Tuesday, October 26, 2021

AN ANNOUNCEMENT TODAY: Rumbles Acquires Subscription-Based Platform Locals

This is all about your MesaZona blogger knows at the present time
 
RumbleDave Rubin of The Rubin Report has a major announcement for anyone looking for Big Tech alternatives. Innovative Big Tech competition has arrived with Rumble’s announcement that it is acquiring Locals Technology, Inc. Buying Locals will help Rumble’s mission of giving creators even more autonomy over their work and connections with their audience. The era of the Big Tech monopoly may be ending as true alternatives like Locals and Rumble empower their creators to generate revenue without being limited by corporate advertisers and special interests. Most importantly, Locals users own their community data and content. The era of creators being dependent on Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter is ending! Watch to hear what’s coming next!

Subscribe to Dave on Locals here: https://rubinreport.locals.com
Or create your account on Locals here: https://locals.com

UK POLITICS: Getting Al Worked Up By End-to-End Encryption

from the nuance,-nuance,-nuance dept

Mike Masnick:
 
"Over the weekend, the Telegraph (not the most trustworthy or reliable in a batch of UK news organizations that have long had issues with accuracy in reporting) claimed that the latest (and most high profile) Facebook whistleblower, Frances Haugen, was prepared to come out against encryption.
This (quite rightly) raised the hackles of multiple encryption experts.
As people were getting pretty worked up about it, the Telegraph (silently, and without notice) changed the headline of the piece (from "Facebook whistleblower warns ‘dangerous’ encryption will aid espionage by hostile nations" to "Facebook whistleblower warns company's encryption will aid espionage by hostile nations") as well as the actual text of the story, to suggest a slightly more nuanced (but still not great) view --
Nuance Is A Thing Jessie Gender GIF - Nuance Is A Thing Jessie Gender Youtuber GIFs
effectively saying she supported encryption, but was concerned that Facebook would use encryption as a "see no evil" kind of blindfold to problems on its platform.
 
Ms Haugen said that she is generally pro-encryption, which enhances users’ privacy. However, she added that Facebook’s plan was also way for the company to “sidestep” harmful content happening on its platform rather than address it. She said: “End-to-end encryption definitely lets them sidestep and go ‘look we can’t see it, not our problem’.”
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Of course, context and motives matter here, and the Telegraph -- which tends to be quite supportive of the current UK government, seemed to be twisting Haugen's (admittedly confused) statement in support of UK Home Secretary Priti Patel's positively dangerous plan to get rid of end-to-end encryption in the UK.
It sure looks like the Telegraph went looking for a way to support that argument, and used Haugen's words to that effect.
A few hours later, Haugen actually testified before a UK Parliamentary committee and claimed her words were taken out of context.
She said that she's strongly pro-encryption... but then tried to claim that her comments to the Telegraph were more about how she doesn't trust Facebook to actually implement encryption. Which is... a strange and almost nonsensical claim.
“I want to be very, very clear. I was mischaracterised in the Telegraph yesterday on my opinions around end-to-end encryption,” she said.
“I am a strong supporter of access to open source end to end encryption software.
“I support access to end-to-end encryption and I use open source end-to-end encryption every day. My social support network is currently on an open source end-to-end encryption service.” [....]
“Facebook’s plan for end-to-end encryption — I think — is concerning because we have no idea what they’re doing to do. We don’t know what it means, we don’t if people’s privacy is actually protected. It’s super nuanced and it’s also a different context.
On the open source end-to-end encryption product that I like to use there is no directory where you can find 14 year olds, there is no directory where you can go and find the Uighur community in Bangkok. On Facebook it is trivially easy to access vulnerable populations and there are national state actors that are doing this.
“So I want to be clear, I am not against end-to-end encryption in Messenger but I do believe the public has a right to know what does that even mean? Are they really going to produce end-to-end encryption? Because if they say they’re doing end-to-end encryption and they don’t really do that people’s lives are in dangerGirls5eva Nuance GIF - Girls5eva Nuance Nuanced GIFs
. And I personally don’t trust Facebook currently to tell the truth… I am concerned about them misconstruing the product that they’ve built — and they need regulatory oversight for that.”
 
