即Anonymous,匿名的),是一群相信未經證實的陰謀論和沒有可信度的極右翼組織,他們相信有一群撒旦崇拜者在世界各地販運兒童,並密謀推翻川普。

Q團體起源於川普二○一六年當選前,在推特上流行的一種陰謀論叫#SpiritCooking(精神晚宴),它主張民主黨總統候選人柯林頓.希拉蕊的競選主任是神秘學家,他邀約的一個晚宴實際上是秘密的撒旦儀式。後來#SpiritCooking演變為Pizzagate(披薩門),謠傳這些撒旦崇拜者活動,集中於華盛頓特區的一家披薩店。在#SpiritCooking於網路流傳僅一個月後,一名男子走進那家店,舉起他的AR-15步槍掃射。

Q團體興起不是唯一,由於網路無國界,網路上各種虛假信息或陰謀論,可能來自任何地方,許多人擔心外國敵對政府透過這種無聲無息武器攻擊,影響選民。臉書執行長祖克伯一開始並不想負起責任,但隨後更多調查顯示,社群媒體平台確實可能激進化和傷害意見不同的彼此,尤其是那些心靈脆弱的人們。

隨著人工智慧和資料追蹤技術的進步,虛假信息影響力繼續擴大。臉書和YouTube的推薦系統,讓人們盡可觀看同溫層信息或影片,一旦你進入被誤導和仇恨的隧道,腦袋幾乎被僵化,很難逃脫。政客也知道這點,在推特上,川普反覆利用其龐大追隨者擴大種族主義和陰謀論,逼得推特不得不將川普部分言論註記為可信度有問題。

社群媒體科技公司也知道必須有所回應,所以修改程式邏輯,雇用大量內容檢查員,開發檢測和移除極端內容或錯誤信息的自動化系統,更新其貼文或顯文規則,更改公司隱私政策等等,目的都是希望禁止或者至少減少這種仇恨或霸凌或不實的有害內容。

目前為止,毒瘤已超過科技公司的抵抗力或意願。社群媒體利潤模型,取決於最大化用戶在平台上花費的時間,禁止貼文或隨便刪文對商業模式不利。正如許多研究顯示,虛假信息不成比例地多數來自右翼團體,太過壓抑它們會被控訴為政治上有偏見,造成這些社群媒體動輒得咎。

網路霸凌和虛假信息就像氣候變化一樣,是全球性生態災難,造成現在真相被謀殺的地獄,它根植於人類劣根性,具有悠久歷史背景(三人市虎);如今透過科技無所不在,使人類思想中毒。但要求科技公司解決它們創造的問題是行不通的,唯有靠人類慎思明辨和覺醒了。(作者為台北商業大學校長)

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