Social media, the new “opiate of the masses”, and the foundation for the Surveillance State

In the world of Frank Herbert’s Dune, the human race had already fought it’s war against the machines.  In the wake of the victory over the “thinking machines”, ten thousand years earlier, those that survived created the Orange Catholic Bible, a religious text that was to be strictly enforced.  Chief among this text’s tenets was, “Thou shalt not make a computer in the image of a man’s mind”, for the obvious reason that never again should the human race face the horrors of an A.I. holocaust.  I think about this tenet from a fictional world more and more lately because it sometimes feels we’re rapidly approaching a point in time when something similar may be necessary for technological progress and even our species to continue.

Everything is “connected” now. Appliances, cars, houses, even entire cities are networking as much technology as possible, all in the name of the god of our age, “Data”.  It’s all done for the sake of data, and algorithms and A.I.’s are created to sort and interpret that data, and then spit out directives.  “All things are possible through Data” is the implied invocation offered up to this information age god, and it’s full steam ahead to feed it as quickly as possible.  So the development of ever more intrusive ways to gather “data”, to track individuals to the point of predicting their future actions “Efficiency” is the supposed end-goal of data collection, but that data is being used by governments to build the most perfect prison that has ever existed: one in which the inmates believe they are still free.

The inmates of this prison gladly feed information necessary to sustain this prison through the use of “social media”, an ingenious platform that exploits a “flaw in human psychology” as Sean Parker aptly phrased it, where users quickly develop an addiction to the dopamine high of ‘likes’, views, more and more attention from their peers.  The “social-validation feedback loop” has become the Trojan horse that allows Big Tech and government to persuade us to surrender our private lives.

And so the technocratic Elite keep the masses subjugated with free ‘social media’, gladly gulping up the data produced by billions of fingers tapping away at phones.  The data is then consolidated, algorithmically synthesized, copied, and sold. To governments, other corporations, anyone who can pay.

Is there an escape from this technological opium den?  Our privacy gone, our movements tracked, our interests, friends, and plans known to those in power, and we stand naked before the State.  But the vast majority of us do so willingly.  And now, Big Tech has become the arbiters of acceptable speech, and the once-freewheeling, free speech internet is coming back under the yoke of the Elite.

It’s imperative to plainly ask ourselves whether this level of “connectedness” enhances our well-being in any meaningful sense, taking into account what is given up in the process. We should ask ourselves whether this sense of well-being is really nothing more than the addiction to the instant hit of dopamine we receive when we get the immediate feedback from posting a picture, a comment, etc. online.  Chances are, it’s the addiction.  Look at the Big Data industry that has been built upon that addiction.  Now we must ask ourselves, how much more “connectedness” is in store for us in the future?  Will it be more gadgets that we simply can’t refuse? Is the elimination of privacy really inevitable?  Does technological progress inexorably entail ever greater advances in social media and data collection only?  Is this the true end of history, when the human race has settled into an easy slavery to “connected” technology? How much digital “convenience” can we enjoy before it becomes self-defeating?  Is it worth the digital slavery to our devices, let alone the invisible Surveillance State being constructed around us?

03/19/18 Overnight Links

Boston Globe: Facebook may have violated FTC privacy deal

Geek Wire: As Congress considers tech-backed CLOUD Act, privacy and human rights groups raise concerns

McClatchyDC: As U.S. indicts foreign hackers, American cyber spies fear retaliatory arrests

Washington Examiner: DOJ to seek death penalty in drug overdose cases “when appropriate”

Reason: Fear of a free, prosperous internet

The American Conservative: The indiscriminate bombing of Yemen and the failure of the Western media

Activist Post: Google’s search results for questions about the Parkland shooting are different from other search engines

SHELDON RICHMAN: Economic nationalism: Elitism in populist clothing

FEE: The 2nd Amendment empowers women more than lapel pins

Columbus Dispatch: ‘Magic’ mushroom research could lead to help for addicts

Motherboard: Will the ‘information paradox’ pioneered by Stephen Hawking ever be resolved?

03/18/18 Links

The Independent: Russian official suggests nerve agent could have come from UK lab Porton Down

BoingBoing: Raleigh police are investigating crime by getting Google to reveal the identity of every mobile user within acres of the scene

Global Times: China’s lawmakers propose iris scans for all

Rappler: Prone to abuse: State surveillance as tool to silence critics

Mashable: How to see all the weird apps that can access your data on Facebook

Albuquerque Journal: Albuquerque PD admits to using cellphone tracking devices

FEE: How totalitarians weaponize loneliness

03/18/18 Overnight Links

Washington Examiner: Edward Snowden: Facebook is a surveillance company rebranded as ‘social media’

Activist Post: Pentagon and DARPA seek predictive A.I. to uncover enemy thoughts

JOHN KIRIAKOU: Bloody Gina’ should not lead the CIA

JAMES BOVARD: Time for the U.S. to end democracy promotion flim-flams

FEE: Why ‘expert opinions’ are so often dead wrong

Mises: Why newspapers are going out of business

The Week: Rand’s stand

03/17/18 Links

The Hill: Selling you out: Mass public surveillance for corporate gain

Ars Technica: U.S. spy lab hopes to geotag every outdoor photo on social media

Nextgov: Walmart files patent for autonomous robot bees

The Intercept: How the New York Times is making war with Iran more likely

Techdirt: Leaked documents expose NYPD’s long-running lack of officer discipline

The American Conservative: Rand Paul: Why I’ll fight Gina Haspel and Mike Pompeo nominations

Reason: Florida may be about to launch the most ambitious criminal justice transparency project in the U.S.

