Spaced Harrier
Member
Will read in work tomorrow. Looks juicy.
Their customer is not you. Or the public.
They get their business from political fixers talking. They have Zero interest in pumping what they do to the press and every interest in doing it quietly for as long as possible without any regulatory oversight.
They are operating in a nasty grey area, scraping or using data covered weakly by privacy policies cut and pasted from other tech companies and using this data to influence voters.
The only way to know how successful they are is to follow the money: how much do they get paid and who by. And the US system hides this very effectively now.
The world is better today then it was in 99,99% of history actually by any objective measure. Still, could have been better of course and some places go backwards for a bit from time to time.
Interesting article, but it paints CA as some shadowy SPECTRE like organisation, toppling Governments and re-shaping the world via its dark magics, yet has little in the way of concrete facts that demonstrate this. At best, CA appears to offer advice based on social media data. The effectiveness and accuracy of this service is painted as so accurate as to be unethical, as if it were a mind control device. Yet, Trump won by a slim margin, and lost the popular vote. Reads like snake oil being blamed for an utter collapse in faith in political systems decades in the making.
See the issue I have here is one of blame. And now the little people can blame someone else for their bad decisions.
I was coerced by the big bad billionaire with big data - it's not my fault the world and freedoms that my parents and grandparents fought for have gone to shit. No sir, not me. That my children will inherit a world teetering on the edge of ecological disaster. How could I have known?
Except a real threat.Robert Mercer is the right's George Soros
This is not accurate. Do you know anything about big data by any chance? Did you even read the full article?Cambridge Analytica is a group of snake oil salesmen that liberals latched onto as a supervillain because they couldn't handle the idea of losing to the obvious stupid people that Trump surrounded himself with.
Cambridge Analytica's models were worse than the RNC's during the general, Cambridge was fired by Cruz during the primary, Cambridge has never used their psychological modeling Facebook stuff in Brexit or the US election.
In a world where targeted fake news on Facebook from CA does not create the alt right (with help from Russia, as well, of course), then you can start talking about razor thin margins. In a world without interference, Trump would have never even made it out of the Primary.
Define interference. Like the article, your inferring something unethical was done. Clinton ran ads based on demographic modelling, where Trump ran ads, allegedly, based on psychometric modelling. I can outline a myriad of problems with Clinton's campaign without mentioning either. CA isn't the Devil with a magic wand; the "alt right" is a new name for an old problem. Unless you think CA "created" GamerGate, too?In a world where targeted fake news on Facebook from CA does not create the alt right (with help from Russia, as well, of course), then you can start talking about razor thin margins. In a world without interference, Trump would have never even made it out of the Primary.
Define interference. Like the article, your inferring something unethical was done. Clinton ran ads based on demographic modelling, where Trump ran ads, allegedly, based on psychometric modelling.
"I dont want to break your heart; we actually didnt do any psychographics with the Trump campaign, Matt Oczkowski, Cambridges head of product, said at a postelection panel hosted by Google in December.
This is not accurate. Do you know anything about big data by any chance? Did you even read the full article?
Ha!Oh so you're saying somebody already hit reset?
This is not remotely true. Cambridge Analytica spends all of their time talking to the press about how great they are. They only admit they were fired from the Cruz campaign when you ask and pry.
According to everyone who matters, that would be because they haven't really lived up to their own marketing material. Ask Microsoft how Windows Phone is doing these days, and you'd get the same response. All we have are allegations, web-connection pics, and poorly made inferals. If your response to this boils down to "That's just what they want you to think!", congratulations, you're seeing the world as a flat earther does.When you ask about how effective they are at micro targeting and psychometrics etc everyone gets real shy really fast. Understandably because it's a shitty way to use big data and they should be hiding it.
But it isn't any comfort at ALL that they are working hard at making this stuff work.
Thanks for posting this, I'll read it later.
Another great article on Cambridge Analytica's involvement in Brexit and Trump's campaign was posted a while ago here: https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/how-our-likes-helped-trump-win
They trained machine learning models using 'Likes' information scraped from Facebook and then tirelessly A/B tested different campaign messages that would be the most effective to get people in their target groups to rally to their cause.
According to everyone who matters, that would be because they haven't really lived up to their own marketing material. Ask Microsoft how Windows Phone is doing these days, and you'd get the same response. All we have are allegations, web-connection pics, and poorly made inferals. If your response to this boils down to "That's just what they want you to think!", congratulations, you're seeing the world as a flat earther does.
