惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

AI
AI
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
T
Tenable Blog
博客园_首页
S
Securelist
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
U
Unit 42
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
量子位
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
博客园 - 【当耐特】
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
K
Kaspersky official blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
GbyAI
GbyAI
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Security Latest
Security Latest
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
I
InfoQ
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
月光博客
月光博客
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
G
Google Developers Blog
F
Full Disclosure
W
WeLiveSecurity
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
腾讯CDC
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Vercel News
Vercel News
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
美团技术团队
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Help Net Security
Help Net Security

Creative Good

Changing the address of this RSS feed Protecting elders and kids from predatory tech The garbage on our screens How it’s going in tech – without ethics AI isn’t meant for us Starlink bestows, or forces, the digital age on an Amazonian tribe Microsoft Recall should make you consider Linux Google goes bananums for AI Creative Good: Apple made a terrible mistake: it told the truth To resist the robots, get a typewriter Big Tech’s corruption was 25 years in the making Creative Good: China and TikTok Surviving the customer experience winter The gaping void in San Francisco, New York, and Cambridge Vision Pro, unscrambled, is “I Poison VR” Resisting Silicon Valley’s cult of “more” The airplane blowout came from our rotten Big Tech economy Creative Good: Instagram’s unmentionable problem Marc Andreessen is right – love doesn’t scale Facial recognition and the end of privacy – with Kashmir Hill The Luddites warned us about Google Celebrating 25 years of this newsletter – and an announcement Creative Good: Surveillance spreading Disaster alerts reveal a better way to design tech Don’t throw technology at it Creative Good: AI is spackle Hacks of the ultra-rich, as revealed by Bruce Schneier and Josh O'Kane Why car companies (still) ignore customers A walk around world raises questions about tech Three things you should listen to An addiction machine for our age Rejecting the Apple Vision Pro What you missed about Google and Amazon Why customers don’t want chat bots The giant brain suck of 2023 My 26-hour delay on Delta Air Lines Is AI a demon or what Creative Good: AI plus whatever ChatGPT’s dangers are starting to show Creative Good: A Simple Desultory Techtonic A picture of the future Where are the customers' chats? Sassy AIs are not the problem AI is creating the Play-Doh internet How Google profits from criminal activity ChatGPT’s drawbacks, and how to respond A new year to make tech better A few more inspiring people Why we can’t trust Apple Bonfire of the vanity project As cities embrace surveillance, we can resist A future for people doing good work A Halloween update on Big Tech Creative Good: Moralists, unite Creative Good: A song about surveillance AI is already turning against you. We can fix it. Waking up to the genetic surveillance state another reason to join Creative Good Creative Good: A “what now?” moment Creative Good: A most welcome decline An “internet for the people” or a plastic beach Our last chance in tech Jennifer Egan and a Forum update Creative Good: Citizenship and smartphones Celebrating one year of the Creative Good community Creative Good Forum Walking away from tech Where to go after Twitter An alternative to Amazon, and avoiding data brokers God, death, and tech with Sasha Stiles The web as monopolized surveillance space Human rights and digital spycraft Designing for deceit in Silicon Valley Bandcamp risks becoming an Epic failure The restart of history Why to resist Amazon by cancelling your Prime account Concentration of power is the problem We said ‘never again.’ Now look at Xinjiang Facebook patents and the comet in Don’t Look Up I founded Creative Good 25 years ago today – and learned a few things Are Facebook and Google criminal enterprises? My predictions for Apple’s smart glasses Creative Good Forum The banality of tech Big questions, answered by Big Tech Smiling in the metaverse Big Tech’s latest misbehavior calls for action Facebook’s laughable response to the whistleblower Get your community organization off of Facebook. Now. Voice surveillance must die The fall of Facebook Why we might transform computers into ‘tiles’ Explaining the last 20 years What to do when the storm arrives Public libraries are better than Google WeWork and waste How to prove vaccine status – with privacy We can’t trust tech, from A(pple) to Z(oom) On resisting emperors and their delusions Cameras and con games: Silicon Valley’s demented fun house
Who’s responsible for fixing tech?
2023-02-03 · via Creative Good

Who’s responsible for fixing tech?

There’s a change in the air in the past month or so – can you feel it? More and more people are finally taking note of the direction, the wrong direction, that tech is headed in. Significant antitrust action is finally getting underway, with the Department of Justice suing Google for monopolization in the ad market. (For more on Google’s ad-market behavior, enabling criminal activity, see my Jan 20, 2023 column. More recently, see today’s Ars Technica piece about out-of-control “malvertising” on Google Ads.)

Elsewhere, both reflecting and explaining the mood today, there’s Cory Doctorow’s recent essay that has deservedly gotten a lot of attention. Cory writes about what I’ll call (the FCC-friendly term) “enfecalization”: he describes how consolidation in the tech industry has caused Google, Facebook/Meta, Amazon, and TikTok to intentionally degrade the user experience of their platforms, surveilling users and exploiting their data for maximal profit. What I wrote about two years ago – Why I’m losing faith in UX – is only more pertinent today. There is no true UX when the very business model of a company is built on deceiving and exploiting its users.

