🔎 Study finds X algorithm amplifies conservative views - and no one is honestly surprised A Nature study of 5k users found X’s algorithmic feed promotes conservative content, increases right-leaning account follows, and shifts political attitudes over time. #ransomNews #X #AlgorithmBias
This is reinforcing concerns about persistent algorithmic influence under Musk. 🔗 read the article on Nature: www.nature.com/articles/s41... #ransomNews #X #AlgorithmBias

The political effects of X’s f...
The political effects of X’s feed algorithm - Nature

Among users initially on a chronological feed, 7 weeks of exposure to X’s algorithmic feed in 2023 shifted political attitudes and account-following behaviour in a more conservative direction compared with those remaining on a chronological feed, whereas switching the feed setting in the opposite direction, from algorithmic to chronological, had no effect.

Nature
With the #EUAIAct and #ColoradoAIAct now in full effect, "I didn't know how it worked" is a one-way ticket to a €35M fine. I've analyzed the Top 5 AI Governance certifications that are turning non-coders into high-earning "adults in the room." #ResponsibleAI #AlgorithmBias

RE: https://eupolicy.social/@johnnyryan/115509111896873965

Vital to see proper research into #AlgorithmBias 😁

#bigtech like to present them as neutral - that's a big fat lie!

After all the hoopla, the US version of TikTok *still* might use the original Chinese algorithm. Because apparently, some 'characteristics' are just too good to re-engineer. Who's surprised? What's your take – genuine security concern or just a lot of noise about byte-sized recommendations?

Link to the spicy details: https://www.engadget.com/apps/the-us-version-of-tiktok-might-still-use-the-chinese-algorithm-120046751.html?src=rss
#TikTok #AlgorithmBias #TechPolicy #Privacy #BigTech

The US version of TikTok might still use the Chinese algorithm

Reports came one day after a potential deal was announced.

Engadget
Google admits search engine algorithm challenges amid bias controversy: Google acknowledges technical challenges with search results that reflect problematic web labeling, sparking debate about algorithmic bias and publisher content quality standards. https://ppc.land/google-admits-search-engine-algorithm-challenges-amid-bias-controversy/ #Google #SearchEngine #AlgorithmBias #TechNews #DigitalMarketing
Google admits search engine algorithm challenges amid bias controversy

Google acknowledges technical challenges with search results that reflect problematic web labeling, sparking debate about algorithmic bias and publisher content quality standards.

PPC Land
As the status quo shifts, we’re becoming more forgiving when algorithms mess up | The-14

As AI becomes the norm, people are judging its mistakes less harshly, showing our tolerance shifts when new technologies replace the old status quo.

The-14 Pictures
Explore how social media algorithms deepen polarization by reinforcing echo chambers and ideological divides — and discover actionable strategies to promote healthier online discourse.
#DigitalDivide #SocialMediaDivide #EchoChambers #AlgorithmBias #DigitalPolarization
https://www.scitechsociety.com/the-impact-of-social-media-algorithms-on-polarization/
The Impact of Social Media Algorithms on Polarization

The impact of social media algorithms on polarization is both profound and multifaceted. Discover how they work and practical solutions to bridge digital divide

SciTech Society – Build a Scientific and Technical Society The impact of social media algorithms on polarization is both profound and multifaceted. Discover how they work and practical solutions to bridge digital divide
Today I read some of my specific concerns, via AlgorithmWatch. Some students seem to be inhibited. I don't believe it's "brain rot" so soon. More likely a kind of insecurity – technically (confusingly) #algorithmBias, the belief computers are right, neutral, perfect &c. bsky.app/profile/algo... 2/2

RE: https://bsky.app/profile/did:plc:wc7vidfs7rux47enbauoxdji/post/3lrv62abouc2v

THE INCREDIBLE REASON HOUSE STATION LIVE CHANGED SERVERS
Or a survival guide for e-businesses facing bans or legal disputes with a platform

