Thứ Ba, 27 tháng 11, 2018

Auto news on Youtube Nov 27 2018

Hello, My name is Stanley and I hope you had a great day.

Today I want to talk about an online program

that was launched on Nov, 2016 by Joe Mucheru

the cabinet secretary of Information, Communication and Technology

The program is called ajiradigital.

go.ke

The program offers basic training

how to make money

at the comfort of your home here in our country Kenya.

Kenya is ranked as the 10th biggest

global supplier of online workers.

This one has contributed in our economy

as well as reducing the rate of

unemployment particularly

to our youths

now, I help you to book an

a training in one of the

ajira studio centers here in our country

but before that you will be required to

follow some of the steps

one, you will be required to

hit the enroll button

fill in your particulars your ID, first last name

your working email, your phone number

and then you also fill in

as a new worker that is if you have never worked as an online worker before

Incase you have ever worked as an online worker

remember you can be a mentor you can also be a trainer

you will be paid you can also work as a experienced online worker

depending on how

and the level of skills you have acquired

and then you can also work as

fill in as studio mashinani user

fill in your

unguessable password and hit the enroll button

in this case I have an account and I will hit the

log in button

I will

key in my ID

and my password

and I will hit the log in button

I have an error and I will

replace that one with

with my email and here we go

So, to book as

a training you will be required to

to click the training

you book the sessions or check the upcoming training

in this case they don't have

upcoming training or you cannot book any sessions

currently. So, you will be required to recheck

once and again

if they have

upcoming training

remember once they have an upcoming training

you will be required to select the class

one class that you will be interested to

in attending

then you will receive an email

with your booking information

and then later it is advisable to

to print all your details

as you will need to present them in order to be allowed to attend

the training in the studio

classes that around in your area.

Now lets go ahead and see what is all about ajira

So, you can come here and click about Ajira

but before that I think I forgot something

you can

you can update your

your information that is your

personal, your contacts

make sure you fill in

your details those that have asterisk

the red asterisk are mandatory you have to fill in

but those that don't have

asterisk symbol

their are not necessary

you can Ignore them in this case

make sure you click the update details

hit the contact, education, work experience

and the training mentor ship

make sure you fill in all of them

and then hit the update button

then lets go and see what is all about

about Ajira

you can

click about ajira and know what is all about it

then you have the online work

the top 3 blogs

that you can work as a

that will give you an insight on how to work on online

are listed here for instance you can click

one online Kenya.com

its called the Tech Mama its owned by one of

the good friend of mine I know

Sheeroh helps people

that is Sheeroh Murega Kiarie

on how to transcribe

that is transcription so you can come here

and know what you will be required to transcribe

for you to transcribe

then you can also click the Freelancer Kenya

Freelancer Kenya is owned by

by the name Walter

so you will be required to fill in your details here

and

start

getting the insights on how to work as a

online worker

then

if you go back to the training

you can see the resources

that the ajira have

one, they have the online training ranging

from core certifications, web design

IT networking, design and creativity

Data Science, Admin , writing and translation

for instance in this case we have the writing of the

articles as we have just seen in the previous

previous blogs the first 3 blogs

that we have just checked, then

they also have the

the articles

many youths here in Kenya

are involved in creating of articles

others are involved in creating of transcription like the one

one of the blogs that we just checked

the Tech Mama this one

learn more about how to transcribe

that is one of the top bloggers

country on how to work as

online worker then we have sales and marketing

and accounting. So you will get all this

at a free lets choose one

in this case I will click the web mobile

and you can read the

the content here

you will find that you will get the certification

and the

the cost is free of charge

and why you are going

the Ajax course

so you come here and type alison.com

and here you will be required again to fill in

because this a different website

which is working in collaboration with Ajira

program. So,

you will be required to fill in your details

sign up

and then you can choose

the program remember all this programs are

free

I don't know whether all of them are free

but you will get

free

free online courses

they are all free so,

you can read online

You need a computer and the internet

you can just read online and get your

certification online

also have the Hyper Text Markup Language 5

which you get at a free

also at alison.com

this is one is good for web designers

who also use the Cascading Style Sheet 3

you will also get at alison.com

at a cost of free

then you also have Java and then we have XHTML

for those who like creating apps you use Android which also you will get at a cost of free

also get it at alison.com and others

then we also have wordpress

CSS

and

many more.......

then we also go to

Ajira centers

you can check the Ajira centers that are around you

about studio mashinani

You can check at KBC Komarock

Langata, Kisumu and Mombasa

then,

If you go to job platforms

we have the local work in Kenya

we have the top 6 writing

we have the top 3 sales and marketing

top 4 transcription

top 4

and many more

depending on what you are interested in

in this case

just come here and click up-work

it will direct you to

their website

and

you will be required again here to sign up

remember every program you will be required to sign up

work

worker

then

you will go the resources

but before that we go to ajira

this is where we have 2 testimonials

those who have worked online

and have been successful we also have resources

the studio mashinani

we also have their terms

you can read all about them

then we also have ajira

and all that and then we have FAQs

you might want to know more about ajira

and many more

now once you have all this you can also check on

ajira

digital Facebook

digital facebook

type Facebook and

go to your Facebook and type Ajira

Ajiradigital

they have a group you can like it

I have liked one

liked

this one

click it

then you can get to interact with other Kenyans

on how to go throw about

or rather

what type of challenges you are facing through

So, its a good platform for you to

to engage yourself with other Kenyans. Yeah.

I think that I had for today

Thank you for watching.

For more infomation >> [WHAT] Ajira digital Program, A Government of Kenya program for online jobs - Duration: 12:31.

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What is home? Questioning my digital nomad life - Duration: 1:44.

It's finally nice out!

I've been in Boston like a month

and the weather has sucked the whole time

Anyway

When I meet people traveling they ask

<i>"Where is home for you?"</i>

And I never really have a good answer

I've been back in Boston for about a month

A lot of people would say Boston is my home

It's where most of my friends and family live

It's a city I know super well

Then again New York is the last city I've lived in

and it still where all my possessions are

So maybe that would be my home?

Legally, Arizona is my home

and it's where my parents live

Almost a month ago I finished up almost 2 months in Medellin, Colombia

That's the longest I've been anywhere in the past 2 years

so... maybe that would be my home?

To me, my home is anywhere I feel truly comfortable

Another thing people ask me is

<i>"when are you going to be done traveling?"</i>

And I also don't have a good answer for that

I'm not ready to stop traveling yet, I enjoy this lifestyle

I feel it's constantly pushing and challenging me to be a better person

to be the person that I want to be

But I do feel need to progress this lifestyle a little bit

So I'm trying to move away from like the "backpacker" lifestyle

Instead of staying in hostels and sleeping on couches

I'm trying to get apartments and Airbnbs

like this great apartment here in Boston

I've been putting more time and effort into my career

and the projects that are interesting to me

But I don't feel like that's got to take away from me

going to new places and meeting new people

I guess my goal is to live like a comfortable, stimulating life

and to have the whole world feel like it's my home

Now I'm gonna go outside

For more infomation >> What is home? Questioning my digital nomad life - Duration: 1:44.

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How to Create a Digital Product That Generates (AT LEAST) $100,000 Per Month - Duration: 50:02.

For more infomation >> How to Create a Digital Product That Generates (AT LEAST) $100,000 Per Month - Duration: 50:02.

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Luka Sabbat Digital Series | Episode 6 "Road Tripping" | Hot Mess On Freeform - Duration: 3:28.

First question —

what made you guys decide to do a show in LA this time,

since you just had one in New York a few months ago?

The answer's in the question.

Our last show was three months ago, and that's way too long.

From the beginning, we always wanted to tour it to a certain extent

where we do more than one show.

And we have different content, and that's

why we're planning to do another one in Japan after.

So, what's the prep been like for the show?

Insanity.

Super last minute and super disorganized.

Lack of communication. Luka and I running around.

It's gonna be fire, though.

It's sick. I mean, it's classic Hot Mess.

Bro, is this the 101? Seems like you're on the right path.

That's critical. We're already late as f*ck.

Y'all know how to do this sh*t?

I can do, like, a back flip.

[Noah] Stop playing.

I'm serious.

[Noah] You're playing.

I can put my feet up on the handlebars while I'm driving,

or I can stand on it while I'm driving.

[Luka] That's hard.

Yeah.

But, I mean, if you want it to go fast, I don't know if you're

gonna get the shot.

We're gonna get the shot.

Okay? Don't worry about that.

Oh, we'll get the shot.

Oh, okay. Okay.

Try those. Try getting on those. Tell me how you feel.

And then we're gonna try to see you on

one of the race ones.

Okay.

How much would an extra ATV be? Just for a quote.

$650 for the three. If you wanted an ATV as well,

we'd do $800.

We'll do it.

The credit card information needs to be

filled in on the bottom as well.

Oh, I'll fill that in.

It's a beautiful life.

I enjoy it.

Great life.

Ready to die in California in the sands by the salt lake.

Great.