Another article that made the rounds this week: The Junkification of Amazon (by John Herrman in New York magazine, Jan 30, 2023). The article’s central question – “Why does it feel like the company is making itself worse?” – answers itself: because the company is making itself worse; because Amazon is not, in the end, concerned with customers’ long-term benefit, in shopping or otherwise; because Amazon, like the other Big Tech giants, has found that a short-term strategy to eke out just a hair more profit is to mercilessly surveil and manipulate customers, rip off third-party vendors, and shamelessly self-deal in every possible search result and category listing page. The reason why it feels like Amazon is getting worse is the same reason that so many people, today, feel like all of Big Tech is getting worse. Because it is.

It’s an interesting moment when everyone from the Department of Justice to New York magazine is waking up and saying – hey – why are these platforms all so... fecal? Even Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett’s long-time (and 99-year-old) business partner, has joined in, writing Why America Should Ban Crypto in the Wall Street Journal two days ago. (If you hit the WSJ paywall, here’s an excellent summary in Wall Street on Parade today, which expands on Munger’s ideas.) While Munger is writing about cryptocurrency, not Big Tech, his conclusion rings true across the entire tech industry:

Such wretched excess has gone on because there is a gap in regulation.

We need more regulation, because – as these disparate voices are all saying in unison – the tech industry is going in the wrong direction. Asking individuals to “get off Google,” as I do at the end of every Techtonic, may be a fine suggestion, but it’s unworkable at scale. We need a systemic response.

I’ll grant that the problems in tech may run too deep for us to hope for a regulatory fix. Paul Kingsnorth, a past Techtonic guest, published an outstanding article today arguing just this: our society is too wrapped up in the Machine, as Ivan Illich and Jacques Ellul and Lewis Mumford and others warned us years ago. So we need a new stance: in Watch the Great Fall (Feb 3, 2023), Kingsnorth discusses how to proceed “beyond progress and nostalgia” to a third way, of open-eyed observation, which can lead to “rebellion, restoration, protection, the building of new structures.”

All four of these are worthy efforts, and I feel energy to pitch in on of them: rebellion (against Big Tech), restoration (of what we set out to build 25 years ago), protection (of users, communities, and ecosystems), and the building of new structures (using digital technology for better outcomes). Given that UX has been broadly co-opted and perverted by rapacious tech companies, I see limited opportunity to advocate for customer-inclusive design as I once did. But there’s a future in building new structures online, in fostering new sorts of community. My initial effort is this newsletter (subscribe here), and in the community we’re building on the Creative Good Forum, which I’d like you to join.

In the meantime, it’s important to acknowledge that we all play a part in what happens in tech. Stated another way, we all bear some responsibility for what happens from here. This came up on Techtonic this week, as I interviewed Torie Bosch about the book she edited: “You Are Not Expected to Understand This”: How 26 Lines of Code Changed the World. You can stream the show (interview starts at 3:24), see episode links and listener comments, or download the episode as a podcast.

Our final topic of the interview covered Ethan Zuckerman’s essay, “The Pop-Up Ad: The Code That Made the Internet Worse” – in which Zuckerman, the inventor of the pop-up ad, ruminates on culpability. Who’s really responsible for the over-surveilled, junkified mess that the internet has become? Is it the Big Tech CEOs and venture capitalists who got rich off of it? Or regulators who looked the other way? Or computer science professors who didn’t teach a sense of ethics? Zuckerman suggests – and I agree – that all of us, all of us, play a part, in deciding the outcome of our tech landscape.

And this is the conclusion I wanted to drive towards today. If you, like so many others, are feeling that “something is in the air,” that tech is on the wrong track – then you know who really should do something about it. It’s you. Take an action that will make things better. Join my Creative Good community, or some other group working for the good of tech.

Being in tech, we have the unique ability to change our trajectory, at least locally: think how many tools and frameworks are available to us as free open-source software! Think how many ways we can connect, and share, and learn, via the internet – outside the grasp of the Big Tech giants! All of which means we should stay hopeful, because it’s not too late. If you’re reading this, there’s still time to improve.

'modern concertgoer' figurine is a person glued to their smartphone instead of watching the concert

Until next time,

-mark

Mark Hurst, founder, Creative Good – see official announcement and join as a member
Email: mark@creativegood.com
Read my non-toxic tech reviews at Good Reports
Listen to my podcast/radio show: techtonic.fm
Subscribe to my email newsletter
Sign up for my to-do list with privacy built in, Good Todo
On Mastodon: @markhurst@mastodon.social

- – -

LET’S MAKE TECH BETTER: JOIN US.

Mission

Creative Good creates good experiences — for our consulting clients, our Good Todo users, our newsletter readers, and all of our fans.

Contact

Creative Good, 2808 Broadway #17, New York, NY 10025 USA
Phone: +1.646.543.3530
Email: emailus@creativegood.com