Let's start here (on Twitter!!!).I agree. As a member of CISA’s advisory committee, we met over the last year & provided recommendations to start conversations about what those guidelines and methods should be. We shared those recommendations in public meetings in June and Sept. They are not secret. https://t.co/vJxO8AIoUh
— Kate Starbird (@katestarbird) October 31, 2022
Read it at your leisure, if you wish. We like kinda full disclosure around here.The inherently subjective nature of what constitutes disinformation provides a broad opening for DHS officials to make politically motivated determinations about what constitutes dangerous speech, write @kenklippenstein and @lhfang. https://t.co/tvYCbqfFjh
— The Intercept (@theintercept) November 1, 2022
And that is a serious problem, as well as a club wielded quite intentionally by people with an adversary to do journalism to. But this is not a problem of Twitter or algorithms or technology. This is a very old, very human problem of how the facts are turned into a narrative turned into a story. And I mean, on the one hand, The Intercept is not the New York Times. Nobody is screaming this Intercept article from the rooftops (and yes, I'm thinking of the NYT shenanigans over Whitewater and again over Iraq and WMD. Takes more to remove a President from office than to ruin the reputation of the Grey Lady. A lot more. Are these things right, or wrong?) It's something of a noise on Twitter. But that just means means nobody is really paying attention, except some people on Twitter:Articles like this that make dark insinuations about meetings w/in a publicly announced advisory committee (yes, amazingly, committee members like Gadde attended committee meetings!) make it increasingly hard to even TALK ABOUT what the U.S. government should (& should not) do.
— Kate Starbird (@katestarbird) October 31, 2022
It's worth reading on Twitter if you've read about the Intercept article on Twitter. Which, again, is not the fault of Twitter; it's the fault of how people use Twitter.This response to/rebuttal of the Intercept article from an insider is worth reading.https://t.co/P2saIoHebo
— RiggedAndStollenHat (@Popehat) November 1, 2022
I blame the algorithm. MATH is not protected by the First Amendment!If the people opposing the fascists could be less stupid that would be great.
— RiggedAndStollenHat (@Popehat) November 2, 2022
From the few times I read The Intercept, I think their adversary is reality. I trust nothing that Greenwald had anything to do with, ever.
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