In California, it's a law that they have to wear a helmet.

You know this, right?

Yeah. Well, now I know. I'm from New York.

Ah, right.

Certainly, if they're on the bike and not moving, you can

have them pop their helmet off — if that's what you're

trying to do with your photography.

Yeah.

But if they're riding, you would run the

chance of a ranger coming by.

It's not terribly likely, but if they came by,

they would certainly issue you a citation.

Well, we might slip in one or two shots without helmets.

We might.

The sunlight's getting mad low and I don't like that.

Cause we gotta get out of here.

Yeah, we need to hurry up. As usual.

Ridiculous.

For more infomation >> Luka Sabbat Digital Series | Episode 6 "Road Tripping" | Hot Mess On Freeform - Duration: 3:28.

-------------------------------------------

Edición Digital Houston 11/26/18 - Duration: 32:55.

For more infomation >> Edición Digital Houston 11/26/18 - Duration: 32:55.

-------------------------------------------

5-pilares do internet marketing ➞Os 5 Pilares do Marketing Digital -YouTube - Duration: 4:55.

For more infomation >> 5-pilares do internet marketing ➞Os 5 Pilares do Marketing Digital -YouTube - Duration: 4:55.

-------------------------------------------

2018 'Or 'Emet Lecture "Digital Journalism and the New Public Square" Jameel Jaffer Oct 18, 2018 - Duration: 1:17:27.

Good afternoon my name is François Tanguay-Renaud I'm a professor here at

Osgoode Hall Law School I'm also the co-director of the Jack and Mae

Nathanson Center on transnational human rights crime and security and it's my

pleasure this afternoon to welcome you to the 2018 'Or 'Emet lecture a few words

about the lecture the 'Or 'Emet fund was established a long time ago now in 1976

to promote the study of law in the broadest sense the fund in itself seeks

to promote through public discussion research and scholarly writing public

and professional appreciation of the significance of things like religion

ethics culture and history in the development of the legal system 'Or 'Emet

what does this mean well it means the light of truth so the lecture really

seeks to shed light on matters that perhaps deserve a bit more truth or

truth telling as it were in 2010 the Nathanson center of which

I'm co-director decided to pool its resources with the 'Or 'Emet fund to ensure

that the lecture would be delivered on an annual basis so as a result the

themes that are not explored by the by the lecture tend to relate at least

tangentially to the Mandate of the Center now this year we're delighted to

have with us Jameel Jaffer who will already be known

most likely to many of you Jameel is the inaugural director of the Knight First

Amendment Institute at Columbia University but he also previously served

as deputy legal director at the American Civil Liberties Union the ACLU where he

oversaw that organizations work on free speech privacy technology and national

security as well as international human rights

Jameel has argued civil liberties cases in multiple appeals courts in the

US as well as in the US Supreme Court and he's testified many times before the

US Congress his cases include some of the most significant post 9/11 cases

relating to national security as well civil liberties including cases

concerning the tension interrogation surveillance targeted killing and

government secrecy he actually co-led the litigation that resulted in the

publication of the Bush administration's torture memos which is a lawsuit that

the New York Times described as among the most successful in the history of

public disclosure in the United States and Jameel also led the ACLU litigation

that resulted in the publication of the Obama administration's drone memos and

most recently with the Knight's First Amendment Institute he's also litigated

groundbreaking freedom of speech cases his recent writing has appeared in

multiple publications including the New York Times the Los Angeles Times The

Guardian the nation and a Yale Law Journal forum he's an executive director

of just security which is a national security blog and he has two

best-selling books under his belt his first book administration of torture

from Washington to Abu Ghraib story and beyond

I was co-authored with Amrit Singh and was published by Columbia University

Press in 2007 and more recently the drone memos published by the new press

in the fall of 2016 Jameel is a graduate of Williams College

the University of Cambridge and Harvard Law School he has served as a law clerk

to the Honorable Amalia Pierce of the US Court of Appeals for the

Second Circuit and he's also been a law clerk to the right honourable beveler

Beverly McLaughlin Chief Justice of former Chief Justice of the Supreme

Court of Canada so I should emphasize here that despite the fact that Jameel

has built most of his career side of the border in the United States he's still

very much a Canadian and thankfully he told me yesterday that he

still identifies as such so um so and and he's actually been involved with

many organizations on this side of the border including the Canadian Civil

Liberties Association he's actually a Distinguished Fellow of the Munk school

of global affairs and public policy and many other organizations so we're really

delighted to welcome Jameel here at Osgoode Hall Law School York University

today to deliver the 2018 'Or 'Emet lecture on the topic of digital

journalism and the new public square now just a few words about format format

Jameel tells me that he's going to speak for about 30 to 40 minutes and then

we're going to open to questions from the floor for an approximate 30 to 40

minutes once again so without further ado please join me in welcoming Jameel

Jaffer thank you Thank You Professor Tanguay-Renaud

and thank you all of you for being here so I haven't lived in Toronto

for more than a quarter century which is difficult for me to say let alone

believe but I'm always delighted to be invited to speak here because I still

have many friends and family in and around Toronto it's also an honor to be

asked to deliver this particular lecture though as you can probably imagine it's

a little bit intimidating to have to deliver a lecture whose name promises

the light of truth so in the spirit of managing expectations let me just say

right up front that I can aspire to at most a faint flicker of truth through a

heavy fog that's what that's what I'll try for a few months ago The

Guardian published a remarkable story revealing that a Cambridge University

researcher had harvested as many as 50 million facebook profiles for cambridge

analytica which is a data analytics firm that was headed at the time by Steve

Bannen one of Donald Trump's key advisors and the researcher Alexander

Cogan collected the profiles with an app called this is your digital life and

through the app he paid Facebook users small amounts of money to take

personality tests and to consent to their collection to the collection of

their data for academic purposes and then Kogan turned the profiles over to

cambridge analytica which used them The Guardian said to predict and influence

American voters choices at the ballot box

The Guardian story relied in significant part on the account of Christopher Wiley

a Canadian researcher who had helped establish Cambridge analytica on and who

later worked with Kogan on the Facebook project Wiley told the Guardian quote we

exploited Facebook to harvest millions of people's profiles and we built models

to exploit what we knew about them and target their inner demons that was what

Cambridge analytica was built on he said most of you probably remember that

story you may not be familiar though with what happened the day before it was

published as the guardians editors were readying their story for print the

lawyers received a letter from Facebook and the letter threatened a lawsuit if

the Guardian went forward with the story Facebook knew that the story would

provoke disbelief and outrage and perhaps even a regulatory response by

the US Congress so it tried to quash the story with the threat of a lawsuit now

there's nothing unusual unfortunately about powerful actors threatening

litigation to preempt unflattering news coverage intimidating letters of the

kind that Facebook's lawyer sent to the Guardian are a staple of the media

sphere in the United States and in the United Kingdom and they're probably a

staple of the media sphere here in Canada too but Facebook isn't just any

powerful actor it's one of the largest corporations in the world it has more

than 2 billion users more than 200 million of them in the United States and

through its human and algorithmic decision making it has immense influence

on how its users engage with one another and with the communities around them

it's no accident that stories about political polarization and filter

bubbles an election integrity the spread of disinformation online voter

suppression in Brazil mob violence in Sri Lanka and even ethnic cleansing in

Myanmar have Facebook as their common denominator Facebook has an invisible

but powerful influence on what we would once have called the public square and

through that influence Facebook affects societies all over the world so what are

the mechanics of that influence in a new article the legal scholar Kate clonic

argues that the social media platform should be thought of as quote systems of

governance because they're now the principal regulators of speech that

takes place online through their control of the new public square the platform's

are exercising power we ordinarily associate with state actors one facet of

that power the facet that cloning explores in her article is sometimes

called content moderation by which we usually mean the determination of which

speech should be permitted on these privately controlled platforms and which

shouldn't be Facebook for example routinely removes User Content that

shows graphic violence or nudity as well as hate speech as Facebook defines it

and speech glorifying terrorism again as Facebook defines it the other major

platforms have similar policies there's an ongoing debate about the ways in

which the companies are exercising that power whether they're taking down too

much speech or too little speech or perhaps even both in an essay published

over the summer by the Hoover Institution

Daphne Keller who's a researcher at Stanford observes that people from

across the political spectrum are convinced that the platforms are

silencing speech for the wrong reasons this debate is important because

increasingly it's the platform's rather than governments that delineate the

outer limits of public discourse and also because the platform's power to

censor isn't subject to constitutional or regulatory constraint

but content moderation at least in the narrow sense of that phrase hardly

begins to describe the platform's influence the social media company's

more fundamental power over public discourse is reflected not principally

in their decisions about which speech to exclude from their platforms but in

their decisions about how to organize and structure the speech that remains

they dictate which kinds of interactions are possible and which aren't

which kinds of speech will be made more prominent and which will be suppressed

which communities will be facilitated and which will be foreclosed if the new

public square were an ocean Facebook would control not only which fish got to

swim in it but also the temperature and salinity of the water the force and

direction of the currents and the ebb and flow of the tides

but despite the rule that Facebook and other platforms now play our collective

understanding of them is very limited and we sometimes struggle even to

describe what they are when is a platform a publisher when is it a common

carrier for the past year the knight Institute that Institute that I direct

has been litigating a First Amendment challenge a free speech challenge the

president Trump's practice of blocking critics from his Twitter account the

case turns on the question of whether the president's account at real Donald

Trump is a public forum the litigation has been a competition of analogies is

the president's notorious Twitter account like a town hall or a park or is

it more like a radio station or a telegraph Heather Whitney a philosopher

and legal theorist has written a fascinating paper about whether the

social media companies are properly thought of as editors her paper is

further evidence that we're still trying to figure out what the platforms are and