As for a shitty way to use big data, it's not really. It's simply a use of it. Advertisers have been doing the same thing for so long, no one cares anymore. They're simply getting better at it, and using the tools of the age. The act in and of itself has no inherent alignment. If you want real discomfort, take a look at the response to the anti-materialism movements in the USA of the 60s and 70s for a better look of how inventive and downright scary advertising stuff gets. You're dealing with a profession who found a way to sell capitalism and self-definition through m Thematerial possessions to anti-materalists before the internet. Brainwashing on a societal level.
Trump won because the Democrats shot themselves in the foot, and ran a campaign so poor, their base stayed home rather than vote. Not because CA has cracked a magical code to produce brainwashing advertisements that work on just enough people to topple the world back into the dark ages.
Honestly one of the scariest things I've ever seen. Reading about it all afterwards still stays with me.Century of the self, one of the best documentary series ever.
As for a shitty way to use big data, it's not really. It's simply a use of it. Advertisers have been doing the same thing for so long, no one cares anymore.
Century of the self, one of the best documentary series ever.
Not really. Advertising works by understanding what your selling and who you're selling it to. Propaganda has negative connotations, but it boils down to basically advertising a political candidate/party/ideology. Advertising without either of the elements (what/who) fails. We're getting better at the latter, and simply expanding the applications for the understandings developed since time immemorial. The argument that using publicly available social media data to create better political campaigns is inherently bad isn't sound. I've mentioned it twice already: if Clinton had of used these techniques to prevent Trump from taking the White House, no one would complain. Well, Trumpets would, but you understand what I mean. Therefore, it's not this specific technique, but it's application, that's at the core of people's issue.Isn't that essentially an appeal to tradition?...
Not really.
Advertising works by understanding what your selling and who you're selling it to. Propaganda has negative connotations, but it boils down to basically advertising a political candidate/party/ideology.
The argument that using publicly available social media data to create better political campaigns is inherently bad isn't sound. I've mentioned it twice already: if Clinton had of used these techniques to prevent Trump from taking the White House, no one would complain.
Lose an election and you're ready to kill everyone? Get a grip
According to everyone who matters, that would be because they haven't really lived up to their own marketing material. Ask Microsoft how Windows Phone is doing these days, and you'd get the same response. All we have are allegations, web-connection pics, and poorly made inferals. If your response to this boils down to "That's just what they want you to think!", congratulations, you're seeing the world as a flat earther does.
As for a shitty way to use big data, it's not really. It's simply a use of it. Advertisers have been doing the same thing for so long, no one cares anymore. They're simply getting better at it, and using the tools of the age. The act in and of itself has no inherent alignment. If you want real discomfort, take a look at the response to the anti-materialism movements in the USA of the 60s and 70s for a better look of how inventive and downright scary advertising stuff gets. You're dealing with a profession who found a way to sell capitalism and self-definition through material possessions to anti-materalists before the internet. Brainwashing on a societal level.
Trump won because the Democrats shot themselves in the foot, and ran a campaign so poor, their base stayed home rather than vote. Not because CA has cracked a magical code to produce brainwashing advertisements that work on just enough people to topple the world back into the dark ages.
Trump won because the Democrats shot themselves in the foot, and ran a campaign so poor, their base stayed home rather than vote. Not because CA has cracked a magical code to produce brainwashing advertisements that work on just enough people to topple the world back into the dark ages.
Thread by jelly
Bump by jellies_two
Define interference. Like the article, your inferring something unethical was done. Clinton ran ads based on demographic modelling, where Trump ran ads, allegedly, based on psychometric modelling. I can outline a myriad of problems with Clinton's campaign without mentioning either. CA isn't the Devil with a magic wand; the "alt right" is a new name for an old problem. Unless you think CA "created" GamerGate, too?
I get that its nice to have some "shady" conspiracy to blame, but I'm not seeing anything that confirms this. At best, a company developed a more accurate public modelling method that may or may not work. At worst, lax data laws allow more effective propaganda. If Clinton had used this and won, would this thread exist?
USA has lost its investigative journalists
Look at this from the BBC
https://twitter.com/castantine/status/897252711212748805
Facebook was sitting in the trump campaign itself helping Cambridge analytica connect their massive data set (including as yet unknown "secret sauce") down to A/B ads to win votes. As this freakish employee says, without FB helping they would not have won.
USA has lost its investigative journalists
Look at this from the BBC
https://twitter.com/castantine/status/897252711212748805
Facebook was sitting in the trump campaign itself helping Cambridge analytica connect their massive data set (including as yet unknown "secret sauce") down to A/B ads to win votes. As this freakish employee says, without FB helping they would not have won.