ǝǝqoɹnʞ 👇️👆️ kurobee @kurobee_dev 》『見たくない表現に触れない権利』 邪魔くさい広告を見たくない権利を侵害されてるんですがどうしたらいいですかね。 「月曜日のたわわ」全面広告を日経新聞が掲載。専門家が指摘する3つの問題点とは? | 2022/4/8 – ハフポスト日本版 nordot.app/88509024750264… pic.twitter.com/…
WhatsApp is adding the option to hide your ‘Last Seen’ status from specific contacts
This week, WhatsApp began rolling out emoji reactions. And it looks like the company could soon implement another overdue feature. With the latest beta release of its iOS app, WhatsApp has added an option that allows users to limit specific individuals…
China cracks down on livestreaming of ‘unauthorized’ games
China has signaled it will begin actively enforcing regulation that forbids the livestreaming of unauthorized games. Per Reuters, the country’s National Radio and Television Administration said on Friday all internet platforms are “strictly forbidden” …
Elon Musk’s Twitter bid is as well thought out as his tweets
Elon Musk, who until the last week or so, was known on Twitter mainly for trolling and incurring the wrath of the SEC, has now set his sights on taking over the platform. Speaking at a TED conference on Thursday, the Tesla CEO positioned his $43 billion hostile takeover bid not as something he wants to do, but as something he feels is “important to the function of democracy.”
“It’s important to the function of the United States as a free country and many other countries,” he said. “Civilizational risk is decreased, the more we can increase the trust of Twitter as a public platform.”
That may sound like a lofty goal — and it’s not that different from how Jack Dorsey and other Twitter leaders have talked about the platform — but Musk’s actual ideas for making Twitter more “trustworthy” are bizarre and sometimes contradictory. It suggests he has little understanding of how Twitter works, much less how to run the company.
During the interview, Musk repeatedly stated he believed speech on Twitter should only be constrained by what’s legal. Twitter, he said, should “err on the side of, if in doubt, let the speech exist.” He said that permanent bans should be used sparingly. “A good sign as to whether there’s free speech is, [if] someone you don’t like is allowed to say something you don’t like, and if that is the case, then we have free speech.”
Besides being a somewhat narrow view of free speech, Musk’s own track record would appear to be at odds with this statement. While he has zero experience running a social media company, his actions as Tesla’s CEO suggest there are many scenarios in which he is notably less committed to absolute free speech.
As Quartzpoints out, Musk has reportedly fired numerous Tesla workers who disagree with him. Recently, one employee was shown the door for posting videos to his personal YouTube channel that depicted flaws in Tesla’s self-driving software running on his own vehicle. Musk also reportedly tried to force a law firm, hired by Tesla and SpaceX, to fire an associate who had previously worked for his arch-nemesis the SEC, in an apparent retaliation for the lawyer’s involvement with the agency’s investigation of Musk. Incidentally, Tesla has faced allegations of discrimination and is currently contending with a lawsuit from the state of California over its treatment of Black employees.
Trust and safety experts were also quick to point out that a lack of content moderation actually has a chilling effect on free speech. “Effective moderation is not inherently in conflict with free speech,” Samidh Chakrabarti, Facebook’s former head of civic integrity tweeted. “It is required for people to feel free to speak.”
This is more than just theoretical. Just ask former CEO Dick Costolo who famously presided over one of the most toxic eras in Twitter history thanks to a hands-off approach to content moderation. It was under his tenure as CEO that Gamergate and other targeted harassment campaigns were able to drive scores of users off the platform. Costolo later admitted that his failure to deal with trolls was a huge mistake.
Others pointed out that less moderation would quickly result in Twitter being overrun with spam and other shady — yet entirely legal — content. Even Musk seemed to contradict himself on this point, saying that a “top priority” would be to rid Twitter of the “spam and scam bots and bot armies” that frequently impersonate him.
Away from the culture war battles over “free speech,” Twitter is facing significant challenges of its own. The company is still in the middle of a big shift, changing many of its core features in an effort to find new sources of revenue. It still has aggressive growth targets for users and revenue that would prove challenging even for seasoned Twitter insiders — which Musk is not.
And Musk doesn’t even seem to know what he actually wants. He acknowledged that he was unsure of if he would be able to pull off actually buying Twitter (other shareholders seem to agree on that point) and claimed to be unconcerned with making money from his investment. He claimed to have a “plan B,” but didn’t share details. He also admitted that his tweets are little more than a “stream of consciousness” he sometimes composes while on the toilet.
As with so much else he does, it’s impossible to tell if he really wants to fully control Twitter or if all this is yet another elaborate troll. It could be both.
“I do think this will be somewhat painful,” he mused. On that, at least, he’s spot on.
「露ウの衝突は米国に責任がある」 「村山首相談話の会」理事長
「村山談話を継承し発展させる会」の藤田高景理事長(2022年4月15日提供)。(c)CGTN Japanese 【4月15日 CGTN Japanese】ロシアとウクライナの衝突は1カ月以上続いています。それに伴い、緊張した情勢の根源は米国の扇動や北大西洋条約機構(NATO)の長年にわたる東方拡大にあると指摘する国際問題関係者が、ますます増…
Engadget Podcast: Nintendo Switch Sports and Elon Musk’s ongoing Twitter affair
This week, Cherlynn and guest co-host Sam Rutherford discuss the new Nintendo Switch Sports games, a coincidental week of beauty gadget coverage and the ongoing saga of Elon Musk trying to own Twitter. We also go over Activision Blizzard’s new Chief Diversity Officer and Meta laying claim to almost half of all digital asset sales in its virtual world.