which legal labels to attach to them last year the US Supreme Court decided

an important case involving the First Amendment right of access to social

media the decision was unanimous but Justice Kennedy who wrote the courts

opinion and Justice Alito who concurred in it disagreed about whether the platforms

in their entirety should be characterized as public forums at some

level both justices seem to understand that the conceptual vocabulary available

to them was inadequate Justice Kennedy wrote quote while we now may be coming

to the realization that the cyber age is a revolution of historic proportions

we can't appreciate yet it's full dimensions and vast potential to alter

how we think express ourselves and define who we want to be he continued

the forces and directions of the Internet are so new so protein and so

far-reaching that courts must be conscious that what they say today might

be obsolete tomorrow if our collective understanding of the platforms is

limited it's a large part because the social media companies have guarded so

jealously the information that would help us

understand them over the last few years they've begun to share information about

instances in which governments compel them to remove user-generated content or

compel them to turn over user sensitive data they've begun to share information

about the limits they themselves impose on the kinds of information and the

kinds of content the users can post on their platforms just a few months ago

Facebook released the internal guidelines it uses to enforce its

community standards a release that marked with the Electronic Frontier

Foundation described as a sea change in Facebook's reporting practices these

disclosures are commendable but they're also overdue and incomplete as the

Electronic Frontier Foundation also observed perhaps under new pressure from

the public and from regulators around the world the companies can be compelled

to reveal more let's also recognize though that one reason the companies

aren't more transparent is that they themselves don't fully understand the

decisions that they're making sometimes this is by choice The Guardian

journalist who broke the Cambridge analytica story spoke to an engineer

who had once been in charge of policing third party app developers

at Facebook the engineer said he'd tried to warn Facebook about the growing black

market for its user data Facebook wasn't interested in hearing about it he said

he told the Guardian quote Facebook was in a stronger legal position if it

didn't know about the abuse that was happening they felt it was better not to

know it would be a mistake to think that

public ignorance in this context is simply a result of the company's refusal

to release information the information we most need the companies don't have

the companies are engaged in a massive social experiment with no precedence in

human history they rely increasingly on continuously

involving machine generated algorithms whose complexity defies understanding

they don't understand their own platforms and still less do they

understand their platforms broader social and political implications when

Facebook was asked about the reach of disinformation in the months preceding

the 2016 presidential election in the United States it first said that ten

million people had seen political ads posted by accounts linked to the Russian

internet research agency Jonathan Albright who's a researcher at

Columbia's journalism school then reported in the Washington Post that six

Russia link pages alone had reached 19 million people earlier this year

Facebook conceded that content posted by Russia linked accounts had reached as

many as a hundred and 26 million people if Mark Zuckerberg recent congressional

testimony showed anything it's that Facebook is a black box even to Facebook

Zuckerberg himself has sometimes acknowledged this in a recent interview

he conceded it's tough to be transparent when we don't first have a full

understanding of the state of some of our systems against that background and

now I'm finally getting to my point we should recognize that independent

journalism and research about the social media platforms is extraordinarily

valuable and that obstacles to this kind of journalism and research are

especially problematic to the extent these obstacles

impede us from understanding the forces that invisibly shape public discourse

their best thought of as obstacles to self-government we should view them I

think in much the same way we view laws that prevented us from reading federal

statutes or attending congressional hearings or accessing judicial opinions

they impede us from understanding the forces that govern us last-ditch legal

efforts to block stories before they go to print like the letter that Facebook's

lawyers sent to the Guardian aren't by any means the only obstacles worth

worrying about in this context perhaps the most

significant impediments to journalism and research about the social media

platforms arise from the company's Terms of Service which bar journalists and

researchers from using digital tools that are indispensable to the study of

the platforms at scale most significantly all the major social media

companies bar users from collecting information from their platforms through

automated means journalists and researchers can collect this information

manually but most of the platforms forbid them from collecting it using

computer code the prohibition is significant because it's impossible to

study trends and patterns and information flows without collecting

information at scale and it's practically impossible to collect

information at scale without collecting it digitally the effect of the

prohibition is to make some of the most important journalism and research

off-limits some platforms including Facebook also prohibit the use of

temporary research accounts the kinds of accounts that could allow journalists

and researchers to probe the platform's algorithms and to better study issues of

discrimination and disinformation online this prohibition too prevents

journalists and researchers from doing work we need them to do these

impediments are substantial in themselves but in the United States

they're made even more so by a federal statute called

the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act the US Justice Department understands that

statute to impose civil and criminal penalties on those who violate the

social media platforms Terms of Service on the Justice Department's reading the

law makes it a crime for a journalist or researcher to study the platforms using

basic digital tools the very existence of the law discourages journalists and

researchers from undertaking projects that are manifestly in the public

interest projects focused on for example the spread of disinformation and junk

news political polarization and unlawful discrimination in advertising anyone who

undertakes a project like that does it under the threat of legal action by the

Justice Department in the social media platforms when journalists and

researchers do undertake the projects they often modify their investigations

to avoid violating Terms of Service even if doing so makes their work less

valuable to the public in some cases the fear of liability leads them to abandon

projects altogether now I want to acknowledge right away that the social

media companies may have good reasons for generally Pro prohibiting the use of

these digital tools on their platforms Facebook's prohibition against automated

collection is presumably meant at least in part to impede the ability of

commercial competitors data aggregators and others to collect use and misuse the

data that Facebook's users post publicly Facebook's prohibition against the use

of fake accounts reflects in part an effort to ensure that users can feel

confident that other users they interact with are real people intentionally or

not though Facebook is also impeding journalists and researchers ability to

study and understand and report about the platform it's difficult to study a

digital machine like Facebook without the use of digital tools trying to study

Facebook with the without the use of these tools is like trying to study the

ocean without leaving the shore I want to return

to a point I made earlier that we should think of independent journalism and

research about the platforms as especially valuable and that we should

think of obstacles to them as especially as especially problematic a half a

century ago the US Supreme Court decided New York Times versus Sullivan which is

the landmark case that established crucial free speech protections that

American publishers rely on even today the cases some of you may know arose out

of an advertisement in the New York New York Times that solicited contributions

for the committee to defend Martin Luther King and the struggle for freedom

in the south and the ad accused certain public officials in the American South

of harassing civil rights activists and using violence to suppress peaceful

protests lb Sullivan the public safety commissioner of Montgomery Alabama filed

a libel suit against four of the clergymen who had signed the ad and also

against the New York Times which had published it the case was tried in

Alabama and the jury awarded five hundred thousand dollars in damages but

the US Supreme Court reversed in his opinion for the unanimous Court justice

brennan explained that the first amendment was intended first and

foremost to ensure the freedom of public debate on what he called public

questions quoting an earlier case he wrote the maintenance of the opportunity

for free political discussion to the end that the government may be responsive to

the will of the people is a fundamental principle of our constitutional system

and in his opinions most celebrated passage he invoked the United States

quote profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public

issues should be uninhibited robust and wide open

justice Brennan was focused in particular on speech critical of

government officials because the case before him involved exactly that kind of

speech but the key insight behind his opinion has broader implications the

insight is that the First Amendment was intended most of all to protect the

speech necessary to self-government or as Harry Calvin jr. put it and now

famous essay published only months after the New York Times case was decided the

central meaning of the First Amendment is quote to protect the speech without

which democracy cannot function now it hardly needs to be said that there is a

large distance between the question that was presented to the court in the New

York Times case and the questions I started off with today but it seems to

me that in an era in which the social media companies control the public

square in an era in which these companies are in a very real sense our

governor's journalism and research focused on these companies implicates

the very core of the First Amendment journalism and research that help us

better understand the forces that shape public discourse and that help us hold

accountable the powerful actors that control those forces is speech essential

to self-government it's what the First Amendment is for so

I'd like to offer just a few preliminary and tentative thoughts about what the

companies the courts and legislators could do to better protect the kind of

journalism and research I've been describing and more generally to ensure

that the public has the information it needs in order to understand the new

public square and to hold accountable the companies that control it if we were

committed to these goals what kinds of policy reforms might we ask for well we

might ask first that the companies be more transparent about the ways in which

they're shaping public discourse David Kaye who's the United Nations Special

Rapporteur for free expression issued a report several months ago urging the

companies to disclose quote radically more information about the nature of

their rulemaking and enforcement concerning expression on their platforms

in a report filed with the UN Human Rights Council kay

recommended that companies issue public opinions when they remove content from

their platforms so that users and others can better understand why the content is

