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Neoreactionary Networks: Mapping extreme and mainstream Twitter

https://awful.systems/post/2570802

Neoreactionary Networks: Mapping extreme and mainstream Twitter - awful.systems

Hello everybody, after a lengthy delay, my talk to the University of Sidney about Neoreaction and the ways I tried to map its various communities, is now available. Please ignore the coughing. My keynote slides were very dusty.

Huh, I never imagined Wikipedia would have such a thing. Thanks!

Is there a compendium of Elon+Twitter badness?

https://awful.systems/post/2466252

Is there a compendium of Elon+Twitter badness? - awful.systems

I want to make the case to my employer that we should drop Twitter/X as a promotional channel. I could go drawing together the various examples of disinfo spreading, instating CSAM posters, rise of content inciting violence etc, but I thought I’d check to see if someone hasn’t already been tracking this. The sooner I can pull the info together the better but I don’t have time right now to go compiling it myself. Anyone know if there’s a site, wiki, resource, thread etc that could set me up?

Money represents the aggregate value of the intersection between human labour, ingenuity and scarce finite resources. Human lives are routinely rendered down, ground up and consumed by the drive to generate this representative value. Entire ways of living, forms of self perception and our understanding of what makes a human worthy of existing is inextricably wrapped up in this value generating process.

As a society we have declared that these people are best placed to decide what to do with that value. They chose anime.

Good to see some reporting that continues to gloss over Srinivasan’s obsession with culture war “woken ess”, writing that veers a little too close to the idea of purging undesirables and open musing that the next best steps might be to corrupt the police force through financial incentives so they can have them as their own enforcers.
To be fair I’ve spent an inordinate amount of time looking at stuff on the Internet that doesn’t interest me. Especially since my workplace moved their employee training online.

Man I feel this, particularly the sudden shutting down of data access because all the platforms want OpenAI money. I spent three years building a tool that pulled follower relation data from Twitter and exponentially crawled it’s way outwards from a few seed accounts to millions of users. Using that data it was able to make a compressed summary network, identify community structures, give names to the communities based on words in user profiles, and then use sampled tweet data to tell us the extent to which different communities interacted.

I spent 8 months in ethics committees to get approval to do it, I got a prototype working, but rather than just publish I wanted to make it accessible to the academic community so I spent even more time building an interface, making it user friendly, improving performance, making it more stable etc.

I wanted to ensure that when we published our results I could also say “here is this method we’ve developed, and here you can test it and use it too for free, even if you don’t know how to code”. Some people at my institution wanted me to explore commercialising but I always intended to go open source. I’m not a professional developer by any means so the project was always going to be a janky academic thing, but it worked for our purposes and was a new way of working with social media data to ask questions that couldn’t be answered before.

Then the API got put behind a $48K a month paywall and the project was dead. Then everywhere else started shutting their doors too. I don’t do social media research anymore.

It’s truly a wonder where these topics will take you.
These people aren’t real nerds.
As in with Eliza where we interpret there as being humanity behind it? Or that ultimately “humans demanding we leave stuff to humans because those things are human” is ok?