Listen below, or subscribe on your podcast app of choice. If you’ve got suggestions or topics you’d like covered on the show, be sure to email us or drop a note in the comments! And be sure to check out our other podcasts, the Morning After and Engadget News!
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Topics
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Nintendo Switch Sports – 1:53
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Checking out the Theraface Pro and PMD Personal Microderm Classic – 14:56
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Elon Musk isn’t done with Twitter, might be trying to buy the company – 23:59
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Blizzard has hired a Chief Diversity Officer to help sort out its whole mess – 36:31
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Meta wants a 47.5% cut on all items sold in the Metaverse – 40:45
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Vivo’s X Fold has a fingerprint reader on both screens – 44:28
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Sonos bought a startup that makes speakers powered by light – 48:53
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Working on – 53:52
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Pop culture picks – 55:14
Video livestream
Credits
Hosts: Cherlynn Low and Sam Rutherford
Producer: Ben Ellman
Livestream producers: Julio Barrientos, Luke Brooks
Graphics artists: Luke Brooks, Brian Oh
Music: Dale North and Terrence O’Brien
閑居 on Twitter: “クールジャパンという杜撰な政策背景に、日本のテレビ番組を海外に売り込むと設立された「WakuWaku ジャパン」が、3月末で廃業したというのに、ほとんど報じられていない。スカパーやら電通やらが出資した国策放送サービス。乱脈経理も事件化せずの国策ぶり。。。”
クールジャパンという杜撰な政策背景に、日本のテレビ番組を海外に売り込むと設立された「WakuWaku ジャパン」が、3月末で廃業したというのに、ほとんど報じられていない。スカパーやら電通やらが出資した国策放送サービス。乱脈経理も事件化せずの国策ぶり。。。
Elon Musk says that Twitter’s algorithm should be open source
If Elon Musk is indeed able to buy Twitter, the platform could look a lot different. In his first public, non-tweeted comments since the saga began, Musk addressed why he wants to buy the company, and changes he would want to bring about.
“Twitter has become kind of the de-facto town square,” he said. “It’s just really important that people have both the reality and the perception that they’re able to speak freely within the bounds of the law.”
In terms of specific changes, Musk said Twitter should open-source its algorithms and minimize the interventions it takes in policing content. “Any changes to people’s tweets — if they’re emphasized or de-emphasized — that action should be made apparent,” he said. “So anyone can see that that action has been taken so there’s no sort of behind-the-scenes manipulation, either algorithmically or manually.”
He added that the underlying code behind the algorithm should be available on GitHub, so that users could inspect it themselves.
Musk also spoke about his philosophy on content moderation, namely that there should be very little of it. “I think we would want to err on the side of, if in doubt, let the speech exist,” he said. “I’m not saying that I have all the answers here.” He repeated several times that his preference would be to allow all speech that is legal, and that he dislikes measures like permanent bans. “I do think that we want to be just very reluctant to delete things and be very cautious with permanent bans,” he said. “You know, timeouts I think are better than sort of permanent bans.”
Those comments are not likely to be well-received among Twitter employees, some of whom were reportedly extremely worried by the prospect of him joining the board.
Musk’s appearance at TED comes just hours after the Tesla CEO made a $43 billion offer to buy Twitter. That offer was the culmination of a chaotic few days for Musk and Twitter, during which he revealed that he had become Twitter’s largest shareholder, was offered a seat on the company’s board of directors, declined to join and was subsequently sued by Twitter shareholders over his delay in reporting his investment to the SEC.
Whether Musk will actually succeed in taking over the company is unclear. Twitter’s board has so far only said that it will “review” the offer. “I’m not sure that I will actually be able to acquire it,” he said. When asked if he had a “plan B,” if Twitter’s board were to decline his offer, he said that he did but declined to elaborate.
As for his own Twitter feed, Musk confirmed what many may have long suspected. “I’m tweeting more or less stream of consciousness,” he said. “It’s not like, ‘let me think about some grand plan about my Twitter’ or whatever. I’m like, literally, on the toilet like, ‘oh, this is funny,’ and then tweet that out, you know?”
YouTube gives Shorts creators the ability to remix most videos
YouTube is giving Shorts creators access to a much larger toolkit. Creators will be able to clip and remix up to five seconds of any eligible video or Short in their own shorts. The feature should be available for everyone on iOS in the coming weeks, and it’ll come to Android later this year.
The tool builds on an audio remixing option YouTube added last year. To remix a regular video, tap the Create button and then Cut from the remix options. You can then choose which part of the video that you want to use in your Short. If you’d like to remix someone else’s short, tap the three-dot menu button, then select Cut.
Shorts that remix other videos will automatically include attribution for the original. Those who don’t want their videos to be remixed can opt out in YouTube Studio.
Adding a video remix tool is a smart move. Remixing options played an important role in TikTok’s success, while Instagram added a similar option in January. The feature will give current Shorts creators a much bigger palette and it might entice some newcomers to try making Shorts as well. Limiting the length of remix clips to five seconds might seem a little constricting, but inventive creators should still be able to make the most of it.
On top of that, it’ll now be somewhat easier for Shorts creators to find an audience. Those videos will be available to view on the web and YouTube’s tablet app in the coming weeks. Until now, they’ve only been viewable in the mobile app.
WhatsApp wants to turn your group chats into ‘Communities’
WhatsApp will start experimenting with Communities, an update that represents a “major evolution” for the messaging app, according to Mark Zuckerberg. An unreleased version of the feature was first spotted last year, but the company hadn’t confirmed it…