being taken down and so that they can challenge the company's decisions when

they believe the company's decisions are unjustified those seem like good ideas

to me as Kay says quote in regulation of speech we expect some form of

accountability when authorities get it wrong we should see that happening

online too but we need the platforms to be transparent not only about what

speech they're taking down but about how they're shaping the speech they're not

taking down what kinds of speech and associations are they privileged in and

what forms does this privilege take what kinds of speech and associations are

they marginalizing and what forms is that marginalization take Kay's report

had a different focus but he highlighted the need for transparency about a

specific form of content curation quote if companies are ranking content on

social media feeds based on interactions between users here o they should explain

the data collected about such interactions and how this informs the

ranking criteria the more general point is that the companies should be more

transparent about how they're shaping public discourse they should be more

forthcoming about the forces at work in the new public square' here's a second

possible Avenue for reform we could ask the social media companies not to

enforce their Terms of Service against those who use digital tools on their

platforms in the service of bona fide journalism and research again many of

the companies themselves many of the questions that are most urgent right now

are questions the companies themselves aren't able to answer the companies

should be facilitating not obstructing the work of journalists and researchers

and others who might be able to provide answers where the companies can't even

if the companies have legitimate commercial privacy or security reasons

for generally prohibiting the use of certain digital investigative tools it

should be possible for them to create a kind of carve out a safe harbor that

expands the space for these activities while protecting the privacy of their

user and the integrity of their platforms

incidentally the data privacy regulation that went into effect in Europe over the

summer supplies a conceptual framework for exactly that kind of safe harbor as

a general matter the new regulation places significant restrictions on the

use of digital tools to collect and analyze and disseminate information

obtained from social media platforms but the regulation also encourages

individual countries to exempt journalism and research from those

general restrictions a handful of countries including the UK have already

recognized exemptions of this kind European privacy legislation in other

words distinguishes between those who use digital tools for private or

nefarious purposes and journalists who use those tools to inform the public

about matters of public concern the company's terms of service should be

similarly discerning the companies can protect their users privacy and their

platforms integrity without categorically prohibiting digital

journalism and research that is overwhelmingly in the public interest a

third possibility we could ask the courts to refuse to enforce the

company's Terms of Service against those who responsibly use digital tools in the

service of bona fide journalistic and research projects as a general matter

courts often a courts enforce contracts as written and as a general matter they

should enforce Terms of Service - but there are content contexts in which

courts declined to enforce contractual provisions that conflict

with public policy often these cases involve contractual terms whose

enforcement would disable democratic institutions or processes for example

where a contract would prohibit a person from running for office or from

criticizing public officials or from disclosing information of overriding

public importance those cases are surely relevant here for reasons I've already

explained journalism and research focused on the platform's is of special

democratic importance because of the unique role that these companies play in

shaping public discourse Terms of Service that impede that kind of journal

and research our intention with our commitment to self-government because

again they impede us from understanding the forces that profoundly shape our

interactions and our communities and our democracy here finally is a fourth

possibility we could encourage the US Congress to amend the Computer Fraud and

Abuse Act so that digital journalists and researchers can do their work

without the risk of incurring civil and criminal penalties journalists and

researchers who are investigating questions that implicate the very core

of the First Amendment's concern shouldn't have to operate under the

threat of legal sanctions let me just close by bringing us back to the

guardian story I started with that story about Cambridge analytic ah is in part a

reminder that the platforms are entirely justified to worry about the ways in

which their users data can be exploited by third parties it should also be a

reminder though of how reliant we are on the work of independent journalists and

researchers if we want to understand the platform's if we want to understand the

new public square' journalism and research about the platforms is crucial

and it deserves special solicitude under our law whatever free speech means in

the digital age it should encompass robust protections I think for this kind

of public interest journalism and research thank you

well thank you very much Jimmy offered this very

thought-provoking lecture so we have plenty of time actually for questions

now this is being very good video recorded and we have one microphone so

if you have a question please wait until I reach you so you can speak into the

microphone

we'll start us off professor Priya thank you this is really really interesting so

I have a question so you you tied the proposals that you make to the u.s.

approach to free speech and New York Times but could it be that that approach

nowadays is part of the problem rather than part of the solution so so

underlying this approach is one that proclaims those three famous words of

Brennan what is it robust uninhibited wide-open exactly but in fact you can

look at it in a different way and say it's a form of privatization so it

privatizes the regulation of speech and interestingly people who in other

contexts are very very favorable to idea that private business should be

regulated by government in this context are saying we should not regulate speech

and in fact nowadays we shouldn't even regulate those who regulate speech the

private companies that regulate speech now this may have been great in the 60s

but now leaving this domain completely on Facebook Google and so on completely

unregulated is is perhaps not sufficient to address the kind of problems that

that we have and perhaps and actually never thought about this until now the

basis for a distinction is is something like speech versus information so

so you can be as free with your speech but but these companies trade in

information and and and that's something else where government may want to be

more heavily involved with with regulating it so now of course they're

just there but so I I generally agree with you that the approach that we have

taken until now is not up to the task I don't see the problem as a problem with

York Times versus Sullivan or the you know at New York Times versus Sullivan

to the extent it just means that we want to make sure that debate about what

Brendon called public issues or public questions is uninhibited and robust and

wide open I'm all for that I don't see any problem with that I think that the

problem is a doctrinal one that is more recent and there has been a shift over

the last 50 years towards a much narrower conception of free speech which

focuses myopically on speakers right and is indifferent and you know to people

who are not in this debate it seems obvious that that free speech should

focus on speakers but it's actually not so obvious right because there are other

participants in the marketplace of ideas there are speakers but there are

listeners there also when it comes to social media platforms users their

society more generally which is supposed to be the beneficiary of this

marketplace of ideas and so I think that the the solution here is a is to reverse

that doctrinal trend and many of the most important and free speech questions

right now that are coming before the US Supreme Court at least are questions in

which there are at least arguably free speech interests on both sides of the V

right so if you think of these social media cases Facebook or Twitter they

argue that they have the First Amendment right to create the expressive

communities they want to create they are at

or they're publishing and they should be entitled to the same First Amendment

rights as any other editor or publisher and to me that's not an implausible

argument the problem is that they're not the only their First Amendment interests

