Setup
When we speak and associate with others in real life, the First Amendment governs interactions, granting broad rights of individual speech and association. Yet when we interact online, we submit to terms of service from private companies. The consequence is that private platforms have become the new governors of speech and association. As if that weren’t bad enough, the platforms’ proprietary algorithms determine which information we see, and allow targeting of particular users based on hyper-personalized data. In effect, the algorithms are dictating and defining our public sphere. In an online world already suffering from vitality over veracity, will this focus on our respective tribes exacerbate polarization even more? Will the predictable trolling keep getting worse?
Speakers
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Jeffrey RosenPresident and CEO of the National Constitution Center -
Rob ReichDirector of Stanford’s Center for Ethics in Society -
Renee DiRestaHead of Policy, Data for Democracy; Research Director, New Knowledge -
Daphne KellerDirector, Intermediary Liability, Center for Internet and Society, Sta...
- 2018 Festival
- Technology
- USA
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