But... here's the thing: Haugen may be a wonderful data scientist. Christian Grey Jamie Dornan GIF - Christian Grey Jamie Dornan Fifty Shades Of Grey GIFs
And, she may have done the world tremendous good by leaking tons of internal Facebook documents, giving the world some insight into what's going on at the company.
But that doesn't make her an expert on encryption.
And, it shows. As Alec Muffett, a security expert who actually used to work on encryption at Facebook, noted in a detailed thread, what Haugen is asking for here is dangerous and shows a real lack of understanding about encryption.
> First, she claims that there should be a government review of any Facebook end-to-end encryption to make sure it's legit. And, yes, there are many reasons to not trust Facebook, but introducing the idea that government needs to review and approve encryption is worse. Is she completely unaware of the government's history of constantly trying to undermine and backdoor encryption? I mean, it's not exactly secret. And the US government has been trying to undermine and backdoor encryption pretty aggressively lately. Suggesting that there needs to be some government entity blessing the encryption opens the door to all sorts of mischief.
> The separate issue is claiming that end-to-end encryption for Facebook is somehow different because you can use Facebook for more than just messaging, and it's bolted on to other services. Again, as Muffett explains, this kind of thinking is dangerous as well. It suggests that encrypted chat needs to be silo'd and kept distant from tons of internet services, when the reality is often that many more internet services should be embracing encryption much more widely to protect their users. . .
[. . .] Again, Haugen has likely done the world a great benefit in leaking a bunch of internal documents (I'll have more on those soon). But it's important to remember that just because she blew the whistle regarding Facebook research, it doesn't make her an expert on everything else. She's not an expert on content moderation, or antitrust, or encryption. She may be a useful source for exploring what Facebook's research showed, or some of Facebook's decision making, but it's depressing how quickly eager politicians looking to gain support for their already existing plans are exploiting her to argue for their position on topics she's really not qualified to comment on. Indeed, it's also dismissing the hard work of tons of actual experts on these topics, from practitioners in the field to the academics who study these issues.

Filed Under: encryption, frances haugen, going dark, tech policy, uk
Companies: Facebook

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ONE EXTRACT FROM THE TELEGRAPH STORY

". . .Former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, who is now Facebook’s head of policy and communications, has also previously defended how the company’s algorithms work.

In a blog post in March entitled ‘it takes two to tango’, Sir Nick argued Facebook users were not “the playthings of manipulative algorithmic systems”, but actively influence what the app shows them by deciding what they click on.

Ms Haugen rejected Mr Clegg’s argument.

She said: “That article, it is almost like a domestic abuser saying ‘if you didn’t make me so angry I wouldn’t hit you so much’.

“He said it takes two to tango, but no. If you go and follow pretty innocuous things just following the algorithm you get led to more and more extreme things because engagement based ranking is dangerous.”

THE STATE OF MISSOURI: What A Tangled Second-String Trumpist Web They Weave-and-Whoof!

WAY TOO MANY WANNA-BEES  . . .THE NEOPHYTE NEOCONS ARE CANNIBALIZING EACH OTHER
Missouri’s open Senate race features a crowded cast of conservative characters. There's the self-described “farm girl,” the auctioneer on a bus tour, a state attorney general suing China, and the guy who stood on his lawn and pointed an AR-15 at protesters. Let's go the top of the pack first

Disgraced former governor is recast as MAGA warrior in Senate bid

Eric Greitens waits to deliver remarks.

Then there’s the state’s disgraced former Gov. Eric Greitens — and they all agree he must be stopped.