aren't the only ones at stake in these you know in in these contexts they have

interest in creating the communities they want to create but users also have

free speech interests in being able to being able to participate fully in

public discourse society has an interest in ensuring that these platforms don't

undermine other important societal interests including the interest in fair

elections right and so I don't I don't like viewing these First Amendment

questions or these free speech questions through a very narrow lens focused on

speakers alone and I think that we are going to have to think about how to

reconcile or balance the rights again which don't seem to me trivial I think

Facebook does possibly have the right to create its own expressive community but

we need to balance that against other societal interests and the doctrine we

have in the United States right now it doesn't do that very well and you see

that not only in cases involving new communications platforms but you see it

in cases involved in campaign finance or cases involving commercial speech its

commercial speakers where there is this very narrow focus on the rights of the

speaker and in my view insufficient attention given to the free speech

implications of those decisions for other participants in what is sometimes

called the marketplace of ideas

Thanks I'm talking much eg I'm a visiting fellow at the school and

basically in University Belfast and I wonder whether you think there's a need

to go beyond the sort of the shield argument in much of the case you've laid

out which is a very compelling case is predicated on the technological ability

of the journalist or the researcher to work out what's going on which might

be presumptively unlawful but then trumped by one of the illustrations

you've laid out um should we also consider or expect that the platforms in

question might seek to frustrate either by not recognizing that they're

frustrating an investigation through their own data management and systems

practices or as we've sometimes seen with some of the sharing economy

companies deliberately seeking to interfere with investigation we've seen

for instance uber try to develop tools that are both clever and wicked in

recognizing when a regulator is logging on and giving them a different version

of the service and it's not wouldn't be surprising to see similar happening with

a journalistic investigation so where as just say the GDP or in Europe does give

a broad protection for researchers it doesn't do as much of some hints at us

requiring disclosure of how an algorithm operates or providing access to data as

we would for instance with classic public authorities where there may be an

access to information right or some way of requiring an explanation so does the

argument you outline lend itself to lore enough yeah maybe but maybe more of the

positive obligation school rather than the shield school yeah so this is you

know in terms of US constitutional doctrine my argument is quite ambitious

in terms of in any other terms it's a very modest argument right my argument

is ambitious only because US constitutional doctrine is so

constraining but I will not pretend that what I'm proposing is a complete

solution to the problems that I've you know described I I think that we can ask

the social media companies to be more transparent and we should

and journalism and research focused on them can create a kind of pressure to

you know a pressure that they will feel to be more you know more transparent I I

don't think we should rule out the possibility of regulation that requires

them to disclose information it's a complicated question what that

disclosure would look like when it comes to so you can distinguish between two

forms of censorship that platforms engage in I don't mean to you know I'm

using censorship in a value neutral way here the platforms decide who can be on

their platforms right the companies decide who can be on the platforms and

what can be said right by setting up the community standards so that's kind of

threshold censorship who gets who gets into the ocean in the first place right

and then there's a kind of environmental or interstitial censorship that the

platforms engage in much less visible and probably more consequential shaping

the speech by deciding which speech goes viral and which speech disappears into

the void so transparency as to the first forms of censorship is relatively

straightforward right you could demand as David Kay has and many others have

you could demand that the social media companies and you could require them to

do this disclose what speech have they taken down what speakers have they taken

down you could require them to issue public opinions explaining their

decisions although the scale presents a you know a challenge because they make

these decisions Oh thousands of times a day but that's relatively

straightforward what transparency looks like with respect to environmental or

interstitial censorship it's much more complicated and some people have called

for algorithmic transparency meaning you know the require the platforms to

disclose the algorithms that underlie those speech environments but again you

know as I said the the plan firms themselves don't fully understand

the algorithms the algorithms are continuously evolving they're based on

machine learning you know machines are adapting to a continuously changing

environment and if they were to disclose their algorithms nobody else would

understand them either and so you know you you can require them to disclose

major inputs that would be one possibility and some of the platforms

have made a move in that direction already in you know in blog posts they

will discuss how certain things end up at the top of your newsfeed and how

others get you know relegated to the bottom but that is a course form of of

transparency I think of journalism and research as output transparency you have

an input transparency right so the journalism and research isn't telling us

what the algorithms are but they're telling us it's telling us what the

results of the algorithms are and there is this many journalists and researchers

think that that form of transparency is ultimately more important because what

you don't get from input transparency even if we were show you know even if

Facebook showed us its algorithms and we fully understood its algorithms arguably

more important than the algorithms or the data that Facebook is feeding into

the algorithms and you don't get that from the algorithmic transparency the

only way you understand the interaction between the algorithm and the data is by

studying the output which is with journalists and researchers do so you

know that's just a long way of saying I think that the solution has to involve

some combination of input transparency and output transparency meaning some

combination of requiring the companies to disclose more and allowing

journalists and researchers to explore more freely and I think in the long run

this set of solutions here probably has to include a combination of

self-regulation on the part of the platforms and regulation imposed from

the outside by

by government my proposals are also modest in another sense in that I'm

focused entirely on transparency right now transparency and I maybe you know

maybe not the narrowest sense of transparency but nonetheless

transparency and but even if you had all the transparency that I've asked for

there's still the question of you know we would know what the platforms are

doing but what should we think of what the platforms are doing that's a

separate set of questions which is much more complicated than the set of

questions that I've tackled in in my view what Facebook and Twitter and

Instagram and YouTube are doing would be not worth losing any sleep over if these

companies were smaller than they are that every everything all the problems

turn on scale they stem from scale and they're that the magnitude of their

implications are societal implications as a result of their scale and if you

think if you agree with me that the problem you know the central problem is

a problem of centralization of power over the speech environment then it may

be that the most direct solution isn't a kind of free speech regulation but

rather antitrust or anti-monopoly regulation where you you know break up

the companies in some way or somehow lower the barriers to entry into the you

know marketplace in the real sense you know into this sector of social media

and their various ways you could do that you could do that again by breaking up

the companies but you could also do it through data portability requirements

you know just making it easier for people to move from Facebook to some new

platform right those forms of regulation might be a more direct way of addressing

some of the problems certainly the centralization problem and in some ways

they're less

they raise fewer difficult questions because you know regulation of speech

which is the other option would run into immediate doctrinal barriers in the

United States and I think would run into immediate value barrier it's not just in

United States but in most democracies you know people don't like the idea of

governments dictating to private entities what content you know what

viewpoints they can carry and what viewpoints they can and antitrust or

anti-monopoly options don't raise those concerns at least not to the same not to

the same extent sorry it's a very long answer - it was

probably a simple question professor Bandopadhyay I thank you to me this was

great uhm I mean I think I think your paper this is a paper does a lot already

in the sense that it moves beyond gateway regulate keeping regulation to

look at the environmental modification the sort of expansive effects of that on

both users and producers of content so but my question is that so from what I

understand as you said this is a transparency argument but it seems a

little asymmetric to mean that it's missing a dimension so for instance in

the classical understanding of free speech of the marketplace of ideas

it was ideas for their own sake and it was the more speech the better right and

you want to encourage that marketplace of ideas but and that is the classical

American understanding of it but of course we now know and as you

acknowledge that there is an economic dimension to speech the reason these

companies are powerful is because they monetize speech and they're able to do

things with speech and people listening to each other are able to monetize

information right so to the extent that your solutions if I have them right of

you know either don't have the Terms of Service or Facebook should agree not to

enforce them in case of research or court should not enforce them in cases

of research all the legislature should amend this statute to my mind they run

into not the free speech sort of the

the the old-timey free speech understanding but they run into an

economics problem which is that the term the service exists and the courts exist

and this particular legislation exists because as a matter of value people see

the economic benefits the economic side of free speech is as important and the

sort of private corporation side of free speech is as important as free speech

for its own sake and this is the kind corporations have speech to do with

campaign finance and things like that there is now an equation between these

two values of free speech for its own sake and free speech as an economic

value to society so they're both in the public interest my question is that

without measuring the economic side of this is it really to what extent would

you say it's reasonable to expect the courts or the corporation or the

legislature to want to undo or unravel the system at all

aside from there you know ideological commitment there's also an ideological

commitment on the economy side so could you say a little more about how you

think that side would play into your argument thank you that's a very hard

question so I I don't think that there is a strong argument that categorically

prohibiting these forms of journalism and research is necessary to serve

economic interests you know I think that a safe harbor for journalism and

research would add you know just to think of it in a very sort of crass

ledger you know sort of pros and cons way you know the pros would be the

public would have more information about the platforms and the cons would be very

limited even if you take economic costs into account these rules were put in

place long before anyone had thought about social media platforms a Computer

Fraud and Abuse Act is a 1980 statute the concern was hacking it's just that

the law was drafted so broadly that when the social media companies came along

they saw in the law the possibility of

you know strengthening the prohibition in their terms of service against this

form of digital journalism and research so I you know they've taken advantage of

the breadth of the law but the law doesn't reflect a congressional judgment

that banning this form of journalism is necessary or that it serves some

economic and the law was drafted before anyone you know had before Facebook was

a gleam in Mark Zuckerberg I so the hope now is that we can go back to the

legislature and say draft a narrower law you draft a narrower law that preserves

Facebook's economic viability that preserves a Facebook's ability to

protect the integrity of its platform preserves Facebook's ability to protect

its users privacy I don't like saying Facebook's protecting its users privacy

because it's ridiculous that you know but that's the argument that they make

is that they use privacy in a very stylized way what they mean is protect

our own ability to exploit our users data but prevent anyone else from

exploiting it mewho piz we can go back to Congress and say now that we have a

better sense of how now that we know how the law is being used today draft a

narrower law and with respect to so I didn't mention it but this safe harbor

idea this idea of the social media platforms creating a safe harbor

voluntarily for this kind of journalism and research you know voluntariness is

it's a spectrum right and Facebook is responding to public pressure right now

Facebook's under a lot of public pressure to respond to the major news

stories that have exposed the various pathologies on Facebook's platform that

lead to some of the things I was talking about earlier you know disinformation or

