The Internet Apologies...For Corrupting Our Elections,... Violating Our Privacy,...And Hijacking Our Attention.
New York magazine|April 16, 2018

Even those who designed our digital world are aghast at what they created.  A breakdown of what went wrong— from the architects who built it.

 

Noah Kulwin
The Internet Apologies...For Corrupting Our Elections,... Violating Our Privacy,...And Hijacking Our Attention.
 SOMETHING HAS GONE WRONG WITH the internet. Even Mark Zuckerberg knows it. Testifying before Congress, the Facebook CEO ticked off a list of everything his platform has screwed up, from fake news and foreign meddling in the 2016 election to hate speech and data privacy. “We didn’t take a broad enough view of our responsibility,” he confessed. Then he added the words that everyone was waiting for: “I’m sorry.”

There have always been outsiders who criticized the tech industry—even if their concerns have been drowned out by the oohs and aahs of consumers, investors, and journalists. But today, the most dire warnings are coming from the heart of Silicon Valley itself. The man who oversaw the creation of the original iPhone believes the device he helped build is too addictive. The inventor of the World Wide Web fears his creation is being “weaponized.” Even Sean Parker, Facebook’s first president, has blasted social media as a dangerous form of psychological manipulation. “God only knows what it’s doing to our children’s brains,” he lamented recently.

This story is from the April 16, 2018 edition of New York magazine.

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This story is from the April 16, 2018 edition of New York magazine.

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