Activist Post: Why we don’t need the government to protect us from “polarizing” internet speech

High Times: This state just shut down 40 medical marijuana dispensaries

Gizmodo: Looks like someone hid a weed joke on Home Depot’s website

03/16/18 Afternoon Links

Engadget: Inside Google’s plan to build a smart neighborhood in Toronto

The Verge: China will ban people with poor ‘social credit’ from planes and trains

NPR: Facial scanning now arriving at U.S. airports

Futurism: Cities’ “smart” LED streetlights may be secretly watching over you

Arkansas Times: ACLU objects to Magnolia schools surveillance system

CPO Mag: Predictive policing raises important privacy and human rights concerns

National Review: FBI recommends firing former Deputy Director Andrew McCabe

The American Conservative: Vietnam: A war on civilians

Reason: Three heroes at My Lai

CNBC: How blockchain could save federal agencies billions

High Times: Research reveals link between coffee, cannabis, and brain function

HowStuffWorks: Breaking the cycle of addiction with psychedelic hallucinogens

It’s total, 24/7 surveillance for Silicon Valley employees

To prevent leaks, of course.

The Guardian: ‘They’ll squash you like a bug’: how Silicon Valley keeps a lid on leakers

: ““It’s horrifying how much they know,” he told the Guardian, on the condition of anonymity. “You go into Facebook and it has this warm, fuzzy feeling of ‘we’re changing the world’ and ‘we care about things’. But you get on their bad side and all of a sudden you are face to face with [Facebook CEO] Mark Zuckerberg’s secret police.”

The public image of Silicon Valley’s tech giants is all colourful bicycles, ping-pong tables, beanbags and free food, but behind the cartoonish facade is a ruthless code of secrecy. They rely on a combination of Kool-Aid, digital and physical surveillance, legal threats and restricted stock units to prevent and detect intellectual property theft and other criminal activity. However, those same tools are also used to catch employees and contractors who talk publicly, even if it’s about their working conditions, misconduct or cultural challenges within the company.”

03/16/18 Overnight Links

The Verge: New Orleans ends its Palantir predictive policing program Ed: Right after it became public knowledge, how about that.

NPR: Critics concerned about privacy issues as biometric scanning increases

Gizmodo: Congress could sneak a bill threatening global privacy into law

Washington Post: Feinstein calls on CIA to declassify documents detailing Haspel’s ties to torture program

The Hill: FBI supervisor warned Comey in 2014 that warrantless surveillance program was ineffective

Bloomberg: Google resists becoming digital ‘town square’ in censorship spat

Techdirt: Censorship creep is setting in as social media companies try to stay ahead of European lawmakers

Washington Examiner: NSA nominee Paul Nakasone: Smartphone tracking software is a privacy, intel threat

The Hill: Tech companies push back against internet watchdog’s new privacy rules

The Independent: Florida school shooting surveillance video shows officer Scot Peterson standing outside as massacre takes place

National Review: Another terrible Florida case illustrates the need for armed self-defense

The Intercept: Military brass tells Congress it has no idea what Saudi Arabia is doing with U.S. bombs in Yemen

The New Yorker: Mike Pompeo, the spymaster who couldn’t stay in his lane

US News: San Francisco embraces Amsterdam-style marijuana lounges

RealClearScience: When an English Lit major tried to school Isaac Asimov

03/15/18 Morning News & Commentary

New York Times: Pentagon wants Silicon Valley’s help on A.I.

The Intercept: Washington breaks out the “just following orders” Nazi defense for CIA Director-designate Gina Haspel

East Bay Express: Berkeley council approves surveillance technology oversight board

Newsweek: Is Silicon Valley silencing conservatives on social media?

CATO: Facebook and the future of free speech

Jacobin: The high-tech poorhouse: “We live in what legal scholar Frank Pasquale has called a “scored society.” Corporations and governments collect unprecedented amounts of data about us — our habits, our histories, our beliefs, our desires, our social networks. Machine learning algorithmsparse that data to assess our worthiness for public benefits, for jobs, for loans, for insurance, and for suspicion in the criminal justice system.

The rich are not exempt from this reality, but it’s the poor and working class who are most endangered by it. Predictive policing algorithmslaunder racial bias and reproduce inequality. Reputational scores based on historical data reinforce the lopsided structure of American society, further advantaging the already advantaged and marginalizing the marginalized.”

NextGov: 5 things you may have missed in the Homeland Security reauthorization bill

CATO: Risky Business: The role of arms sales in U.S. foreign policy

The American Conservative: The Navy wants $1.5 billion in additional goodies. We want an audit.

The Verge: Chelsea Manning thinks we need to remake the internet

GEORGE WILL: The real Down Syndrome ‘problem’

Gizmodo: DARPA is funding time crystal research

03/14/18 Morning News & Commentary

Gizmodo: Report: Madison Square Garden has secretly been using facial recognition tech

ScienceMag: A revered rocket scientist set in motion China’s mass surveillance of its citizens

The Verge: Facebook bans “far-right” group Britain First for “inciting hatred against minorities”

Also The Verge: YouTube will begin adding Wikipedia information to videos about conspiracies

Techdirt: Trump administration wants to start sending Secret Service agents to polling stations

The Guardian: England’s May expels 23 Russian diplomats in response to spy poisoning

Vox: How America’s prisons are fueling the opioid epidemic

Libertarian Institute: The war on opioids has become a war on patients

SingularityHub: What if the AI revolution is neither Utopia nor Apocalypse, but something in between?