you know the undermining of elections and my Institute we sent a letter to

Facebook maybe six weeks ago proposing that they adopt a safe harbor for this

these forms of journalism and research and we spelled out in significant detail

what we meant by public interest journalistic and research projects and

we provided a draft of an amendment to their Terms of Service and I will not

say that they jumped at the opportunity to create that safe harbor harbor but

they responded graciously and invited us to come in and talk with him about it

and we've now had a couple of conversations with them most recently

just a few days ago where we spent two hours talking to Facebook's lawyers and

engineers about whether something like this would be workable and I am NOT

suggesting that you know I'm confident that this is going to happen I'm

definitely not but we would not be getting this kind of response from

Facebook if they didn't feel some public pressure now to answer the kinds of

concerns that we're that we're raising so that's just to say that we're in an

environment in which I think these kinds of reforms are at least on the table

which is more than we could have said two years ago and I think it's

worthwhile to think about how to exploit this moment especially since we don't

know how long this moment will will last

I like to address this from tools digital tools available to analyze

analyze algorithms parentsí reasons I come from small consultancy the group

that I had and I work for banks for in the corporate world government the way

they are using analysis it's a very methodical focused work for this craft

from social planners to be analyzed maybe we could borrow from their

expertise let's take an example we talk let's look at the algorithm if I don't

make sense please interrupt in here you talk input all garage you call data

coming out of the hall to the algorithm the algorithm a thematical formulas each

together I would believe as a professional wouldn't give the entire

story what will tell the story if five

Facebook would show us their use cases what does it mean a use case I want to

add a new customer I have a registration and I end up with a profile and I want

to know what goes in my profile and if you have a flag that you flagged me as a

his security I want to help you do follow-up on me yeah that's I agree with

you I so I mentioned this only briefly in my prepared remarks but so Facebook's

Terms of Service prohibit not just scraping not just collecting collecting

data through computer code they also prohibit what they call fake accounts

and in most contacts you know what counts as a fake account

is obvious you know if you create an account that's not associated with your

real name it's a fake account but researchers and journalists sometimes

want to use what Facebook would call fake accounts

and what they would call what researchers and journalists would call

temporary research accounts to probe the platform for precisely this reason so

you create an account in which you you know you you post that you're a member

of the Democratic Party and you create another account that in which you say

you're a member of the Republican Party and you can see then you know how does

Facebook respond to you you know how different are the responses and this is

a very important thing you you because the algorithms don't tell you everything

you need to know how the platform's respond to certain prompts right and

this is you know in the offline world there's a whole line of cases at least

in the u.s. that protects the ability of civil rights researchers to go to

landlords with tests you know with testers and you send one white couple to

the landlord the next day you send a black couple to the landlord and you see

how does the landlord respond differently to people who are otherwise

similar but differ in this one key quality and journalists and civil rights

researchers want to do the same thing on Facebook's platform they want to find

out well if you're black on Facebook what is the experience of being black on

Facebook and how does it differ from the experience of being white on Facebook or

you know what what is the experience of being from California on Facebook and

how does it differ from the experience of being from Toronto and on Facebook

and it's impossible to do that kind of research without violating Facebook's

Terms of Service so the safe harbor that we proposed and the safe harbor that I

referenced earlier would protect not only the ability of a researcher to

scrape the platform it would also protect the ability for researcher to

create what they would Facebook would call fake account to do that kind of

work now Facebook has said we want to create a community in which people can

feel confident that the people they're interacting with are real people and not

you know not BOTS or machines or fake fake people and so what we've proposed

is that they allow researchers and journalists certain in certain contexts

to create these temporary research accounts so long as the accounts

themselves identify themselves as fake accounts right so but there are there

are many contexts in which what you're trying to study is not the activity of

other users what you're trying to study is the activity of the platform and so

you're not really interacting with other users and to the extent you are you

would disclose to those users that this is not a real person this is the New

York Times doing a study of Facebook and you know we'll see how Facebook response

to this suggestion I mean they again they did not jump at it but nor have

they said that they're close to it good question let me now ask a question and

we have had the chance to speak about this so so your discussion is very much

couched in American medium right so Facebook is an American company you're

from an American organization and you're having a dialogue within a legal

framework that is American and that makes sense right to the extent that you

approaching Facebook on those terms and then be willing to say amend their Terms

of Service or their approach in a self-regulated way and so far as that

works fantastic the sense is that might not be the end of the story

and so the worry here in terms of strategy is having that discussion in a

context like the US which has a very specific not to say neo syncretic

understanding of freedom of speech which is as you said very user driven very Pro

corporate speech campaign-finance Hobby Lobby Citizens United cases we're all

familiar about is the worry that it the kinds of outcomes with that discussion

say whether it ends up in the court or even at the level of Congress and

tranches further some of these idiosyncrasies makes me think that it

might be worth thinking about approaching other avenues or other

venues from a transnational perspective going to the EU coming to other

jurisdictions have that discussion in order to be able

to try to have it only in any less idiosyncratic way right so we've seen

Google having trouble in the EU and my terms of services here in Canada changed

as a resolved right so so to what extent do you think it's it's it's prudent I

want to say that cab in the approach to the US and to what extent do you think

it would be worth engaging other yeah that's a good question I and I mean

you're absolutely right that you know I've approached this through a kind of

American lens I would say that the extent to which it would be productive

to approach it through a different lens depends a little bit on which reform

we're talking about right so if we're talking about pressuring the companies

to be more transparent there's no reason why that kind of campaign should be an

American campaign you know there are users of these platforms all over the

world and we're not relying on law in any direct way in pushing for this kind

of reform we are it's a softer ask and it would make sense to have a broader

coalition and that's something that we should definitely explore when it comes

to you know persuading the courts not to enforce Terms of Service it's hard to

get out of a single jurisdiction right there there the cases were a lot we'd

have to rely on in asking American courts not to enforce Terms of Service

our American cases and we're stuck with the idiosyncrasies of American law in

that context and you know there is a sense in which we could put together a

broader you know that we could have groups in multiple countries going to

their own courts and you know making the same arguments but they would have to

make the arguments in very different ways and even you know whether the

argument could be made or not might turn on what jurisdiction you're in I mean

this is a not an easy argument in the United States it might be an easier one

in countries where the public interest override to contractual agreements is

stronger you know there's more in the United States as you can imagine you

it's this very high deference to private private contractual agreements and then

this argument that you know the CFAA the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act violates

the First Amendment to the extent it prevents this kind of journalism

research there we're addressing both of them we're addressing an Americans a

prop an American problem because it's an American statute and I don't know that

there are similar things in other countries maybe there are but I don't

know and we have no choice but to use American tools to get at it there I

think the problem is especially American in that the CFAA reflects this use of

government power to protect private interests and you know that's the kind

of thing you see more in the United States than you do and your private

economic interest right but the solution our our argument that this statute

violates the First Amendment to the or violates free speech rights to the

extent that prevents this kind of journalists or research my sense is we

have more we have stronger tools at our disposal in the United States to fight

against a problem like this then you do in most other places in the world

because free speech doctrine is very well developed in the United States for

better and worse and you know it's an entirely plausible argument that this

statute could be struck down as applied to journalists and researchers on First

Amendment grounds so I think that we you know we this this set of problems would

definitely benefit from the thinking and resources and experience of a broader an

international coalition or group but the value of that might be different

depending on which reform we were talking thank you my question was about

jurisdiction too but I'm gonna know can can you take us back to the original

story and the Guardian and take us to the offline legal scene what happened

with that threat to to sue the Guardian the short answers

they back down Facebook back down I think arguments so they argued that so

the Guardian their hook was that the Guardian described this as a breach as a

data breach and Facebook the hook for Facebook's letter to the Guardian was

that it was libelous or defamatory to describe this Cambridge analytic

analytical thing is a breach because there was it's not that Facebook had

data in some you know on some hard drive somewhere and somebody hacked into it

and exposed it that's not what happened here this was a combination of data that

individual users had already made public in some sense they had posted publicly

and other information that users had voluntarily given to this researchers in

return for small sums of money and so Facebook said you absolutely cannot

publish that you know you your your story is completely wrong the framing is

all wrong this is a much more minor problem and to call it a breach is you

know not just wrong but actionable now I don't think Facebook was really

concerned about that narrow point what Facebook was concerned about was the

story you know more generally and the Guardian to its credit just published

the story and the aftermath of the story was that Facebook was you know under

fire from you know and from many different places and Facebook

predictably decided that it was probably not in its interest to be seen to be

going after the Guardian for for the story and so Facebook sort of changed

its its attitude towards the story after after it was after it was published and

but you see that you know now we represent these journalists and

researchers that are trying to study the platforms and those kinds of

conversations happen all the time behind the scenes around the Terms of Service

and the canoe fraud and abuse act like a journalist

will so we represent one journalist who

came up with a tool that allowed people to study why Facebook was recommending

certain people as friends in the friends you may know people you may know feature

so if you use faith Facebook there's a feature called people you may know and

it recommends people to you and this journalist cache hill at Gizmodo was

studying this particular feature of Facebook and interested to find out why

she certain people had been recommended to her and one of the people that

Facebook recommended to her turned out to be like a long-lost relative of hers

and she didn't even know this was a relative but she did some research and

she found out that Facebook somehow knew that this was her relative even though

she didn't and she thought well this is interesting

and so invented a browser plugin that individual users could install and track

the people who who Facebook was recommending to them and Facebook

contacted her offline and said we think that this this tool violates Terms of

Service and we think you might want to take it down and she got in in exchange

with them about you know can you explain to me how this violates the Terms of

Service because this is a browser plug-in it's not obviously in violation

of the prohibition against scraping it doesn't involve a fake account so what

what is that the term that it's prohibiting and I don't think she ever

got a satisfactory answer to that question but they tried to bully her

into abandoning this this project and she didn't you know to her credit but

many journalists abandoned projects in the face of you know the veiled threat

of legal action or not-so-veiled threat of legal action and so the same kind of

thing that you see going on with the Guardian goes on you know every day

behind the scenes and there's no no easy way to track those kinds of

conversations and you know we have no idea how many projects have been

abandoned because Facebook or some other platform said hey you know what there's

this federal statute called the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and you know they

may as they're doing with cache Hill they may be invoking Terms of Service or

the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act even when those things don't actually apply

