Techs not ready for the post-Roe infowar – Protocol

Posted: May 9, 2022 at 8:56 pm

Hello, and welcome to Protocol Policy! Today, were talking about tech platforms responsibility in fighting misinformation in a post-Roe world. Plus, the Biden administration strikes a deal with ISPs, and Trump loses a court battle.

It took about a day from the leak of the Supreme Courts Roe decision for internet sleuths to decide theyd figured out whodunnit.

It started with a Twitter thread, which sent searches for the clerks name soaring moments later. Pretty soon, posts about the alleged leaker were lighting up Facebook. According to social media monitoring firm Brandwatch, mentions of the alleged leakers name (which were not sharing here) spiked by 7,300% within a few days.

The Supreme Court marshal is now investigating the leak, and its anyones guess whether this social media-fueled theory will turn out to be true. The question is: What responsibility do platforms have in the event that its not?

The Roe decision is about to become techs next big infowar and charting a path forward isnt going to be easy. Take the leaker posts.

Its not just about the leaker. Its also unclear where platforms will draw the line when it comes to medical misinformation about abortion. Its already popping up in ads.

Its no big surprise that tech giants arent interested in drawing bright lines around one of the most polarizing issues in America. Meta, Twitter and Google all directed Protocol to their existing policies but as in all things, your interpretation of how those policies apply to abortion misinformation probably depends a lot on your views about abortion.

None of these questions are exactly new. Pro- and anti-abortion groups have been fighting it out on social media for years, and fighting it out with picket signs for even longer. But with in-person clinics expected to evaporate across wide swaths of America, the ability for people to get reliable information about abortion online has arguably never been more critical.

Twenty ISPs will dramatically cut costs for low-income Americans after striking a deal with the Biden administration. The providers, including AT&T, Comcast and Verizon, will offer high-speed plans for no more than $30 a month. That deal, combined with the $30 monthly broadband benefits in the infrastructure law, means eligible Americans should be able to get high-speed service for free.

A federal judge dismissed Trumps censorship lawsuit against Twitter, which argued that the company had violated the former presidents First Amendment rights. Plaintiffs are not starting from a position of strength, the judge wrote.

Tesla is suing a former engineer, alleging he stole confidential information about Teslas efforts to build an in-house supercomputer. The company says the engineer then tried to pass off a dummy computer for inspection.

Oral arguments began in Texas appeal of a ruling against its social media law. The law was already blocked on the grounds that it was unconstitutional after Texas was sued by NetChoice and the Computer and Communications Industry Association.

New polling shows that American voters do not see regulating tech companies as a priority. Their top concerns are strengthening the national economy (38%), followed by controlling inflation (37%). By contrast, only 5% of respondents prioritized regulating tech companies.

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The fossil fuel industry is pushing a new (factually dubious) narrative on Facebook. According to an analysis by Media Matters, some of the industrys most popular recent posts focus on the need for energy independence to justify more drilling, even though the U.S. is a net exporter of liquid natural gas. Only two of the 100 posts analyzed had climate misinfo labels attached.

Could labeling junk news discourage people from reading it? Not likely, according to new research from NYU. The study found that rating news outlets by reliability didnt nudge most people to more reliable outlets unless they were among the most voracious readers of unreliable news to begin with.

Google is blocking paid app downloads in Russia, citing payment system disruption. While sanctions prohibit certain financial transactions, free apps and other free Google services are still available there.

COVID-19 restrictions in China have forced Apple to rely on local engineers to oversee its manufacturing operations in the country. The company had previously sent U.S. engineers to China to do the work, but limits on foreign visas during the pandemic prohibit that kind of travel.

An analysis of Russian state media shows how the country is using its vast propaganda network not only to mislead Russian people about the war in Ukraine, but also to confuse them to the point of not knowing what to trust.

Former U.S. TikTok employees say they averaged 85 hours of meetings a week while working for the company, which has adopted a grueling work environment, according to the Wall Street Journal. If I knew that working at TikTok would cost me this much, I would never have taken the job, one former employee wrote in a Medium post.

Uber is cutting costs and treating hiring as a privilege, according to a leaked email to employees from CEO Dara Khosrowshahi. Khosrowshahi wrote that the changes are a response to a seismic shift in the market. Meta made a similar declaration about hiring last week.

New polling shows voters' top tech policy concerns are cybersecurity and data privacy. Only 7% of respondents prioritized antitrust action and 1% prioritized changes to app store rules. In fact, the majority (58%) believe the pending tech antitrust legislation would cause more harm than help to consumers.

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Elon Musk might want to think twice about banning bots on Twitter: Theyve been awfully good to Tesla, after all. According to The Washington Post, researchers at the University of Maryland found one account in particular, @danrocks4, that has posted about Tesla, on average, every three hours for more than six years.

Thanks for reading see you Wednesday!

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Techs not ready for the post-Roe infowar - Protocol