Another image in the post boasts how the model identifies a union strike as a "risky protest".
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Another image in the post boasts how the model identifies a union strike as a "risky protest". 28 comments
The whole piece argues that the feature "was never designed to help companies silence legitimate protests", and that it could clearly be used that way was just a wild misunderstanding by us crazies rather than something Feedly themselves advertised. At no point do they ask Feedly CEO Edwin Khodabakchian to address the fact that the tool is not only surfacing union strikes, boycotts, and "legitimate protests" (as he puts it), but was explicitly marketed for its abilities to do so. @molly0xfff Well, you see, you just have to define "legitimate protests" as "protests that do not pose a risk to your companies assets." @molly0xfff I really miss the first 50 years of my life when companies were much more careful not to give off such "just another day in 1930's Germany" vibes. @molly0xfff We need an federated, ActivityPub integrated open rss reader interface so badly @cupcakezealot @molly0xfff can you tell me more? Would it be an RSS reader with Mastodon integration, or something different? @cupcakezealot @molly0xfff what do you mean by activitypub integrated open RSS reader? I like this idea but can you clarify? @filipesm @molly0xfff Traditional adding of rss feeds like normal plus an aggregator for links to posted by topic? I dunno just noodling some ideas I know there's Lemmy but that's more focused around reddit style discussions so simpler than that @filipesm @cupcakezealot @molly0xfff Flipboard is just a really pretty graphical “boost other people’s content” interface, sadly, and the UI doesn’t really scale once you’re following more than a few feeds. @cupcakezealot @filipesm @molly0xfff I'm not sure if this is what you have in mind, but you can follow RSS feeds in Friendica (https://friendi.ca) the same way you follow ActivityPub accounts. If you paste an RSS feed into the search box on Friendica, it will bring it up like it was an account. If you follow it, its posts will appear in the same timeline as ActivityPub posts. @molly0xfff Thank you and thank you to your followers for recommending NetNewsWire, which is open source and which imported my Feedly OPML file perfectly. @molly0xfff Fuck strike breakers. Fuck those that would "inadvertently" support strike breakers. Breaking strikes is nothing but oppression. @molly0xfff right? I mean, the blog post clearly had "Protests" and "Violent Protests" as two separate filtering criteria. Why do publications do this? Is it that they're friends with their subjects, have been to their events etc? Are they afraid of losing advertising? Do they just not care about ethics? Is it something else? @molly0xfff Maybe companies just need to know about strikes and protests so they can immediately meet all the demands and do an extremely sincere apology. @molly0xfff From the article, “ Feedly heard from around 20 users who were upset about the feature” 20 people seems low to cause this amount of backpedaling @molly0xfff So they seriously just quacked like a duck, then went on air saying that them quacking like a duck could have been misconstrued as quacking like a duck but quacking like a duck was not what they were actually doing. @molly0xfff It reminds me of how the Rspberry Pi folks were trying to pretend they were just misunderstood and weren't talking up their new hire's pride in his history of using their products for police surveillance. |
Feedly also managed to land a puff piece in PCMag. "The title and wording were vague enough for some users to easily imagine the various ways a corporation could deploy AI to suppress employee-sponsored protests". https://www.pcmag.com/news/feedly-faces-backlash-over-protest-tracking-ai-models
Vague?? Seemed pretty clear to me.