• mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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    20 days ago

    Hm

    I mean you’re not wrong. The US spent most of the previous two centuries wandering around the world killing and enslaving anyone who made them nervous or unprofitable while the whole “honest” media wrote a never ending stream of stories enthusing about how nice it was that the price of bananas was going down

    Then when the internet came along we replaced that with an absolute explosion of viewpoints some of which are honest, some of which are just lazy and pointless, and some of which are manufactured propaganda which shows a remarkable level of effectiveness

    But… if you wanna tell me that that’s not the pure step backwards I described it as, I won’t say you’re totally wrong about that tbh

    Regardless of all that, yes, I still think making it work effectively and honestly is as important now as it ever was

    • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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      20 days ago

      If media is used by a tiny group to control what people think and new technology allows the same tiny group to reach people with more granularity, is it really a move “forwards” or “backwards”?

      If you believe that media is a part of functioning democracy, who should be in control of it?

      • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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        20 days ago

        By “Media” I mean everything. Newspapers, TV, social media, anything that lets people know what’s going on in the world

        It used to be like a few thousand independent editors all across the country, then with TV and corporate consolidation it dwindled to basically just 1 corporate viewpoint, now with social media and the internet I think public opinion is more or less up for grabs for whoever wants to spend the most money to influence it (not that different from the later stages of the TV era tbh)

        For quite a while now media has been out of “control” of any single grouping; basically that was one of the big advantages of the internet era. But the disadvantage is that real journalism costs money, and modern newspapers don’t have a good business model to stay alive and do it, and modern social media isn’t really configured to be able to keep out propaganda viewpoints, and so the public narrative winding up de facto “in control” of whoever puts more money and effort into distorting it.

        I don’t think we should go back to where anyone can have “control” necessarily but it would be nice if real journalism could make money again to be able to do the investigative aspect, and if normal person social media (for the opinion aspect and sharing-news-stories aspect) was community operated and resistant to deliberate propaganda

        Best answer I can come up with to your question as I see it

        • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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          20 days ago

          When is a community organization, say the black panther party, judged to be putting out deliberate propaganda that social media needs to resist?

          • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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            20 days ago

            So. That’s why I say community operated, and that the internet was a big step forward whatever its flaws. I wouldn’t consider the Black Panther viewpoint to be propaganda, and yet I think there’s been a pretty consistent consensus from newspapers to TV to modern corporate social media that if the Black Panthers’ viewpoint is on your front page one day, then that’s a problem and we’re gonna have to fix it and probably someone’s getting fired or at least moved around.

            How community operated social media can determine the difference between somebody in Akron who thinks Joe Biden is a bum and wants to say so, and somebody managing 59 accounts through a VPN each of which keeps up a steady stream of content including a healthy dose of “Joe Biden is a bum and I want to say so,” I honestly have no idea. In a perfect world, to me. the social media software would contain the judgement that:

            • the Black Panthers would not be propaganda
            • an honest Trump supporter would not be propaganda
            • the guy in Akron would not be propaganda, and
            • and the guy with 59 accounts would be propaganda.

            How to implement that though, I don’t really know.

            • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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              20 days ago

              To compare it to a previous era of media, would you say that someone wheatpasting a bunch of flyers everywhere is propaganda in the same way that the person with 59 accounts is?

              I take issue with defining propaganda as only that kind of amplifying a point of view through technology, because that’s a really limited definition that doesn’t fit with the last two hundred years of use and one that almost seems to point at smaller organizations more than large ones but I’m willing to dive into it anyway.

              • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                20 days ago

                This is a fascinating conversation

                Wheatpasting is great. To me, the difference is twofold. Roughly speaking, you could say:

                • Honestly presenting the source of what you’re putting out is opinion, disguising or being deceptive with it is propaganda
                • A method that offers 1 unit of influence per person, is opinion, whereas a method that gives 1 unit of influence over the narrative per dollar is propaganda

                Like I say, I am fascinated that you don’t see a problem with running a large number of accounts to create the illusion of popularity of a certain viewpoint, without it needing to be a persuasive enough viewpoint to gain popularity on its own

                • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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                  20 days ago

                  I brought up wheatpasting specifically to bring this point up, you said methods that produce more influence based on the monetary input are propaganda. Would you say that lobbying is propaganda? Would you say using any technology (such as wheatpasting) beyond yelling in the street is propaganda?

                  The reason I ask that last one is because that technology, the printing press, the paste and brush, cost money and produce a lasting effect.

                  Would you say that the way the Washington post and New York Times exercise editorial control over reporting about Gaza is propaganda?

                  I never said that I don’t see a problem with running a large number of accounts, we’re talking about weather it’s propaganda, not weather it’s problem or bad.