to the the project that the journalist or researcher is engaging so yeah that

you know that's part of the reason why we thought this safe harbor idea was

worth pursuing yeah last question hi so my name is Luke and I'm just a first

year student here at Osgoode and my question was related to the EU and you

mentioned them briefly in your speech I just wanted to know your assessment of

how they're handling it because I see that they're taking broader steps in

other countries or like North America or Canada in terms of curtailing this and

we specifically maybe - the copyright directive that they've recently done

because there's been some public backlash to that so I'm not sure how you

assess their strategy on the digital single market so I don't know a lot

about the copyright directive I think my general sense is that the EU has been

more thoughtful than the United States when it comes to privacy issues I'm

worried a little bit about their response to what they see as dangerous

speech you know so they have you know in Germany there's this new law that

requires the platforms to take down speech related to terrorism for example

within I think it's 24 hours and you know the the way these categories of

speech are defined it's often unsatisfying and the platforms have

every incentive to over censor to take down much more than might fall into

those categories because liability the liability is significant and there's no

penalty for taking down more speed than you have to and most the speech

that is taken down you know some of the speech that's taken down

you know everybody would agree this is inciting people to terrorism or inciting

people to immediate violence but a lot of it isn't like that you know a lot of

it is stuff that's controversial or involves groups that are disfavored but

doesn't involve you know sort of the kind of speech that most people would

agree governments have a legitimate interest in taking down and the cost of

that kind of over censorship often fall most on marginalized groups marginalized

because they're politically marginalized or religious minorities or racial

minorities and you know I I think that there are you know there are trade-offs

here in the United States there's a good argument to be made that Twitter for

example has which has you know used to call itself the free speech wing or the

free speech party right because they generally didn't take things down one

consequence of their not taking things down is that a lot of harassment stayed

up on the platform and there are two the groups that pay the most significant

price for that kind of harassment are women or you know minorities of one kind

or another and it'll be hard to call that a free speech success you know but

on the other hand you don't want the platforms to take down so much speech

that you know you end up with these carefully curated spaces where you know

controversial ideas are marginalized so you have to find some middle you know

some some middle middle road here on the speech issues I'm not convinced that

we've found it privacy I think that the EU seems to be

a good step ahead of the United States and on antitrust issues to the EU it's

been much more aggressive with the big technology companies and now you see for

good reasons and bad reasons the u.s. admitted the Trump administration

more interested in anti-monopoly litigation or regulation of the of the

tech companies but we're definitely behind

alright so Jimmy o started is lecture by confessing doubts as to whether his

lecture would live up to the title Omid lecture that is the light of truth now

after listening to this lecture I think you'll agree with me that he's really

made a valiant effort to shed light on an area on an issue that really warrants

more inquiry and that he's been a the lecture really champions eliciting facts

access to facts greater actor access to truth in an area where even those were

putting out the truth that his companies like Facebook generating algorithms do

not know what that truth is so it's hard for me to think of a topic for a lecture

for Nora mat lectured that was more appropriate so please join me in

thanking time will Joffrey for what was really a great

For more infomation >> 2018 'Or 'Emet Lecture "Digital Journalism and the New Public Square" Jameel Jaffer Oct 18, 2018 - Duration: 1:17:27.

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SPOT 2018 // Jan Grue - Teknologiske kropper: Funksjonshemming i en digital tid (tekstet) - Duration: 42:35.

For more infomation >> SPOT 2018 // Jan Grue - Teknologiske kropper: Funksjonshemming i en digital tid (tekstet) - Duration: 42:35.

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Digital Advertising: Advanced Targeting Options for Online Ads - Duration: 3:21.

Yes, you've spoken about you know pretty general target options that anyone that

has dipped their toes into Facebook advertising or Google Ads they've

probably seen some of those things. Can you speak of any that might surprise

a business owner or marketing manager? Sure, yeah Facebook and Google actually

both have this targeting option but on Google it's called similar to

audiences and on Facebook it's called look-alike modeling but pretty much what

that is, is it targets an audience that you suggest. I want to target forty to

fifty five-year-old women, who are have this job title and work in this location

but what the similar to or the look-alike does, is it will find other

people that are a little bit different from the targeting options that you

input but it will find people almost like that. So hence the

word look-alike. So it'll find people just like that and that allows you

if you're a business and you have a very niche targeted audience,

you would use a targeting option like that where you can multiply the ten

thousand people that you were supposed to hit but now you can multiply it to a

hundred thousand because Google and Facebook are gonna go out and find

people that are almost like that but not specifically like the ones that

you chose and we've seen a lot of really good success from that specific

targeting option. So that's one that off the top my head would be just unique. Yeah that's good.

That's really helpful. So I think another one that is really interesting and YouTube has really come

in the targeting game they've come a long way in the last year

but one cool thing that they just added is something called custom intent

meaning Google it owns YouTube so YouTube is under the Google platform

they've actually combined forces now and really what you're allowed to do is

target people on YouTube watching YouTube videos based off of their search

history on Google which is really cool. So if you want to target a YouTube ad to

somebody that's watching YouTube video, you can put in specific keywords that

they may have been typing on Google and all of that data will come over to

YouTube and you'll be able to target people like that and that's moving

around to the different platforms that Google owns but right now it's on

YouTube and it's been working really well for a lot of big advertisers and

even small advertisers. And that's probably really good to combine those

and so you start showing up on search whenever they are looking for those

terms and then when they go over to YouTube, you show them a visual ad that

is really going to enhance that brand experience and hopefully connect

with them and as we're talking about the marketing mix yeah and then once if I

can take you one step further, once they watch that YouTube video because they

clicked on your search ad, you show them the YouTube video and then anybody that

watches your YouTube video, you show a display remarketing ad somewhere on the

internet, Lancaster Online, AccuWeather, so that when we're talking

about marketing mixes that's really where it's at. So they saw your search ad,

then they're on YouTube you show them your YouTube ad and then they're

somewhere on the internet and you show them a display ad all with the same

messaging, all with the same branding and that's where you're hitting people at

multiple touchpoints hopefully they're coming back to

the website and converting. We've seen a lot of good success from that.

For more infomation >> Digital Advertising: Advanced Targeting Options for Online Ads - Duration: 3:21.

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Digital Series: Twilight Talks - A conversation with photographer Dayanita Singh - Duration: 8:40.

>>> Dayanita Singh is an Indian photographer who

uses the book format and architectural screens to

arrange and transport her work as a series of mobile

museums. She has had exhibitions at museums

such as the Hayward Gallery, in London, but she also likes

to exhibit in popular venues such as a jewelry shop window

in Calcutta. A pop-up shop of her work is currently on view

at Callicoon Fine Arts in New York.

>>> I live in a very beautiful apartment in Delhi.

It's very bare. Large windows, but windows that only look

to the green. You don't see any other architecture.

And I built it so that it would be like an oasis from

the world. Until this year I didn't have anything on

the wall. So it was all white walls, very spare furniture.

And upstairs is my studio and that's where all my images

are and where all my books are.

>>> You live as is your work, right? It's a very

kind of pared down, minimal existence.

>>> Yeah, but with all the luxuries possible.

>>> Do you have a place in your life for clutter?

>>> Not really and it really annoys me, so I have to make

bundles of everything. So even if I have lots of prints,

everything gets made into a little bundle.

I like to classify and then disrupt and reclassify.

>>> You have categories, but you seem to resist

your own urge to want to do that.

>>> Yeah, because it's very important to break

those categories and that's perhaps one of the

problems of photography, no? It's only when I made

Go Away Closer that I realized that you could

edit from just an emotion. So now I have lots of long

tables and they're filled with prints of four by

four inches, and I start to lay them out. And I

start in a very serial way, because I have to get

some order. And then I get terribly disturbed and

depressed that there's nothing there and I'm

useless and there's no point doing anything.

And then there might be one photograph where there's

this light shining from the back, and that

triggers something, and at that point it's really

important to keep the focus. And then I sort of

go to the other things, a little bit like a DJ,

I think, and then I pick up from that table from this

table put it together, build something, feel quite happy,

sleep over it, wake up in the morning, say rubbish,

and throw that off the table and start again.

>>> I think what you're describing is something

that feels a little more just like going out in the

world and finding meaning every day.

>>> I'm a collector of images, but then I have to

do something with that collection. There's no

point just collecting mountains of images-

there's enough out there in the world-

but then to make something out of them. It doesn't matter

how beautiful the images or how strong it is.

It's only if it calls out to be in a form and then it also

starts to determine what form it might be.

>>> I mean you're collecting experiences too.

I mean, how much do you think about the memory

of a particular image as you're configuring something?

>>> Actually, that is the thing, the most difficult

part, because you have to get away from that.

So whatever your memory might be of that time you have

to really learn to listen to the image. And what the

image is saying and how you remember it may be two

completely different things.

>>> It feels to me little bit like this is how we

form memory, how memory works, and also maybe,

too, how history is meaningful to us only in

the moment to moment, as we rediscover something,

or something surfaces that feels suddenly relevant.

>>> And to see what memories emerge, finally.

Like today, you saw that Museum of Gestures the

other day? I've changed it all around today, because

I turned the photographs, I turned the books. So now

it's a different work. And so Photi was saying,

how often are you going to do this the Dayanita?

