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Comment Balance of the evidence (Score 1) 296

One thing I've struggled with has been to know how to balance the evidence on ivermectin. This one study reports no significant difference. But there's also a huge number of other studies that show significant difference: https://c19ivermectin.com/ If it works, it works; if it doesn't, it doesn't. If it doesn't, then I wonder what the best explanation for all these other studies is -- are they flawed and/or fabricated?

Comment Re:You can't be canceled, no matter how mean you a (Score 1) 97

Here's a recent attempt to round up examples of "cancel culture," published by a Twitter user -- this unroll has 98 examples. https://threadreaderapp.com/th... I think what people are pointing to is a growing sense of incivility and intolerance of expression of personal opinions that don't conform to particular political stances. It's particularly difficult for academics; I have shared personal correspondence with several who find that the liberal spirit of free discussion and discourse in the universities about social issues has been replaced with a chilling sense of fear.

Really, I see it as a rise of intolerance, and I've personally witnessed friends on Facebook organize brigades to publicly shame political opponents. Perhaps this behavior isn't new, and social media simply makes it more obvious, but I still think it's to be discouraged -- it's uncivil, and exacerbates the political division in the US that's been growing steadily in the last 15 years.

Will targeted people "be okay in the end"? Probably -- but that doesn't mean the cancelation / deplatforming was just in the first place, nor does it mean intolerance of opposing viewpoints is something that will enrich the US in general.

Comment Targeting is "discrimination," but not immoral. (Score 1) 104

To discriminate, by its primary definition, is simply to recognize differences or distinguish between things. By its secondary definition, discrimination refers to the unjust application of discrimination along categories like race, sex, or age. Facebook's trying to provide a platform that's attractive to marketers, and seems to be doing some optimizations of targeting "under the hood." Obviously, performance marketers are trying to optimize for number of clicks per placement, and if Facebook as a channel has better stats on this, they'll choose to invest more advertising dollar into Facebook. This is their entire business model. I see nothing wrong with this whatsoever. They're providing more value by connecting people with the right content, facilitating transactions. More so, they seem to be doing it by understanding who is interested in what sorts of products or services. The information they'd be leveraging to get at this is purely the outcome of aggregating an enormous amount of individual choices -- click, or don't click. This isn't unjust discrimination, it's just application of knowledge about who is most interested in what at the time, full stop. I think what people are starting to pick up on here, and why people are upset by this, is that advertising messaging gives people what they want, and tech-enabled message targeting can do that far more effectively than ever before. Tech has enabled targeted marketing to subsume a person's day-to-day experience of the outside world far more than in the past. This makes it an agent of unprecedented social control -- information exposure and availability is now administered, de facto, by a handful of large privately held corporations. I suppose I'm just suggesting that the motivations for the civil rights acts of half a century ago, and the narrative based around unjust discrimination based on protected classes, is simply not the right level of analysis. And Facebook isn't the enemy here, any more so than any one of the marketing channels competing with them for advertiser dollars. This is industry-wide, and it's an existential concern about the exercise of information delivery.

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