For nearly two years, we watched our entire platform become invisible. Not because of bad content, policy violations, or lack of effort... but because of a silent algorithmic shadowban. We had no warnings, no appeals, and no answers. Worse: under YouTube’s terms of service, any legal dispute must be handled in a U.S. court (even if you're based in France and pay taxes there). This is how global platforms sidestep national laws... and why creators are left legally unprotected in their own countries.
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PART ONE – WHEN A SHADOWBAN SHUTS DOWN YOUR BUSINESS
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Two years ago, we left Dedibox, a French hosting company we judged incapable of meeting even our most basic expectations in terms of customer service. In a field as critical as data hosting, the professionalism of the technical support team cannot be optional... it must be the company's showcase, the reassuring human face you turn to when something goes wrong. This pursuit of reliability led us to GoDaddy, based in Arizona, whose configuration tools, WordPress diagnostics, interface design, and especially their technically skilled support team had earned our trust... far beyond the empty promises of typical commercial discourse. But everything collapsed suddenly, swept away by a digital catastrophe we didn’t see coming. A brutal, invisible blow: the shadowban. House Station Live was ghosted (to use the terminology of our virtual assistant, GPT). Disappeared from search results, ignored by YouTube recommendations, erased from the Android Play Store. For eighteen months, despite heavy investments and extensive testing in formats, lengths, languages, thumbnails, titles, even hosts, nothing changed. Every video was locked between 20 and 30 views. We were trapped in that narrow range, with no human contact, no way to file a complaint, and no hope of improvement.

Facing this algorithmic wall, we made the only logical decision: open an investigation and build a legal case. Not to prove a “perfect crime” but to demonstrate that even the most opaque algorithms leave traces. During this inquiry, we came across a particularly disturbing fact: according to YouTube’s terms of use, any dispute must be brought before a U.S. judge. It doesn’t matter that you are based in France, targeting a French audience, or that French law requires foreign companies to have a legal presence in the country... Google circumvents this by distinguishing between headquarters, local offices, and legal jurisdiction. The result is clear: you are automatically excluded from the protection of your own legal system. This system is so airtight that very few individuals or businesses attempt legal action against Google. The GAFAM is protected by a lethal triad: algorithmic opacity, extraterritorial legal shielding, and the complicity of a U.S. government that views tech giants as national pride (even strategic weapons in the global information war). While France leaves its citizens exposed and helpless against digital abuse, the United States has conquered the Internet on a global scale by imposing its law as if it were sovereign territory.

To illustrate just how absurd and dangerous this has become, let’s take the example of music licensing. Every month, House Station Live pays royalties to SACEM, the French government’s music rights agency. In return, we are legally authorized to broadcast commercial works, provided we submit monthly playlists so that royalties can be fairly distributed to artists. In theory, everything is legal and in order. But the United States has its own system: the DMCA. And if you stream House Station Live through any platform based in the U.S. (like GoDaddy, YouTube, etc.), you are automatically subject to U.S. law, even if your legal entity is based in France. France, in turn, declares itself incompetent in such cases because the “crime scene” is legally located on American soil, where the servers are hosted. So the SACEM fee we pay offers zero protection, neither domestically nor abroad... where we’re treated like pirates. Imagine buying a product from a foreign website: you pay the foreign VAT, a currency conversion fee, and then the French customs tax. Three layers of taxation. A 30 € item ends up costing you 150 €. That’s digital over-taxation. And the same applies to our royalties.

Worse still, the U.S. considers you to be operating on their soil the moment your server is physically located there... regardless of where you are based, where your company is registered, or what contracts you’ve signed with your local rights agencies. Even if your SACEM contract is supposedly international, it offers you no protection in this skewed legal context. The U.S. has simply annexed the Internet, claimed it as their jurisdiction, and imposed their extraterritorial laws on the rest of the world (without any international mandate or global consent).
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||#HSLdiary #HSLpartners

#Shadowban #Censorship #YouTube #DMCA #DigitalRights #FrenchTech #AlgorithmBias #GoogleAbuse #PlatformAbuse #Justice