And I said, every day.

>>> Until someone buys it.

>>> And then they can keep doing it.

Yeah, and that's what I wanted for photography:

to find forms that you can endlessly rearrange.

Which means that the edit has to be very solid and

that's what takes the time.

>>> I think people think of photography as realism.

They think of it as their hard memory of their lives,

even the family photos that they keep.

And in some ways they rigidly write that narrative but

then don't often rewrite it as they probably should

be doing, right?

>>> But even before social media, if I think back to

my childhood, all my memories are from

photographs that my mother took. I have very few

memories aside from those times that there were

photographs of. And I often wonder, if there

wasn't any photographs, what would I remember?

>>> Your work itself is so architectural. You build

these screens, you make boxes, you make clothing.

There's a utility to it and there's a mobility to

it as well. But it seems to me like it's a kind of

self-sufficient.

>>> Yeah, mobility is very important. Changing is

very important. And somehow, taking my agency back.

I can't wait for a museum or a gallery to

want to show my architecture work.

Today there are museums, tomorrow there may not be.

One can't make one's work on the assumption that

there would always be these art galleries and museums.

So I want to make forms and present them in

ways that they can be constantly rearranged.

I think it's that fixedness of the print that I so dislike.

>>> There's a kind of pragmatism to that.

I think people want to think photographs last forever,

they outlive us. Maybe they do but they don't

really live that much longer, probably, than we do.

It takes somebody to know what's in the

photograph to treasure it and to give it meaning, really.

>>> Well, that's why I got very interested in making

family portraits. Because when I realized that it

was impossible for me to work as a photojournalist,

I had this idea that if I made portraits of your

family and I gave them to the family, nobody could

cherish it as much as you would. And if it was a

large enough print and framed, that you would put

it on your wall and that would be my exhibition.

So my idea was that if I had my photographs in 300

homes in my lifetime in India, that would be my exhibition.

>>> That's a great big serial exhibition. But you

have photographs now in a shop window in...

>>> In Calcutta.

>>> Calcutta, that have been there for a long time...

>>> For ten years.

>>> Ten years. Do you want to talk about that?

>>> Well, I made the Sent a Letter box that you saw

in the exhibition, which is seven accordion fold

books that become exhibitions. And I was

walking in Calcutta, on Park Street, I saw these

empty vitrines, and I had the box in my hand, went

inside, introduced myself to the owner, and he said,

what can I do for you? And I said, well, your

vitrines are empty. Could I have them for a day or two?

And he said, you can have them for as long as

you like because our jewelry is too valuable to

put on the street. So I put them in, it was

January 2008, and I went back January 2018, and

they were still there, and now I've put Museum Bhavan

in their place. So that's been my longest running

exhibition, on Park Street. Probably 10,000

visitors a day. 1% pay attention, and if you

start to calculate the numbers, it's more than

any museum show.

>>> And it's maybe a more focused, or just as much

attention as people pay in museums now, honestly, too.

They go through and take pictures of things

and selfies. And also too is, museums are desperate

to get people up to the hill where the museum is,

this kind of pristine, intimidating thing.

>>> Well, that's the reason for making that box,

you know, that Museum Bhavan box. An offering to

the museums to say, you know, you might want to

think about reaching out to people. So for example,

if there was a MoMA box that I could carry back,

then I can take it to Saligao and show it to

people in the village and we could have a little

MoMA exhibition in a small village in Goa. Those people

may never come to MoMA. So why shouldn't the

museums also find ways to disseminate other than the

kind of souvenirs they make at the shop. But to

actually find pocket museums and museums in

suitcases and bags, and you become an ambassador

for their museum for when you travel in Japan.

>>> Yeah, it's unintimidating, you know.

I mean, it's not pretentious like Marcel

Duchamp's boîte en valise, but it has real sincerity.

And I was thinking as you were talking that India,

rural India, must be so different from rural

America, but I think maybe in some ways it's not.

I think a lot of Americans, in living in rural places,

don't necessarily go to cities, and if they do

they don't particularly go to MoMA or museums.

>>> No. It's so easy now. You can print on all kinds

of material, no? So it could even just be one sari,

where you print the most famous paintings and

take it somewhere and just put it on a clothesline,

and then you have that exhibition. So I think the

museums need to go outside themselves now. And I'm

giving them a lot of clues but nobody is taking those clues.

For more infomation >> Digital Series: Twilight Talks - A conversation with photographer Dayanita Singh - Duration: 8:40.

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Using FCPS-Approved Digital Resources at Columbia ES - Duration: 3:17.

Hello Fairfax County Public Schools. We're here at Columbia Elementary School with

principal Mike Cunningham and assistant principal Ms. Patel and all of the

wonderful office staff and students. And we're here with Maribeth Luftglass and

we're gonna look today at digital resources. You know Portrait of a Graduate is

about communication and collaboration skills and how are digital resources

really helping us advance portrait of a graduate and classrooms here Columbia.

So, let's go! Mike what do you want me to know before we go in about the digital resources

and what's going on in your elementary school. We're really excited to show you

that we were awarded a grant last year, through DIT. Yes. And this was a project that our staff wanted to do. To do create more

online resources for the kids and they're using it to create a book. Each

kid is creating a book on the seasons. Students are creators, not just

consumers of education, of technology, which is a great model.

Let's go take a look. Very good.

What are they working on here? What digital resource is this?

So, this is called Book Creator. It's one of our approved apps that they can use to add videos, they can draw, they can take

pictures, they can add audio. So these kids are all using all those media to

teach us about trees as they're doing their science unit. So they really can

create a book online? Yeah. And then they can print it out and make an e-book,

share with their parents. Oh, that's so powerful and you mentioned it's an approved app.

Why is the approval process of these sort of resources so important here

in Fairfax County Public Schools. We have great people in central

office who spend all their time making sure that they are secure, that they're not,

that the apps that we use are taking good care of the data, of our kids, they're

not sharing things they shouldn't, they're really good educational tools, they align

with our curriculum. So we want to make sure that we're using applications that

are the best for our kids both as far as educational value and security. So our

teachers, as you know, are very busy trying to make sure that they have all

the best tools. And one of the nice things about having a vetted process and

a vetted list of tools is that it saves them time and effort. We have to do a lot

of research on their own to make sure that they're safe and secure is one

thing that we can provide a value added to our teachers. One of the nice also

things that provide some consistency when students and teachers move

from one school to the next, they can see tools that they've already learned

how to use our school-based technology specialists, our wonderful SBTS here,

is able is able to teach our teachers how to use these various what these various

tools so there's some consistency and professional development and consistency

with our schools and what our teachers are learning how to use.

So if I'm new to Fairfax County Public Schools as a new teacher or I'm a veteran teacher,

but I'm not particularly technology savvy, where do I start to really know

where these approved digital resources are?

So FCPS, in partnership with information technology and instructional services, developed an FCPS Digital

Ecosystem site. So they can look for that on the website. They can also find it on

their browser. So all of our teachers on their laptops have the FCPS Digital

Ecosystem automatically linked on their browsers anytime they go on your

computer they can find those resources very easy. Fantastic. Thanks for all that

you're doing and for your system leadership, Maribeth when making this

happen for teachers in the classsroom. We're excited! Very good.

For more infomation >> Using FCPS-Approved Digital Resources at Columbia ES - Duration: 3:17.

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Overcoming Fear - Digital Storytelling Project - Duration: 4:01.

For more infomation >> Overcoming Fear - Digital Storytelling Project - Duration: 4:01.

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@TxRRC Central Records: Transition to the Digital Age - Duration: 1:34.

(Music)

(Roy Phillips) Everything we have is available to the public. We've had people come from all

over the world, and that's why we want to digitize everything. We want to make this

available, not just to the people of Texas, but to the whole world. The purpose

of Central Records is- we're more like a repository. All the records that are

generated, primarily by the oil gas division, bundle down to us here. We also

have a small library, and we have some very old documents in there and books,

and we have a reference library. People come to look at the old historic things.

The first step to digitize is we pull

the hearings off the shelves and put them in boxes. Once they're in the box,

we have a team that do what's called prepping then it goes to our imaging vendor,

and they take the documents and run them through the scanners, and then it goes online

for the public to view. The reason that we're digitizing, trying to get

everything digitized, is for transparency so anybody out there in the public has

the ability to be able to look at any document- sitting in their living room,

sitting at their desk, wherever they are if they have a computer they can look at

these records.

(Music)

For more infomation >> @TxRRC Central Records: Transition to the Digital Age - Duration: 1:34.

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Digital Pull Testimonial - Duration: 0:33.

Our idea is that the project don't stay restricted to the university.

But, that it can also be published by you (SEconecta), that would be a platform for us

Where the project could e visualized not only nationally but also internationally

So that it can be of easy access for the community and that, additionally,

can set bases for other projects in the future, that could be not only focused in residential applications,

But also enterprise applications and that can help generate more ideas about renewable energies.

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