. . .Greitens is a formidable presence in the race, armed with a solid base, right-wing media savvy and a billionaire backer. But the scandal-plagued Greitens is also viewed by many Republicans — both nationally and in Missouri — as the candidate most likely to jeopardize a GOP-held Senate seat. With the Senate majority in sight in next year’s midterm elections, the prospect of blowing the opportunity weighs heavily on party minds.

“Heaven forbid Eric Greitens ever did get into the United States Senate,” said Gregg Keller, a Missouri political strategist who briefly served as an adviser to GOP Sen. Josh Hawley’s 2018 campaign.

Pointing to Greitens’ baggage — he resigned the governorship in 2018, midway through his first term, following allegations that he sexually assaulted a woman — many Missouri Republicans view him as an opportunist who has shamelessly recast himself as a MAGA warrior to revive his political career,

Greitens isn’t alone in his pursuit of Trump’s endorsement — the Republican Senate primary field is stocked with Trump supporters, several of whom have made pilgrimages to Mar-a-Lago in recent months. But Greitens has surpassed them all in his attempts to curry favor with the former president. While his primary rivals have also embraced Trump’s disproven claims of a stolen election, Greitens is the only one who has repeatedly campaigned in Arizona, where he promoted the Republican-led “audit” of ballots in an attempt to decertify President Joe Biden’s victory in the state.

Greitens has also brought Trump World luminaries like Rudy Giuliani and former New York Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik to campaign for him in Missouri. He signed on numerous Trump associates to assist his bid, among them his national campaign chair Kimberly Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr., and Tony Fabrizio, a Trump pollster.

>

Former Trump campaign chief Steve Bannon regularly invites Greitens to appear on his “War Room” podcast.

Looming awkwardly over the primary is Hawley, the state’s junior senator, whose relationship with Greitens has been strained in recent years. Hawley, then the state attorney general, investigated Greitens in 2018 over Greitens’ use of a charity’s donor list to solicit campaign funds, turning the findings over to a St. Louis prosecutor. Greitens was subsequently charged with computer tampering, though the charge was dropped as part of a deal with prosecutors to resign from office.

Earlier that year, Greitens had also been indicted on a charge of invasion of privacy after facing allegations that he took an unauthorized nude photo of his hairstylist while sexually assaulting her in his basement in 2015. Greitens admitted to engaging in an extramarital affair with the woman, but insisted the encounters were consensual. The charge was dropped for lack of evidence, though Missouri legislators convened a special committee and found the woman making the allegations to be credible, according to their report.

Greitens at the time blasted Hawley for being “better at press conferences than the law.”

While both Republicans have raised their national profiles championing Trump’s election fraud conspiracies, Hawley is the one who appears to be in closer touch with the former president.

. . .

Hawley has so far declined to publicly take a stance on the primary in his home state, despite getting involved in other competitive Senate contests nationwide.

He has made endorsements in three competitive Republican elections, throwing his support behind Sean Parnell and Herschel Walker, the respective Trump picks in Pennsylvania and Georgia Senate primaries. Hawley has also endorsed J.D. Vance in Ohio.

> Hawley’s campaign consulting firm, OnMessage Inc., is working for Rep. Vicky Hartzler in the race. On Wednesday, she became the first candidate in the five-way Republican primary to purchase a television ad: a 30-second spot that alluded to Grietens’ sexual misconduct. . . .

> Other candidates campaigning for the seat include current Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt, Rep. Billy Long and Mark McCloskey, a lawyer who drew national attention last year after he and his wife were photographed pointing guns at anti-police protesters outside their St. Louis home.

READ MORE ----

“To call it a clown show is an underestimation of the chaos, the pandering, the disingenuousness of the candidates,” said one longtime Missouri GOP activist.

“You cannot overestimate how bizarre this primary is shaping up to be. In that world, who says McCloskey can’t win?”

 

TIME-TO-BINGE and CRINGE: ALL HALLOWEEN MOVIE TRAILERS 1978-2021 (can you watch them all?)