|
|
|
|
|
by pessimizer
2764 days ago
|
|
It's a huge flaw that this paper keeps referring to the "US" and its intentions, even explicitly distinguished from the FCC or its president in the blog entry linking the paper[1]. Baked into the examples used to illustrate its premise is a United States that is never specifically located or identified; it just makes appearances as "some Arizona Republicans" and "national security officials" and only intends to spread its "liberal and democratic values" with its "pro-freedom" bias. The idea that Americans are now soaked in more or more vulnerable to intentional misdirection due to ideas flooding the internet from twitter and facebook is completely ahistorical. If anything, American "consensus" beliefs have always been dictated and enforced from above, and have never been a consensus. I hope that he reads some Walter Lippmann before he continues to treat politics like a computer program. We are and have always been constantly under attacks from people who want to define the facts that we base our decisions on, including all parts of government. Additionally, those attackers do not always have bad intentions, and may be using deceptive simplifications in order to trick us into doing what they think is best for us. The evaluation of a flood of information coming from actors with a full range of motivations to manipulate that information is the basic dilemma of democracy. This paper itself is soaked in and re-enforces a bunch of questionable common knowledge, especially as it seems to be addressed to an American flag when only people are available to read it. [1] https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2018/11/propaganda_an... |
|