anonymars
today at 7:29 PM
Tangentially related, but while we're talking about eerily prescient writings, I nominate "The MADCOM [Machine-Driven Communication] Future: How Artificial Intelligence Will Enhance Computational Propaganda, Reprogram Human Culture, And Threaten Democracy… And What Can Be Done About It (2017)"
From Part II: The Implications Of A MADCOM World—Three Scenarios For The Future:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep03728.5?seq=2
"Heterogeneous democracies like the United
States devolve into perpetual conflict as
adversaries use MADCOMs to manipulate the
population, by exacerbating cultural differences
and undermining narratives that unify the
country. The social consensus disintegrates,
and political opponents are labeled traitors and
enemies...
"The US public believes that MADCOM
activities are just a more sophisticated
form of advertising, and reflexively relies
on appeals to free speech. In fact, there are
active manipulation campaigns pushing these
narratives to convince the public it isn’t being
manipulated at all. Any time people interact with
an electronic device—whether a smartphone,
augmented-reality device, or social media—their
data is captured, their behavior is tested and
recorded, and algorithms adapt to make devices
more addictive, advertisements more persuasive,
and propaganda more manipulative...
"Some individuals
flee to private social spaces online, but this
reinforces their filter bubbles, exacerbating
political polarization. A small number of people
flee online social spaces entirely, creating a
minor resurgence in offline, mass-market media.
These information-savvy individuals are the
least likely to be susceptible to disinformation
in the first place, so their absence simply
removes rational voices from the conversation.
The affluent pay for the luxury of privacy, as
brands emerge specifically targeting those who
wish to protect their data and their cognition...
"Agreed-upon facts become a relic of the past.
No one knows what is true anymore, because
expertise has been subsumed to the tyranny
of MADCOM-manipulated public opinion. AI
video- and speech-manipulation tools invent and
revise reality on the fly. The only truth is what
you can convince people to believe. The new
definition of a fact is “information that aligns
with preconceived opinions,” and any contrary
evidence is discarded as likely disinformation.
The story is all that matters. The three-hundred-
year-old Age of Enlightenment, based on reason
and a quest for truth, ends."
(Full piece: https://www.jstor.org/stable/resrep03728?searchText=&searchU...)
CrzyLngPwd
today at 8:12 PM
Thank you, that looks like essential reading.