#Astroturfing
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
...There's this thing going around by the Concept Art Association trying to raise money to fund anti-AI-Art stuff, that big stupid "Protecting Artists From AI Technologies" Gofundme, and I feel the need to inform y'all that it's a scam, or at least suspicious as hell.
Like, the main person behind it, Karla Ortiz, is a major NFT person and the organization they're trying to get buddy-buddy with; the Copyright Alliance; is basically an astroturf organization funded by megacorps like Disney and Warner to push against orgs like the EFF who're doing good work to push back against said corps overreach.
It bears all the signs of an astroturfing attempt to cozy up with megacorps and expand copyright law to something akin to what the music industry has. Which, as anyone familiar with that industry will tell you, you do not want.
Regardless of your views on AI art, the expansion of copyright is a bad idea for all artists, especially anyone who does fanart, and we shouldn't let the people trying to use this wave of panic to smuggle in a draconian expansion of copyright law that will only be used to hurt independent artists and help megacorps.
Remember, no matter what anyone says, Disney is not your friend. If they get their way on expanding copyright law, they will stab you in the back and then discard you.
1K notes
·
View notes
Text
Friendly reminder to keep an eye out: The astroturfing attempts are ramping up.
(It doesn't work as well here as they'd like; Tumblr is a monster they have yet to conquer, and most of the time they stick out like a sore thumb and get called out as bad faith actors.)
What is astroturfing? It's when an entity with an agenda hires people/bot farms to pose as members of the public, pretending to be a regular person. They join conversations, ask "innocent" questions, and comment on posts with the express goal of nudging public opinion in a way that is favorable to their goal.
Basically, it's planting their own people in the crowd to make their company/product/country/opinion (etc, etc) look better.
"Many people are saying..."
20 notes
·
View notes
Text
A link-clump demands a linkdump
Cometh the weekend, cometh the linkdump. My daily-ish newsletter includes a section called "Hey look at this," with three short links per day, but sometimes those links get backed up and I need to clean house. Here's the eight previous installments:
https://pluralistic.net/tag/linkdump/
The country code top level domain (ccTLD) for the Caribbean island nation of Anguilla is .ai, and that's turned into millions of dollars worth of royalties as "entrepreneurs" scramble to sprinkle some buzzword-compliant AI stuff on their businesses in the most superficial way possible:
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/08/ai-fever-turns-anguillas-ai-domain-into-a-digital-gold-mine/
All told, .ai domain royalties will account for about ten percent of the country's GDP.
It's actually kind of nice to see Anguilla finding some internet money at long last. Back in the 1990s, when I was a freelance web developer, I got hired to work on the investor website for a publicly traded internet casino based in Anguilla that was a scammy disaster in every conceivable way. The company had been conceived of by people who inherited a modestly successful chain of print-shops and decided to diversify by buying a dormant penny mining stock and relaunching it as an online casino.
But of course, online casinos were illegal nearly everywhere. Not in Anguilla – or at least, that's what the founders told us – which is why they located their servers there, despite the lack of broadband or, indeed, reliable electricity at their data-center. At a certain point, the whole thing started to whiff of a stock swindle, a pump-and-dump where they'd sell off shares in that ex-mining stock to people who knew even less about the internet than they did and skedaddle. I got out, and lost track of them, and a search for their names and business today turns up nothing so I assume that it flamed out before it could ruin any retail investors' lives.
Anguilla is a British Overseas Territory, one of those former British colonies that was drained and then given "independence" by paternalistic imperial administrators half a world away. The country's main industries are tourism and "finance" – which is to say, it's a pearl in the globe-spanning necklace of tax- and corporate-crime-havens the UK established around the world so its most vicious criminals – the hereditary aristocracy – can continue to use Britain's roads and exploit its educated workforce without paying any taxes.
This is the "finance curse," and there are tiny, struggling nations all around the world that live under it. Nick Shaxson dubbed them "Treasure Islands" in his outstanding book of the same name:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780230341722/treasureislands
I can't imagine that the AI bubble will last forever – anything that can't go on forever eventually stops – and when it does, those .ai domain royalties will dry up. But until then, I salute Anguilla, which has at last found the internet riches that I played a small part in bringing to it in the previous century.
The AI bubble is indeed overdue for a popping, but while the market remains gripped by irrational exuberance, there's lots of weird stuff happening around the edges. Take Inject My PDF, which embeds repeating blocks of invisible text into your resume:
https://kai-greshake.de/posts/inject-my-pdf/
The text is tuned to make resume-sorting Large Language Models identify you as the ideal candidate for the job. It'll even trick the summarizer function into spitting out text that does not appear in any human-readable form on your CV.
Embedding weird stuff into resumes is a hacker tradition. I first encountered it at the Chaos Communications Congress in 2012, when Ang Cui used it as an example in his stellar "Print Me If You Dare" talk:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njVv7J2azY8
Cui figured out that one way to update the software of a printer was to embed an invisible Postscript instruction in a document that basically said, "everything after this is a firmware update." Then he came up with 100 lines of perl that he hid in documents with names like cv.pdf that would flash the printer when they ran, causing it to probe your LAN for vulnerable PCs and take them over, opening a reverse-shell to his command-and-control server in the cloud. Compromised printers would then refuse to apply future updates from their owners, but would pretend to install them and even update their version numbers to give verisimilitude to the ruse. The only way to exorcise these haunted printers was to send 'em to the landfill. Good times!
Printers are still a dumpster fire, and it's not solely about the intrinsic difficulty of computer security. After all, printer manufacturers have devoted enormous resources to hardening their products against their owners, making it progressively harder to use third-party ink. They're super perverse about it, too – they send "security updates" to your printer that update the printer's security against you – run these updates and your printer downgrades itself by refusing to use the ink you chose for it:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2020/11/ink-stained-wretches-battle-soul-digital-freedom-taking-place-inside-your-printer
It's a reminder that what a monopolist thinks of as "security" isn't what you think of as security. Oftentimes, their security is antithetical to your security. That was the case with Web Environment Integrity, a plan by Google to make your phone rat you out to advertisers' servers, revealing any adblocking modifications you might have installed so that ad-serving companies could refuse to talk to you:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/02/self-incrimination/#wei-bai-bai
WEI is now dead, thanks to a lot of hueing and crying by people like us:
https://www.theregister.com/2023/11/02/google_abandons_web_environment_integrity/
But the dream of securing Google against its own users lives on. Youtube has embarked on an aggressive campaign of refusing to show videos to people running ad-blockers, triggering an arms-race of ad-blocker-blockers and ad-blocker-blocker-blockers:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/where-will-the-ad-versus-ad-blocker-arms-race-end/
The folks behind Ublock Origin are racing to keep up with Google's engineers' countermeasures, and there's a single-serving website called "Is uBlock Origin updated to the last Anti-Adblocker YouTube script?" that will give you a realtime, one-word status update:
https://drhyperion451.github.io/does-uBO-bypass-yt/
One in four web users has an ad-blocker, a stat that Doc Searls pithily summarizes as "the biggest boycott in world history":
https://doc.searls.com/2015/09/28/beyond-ad-blocking-the-biggest-boycott-in-human-history/
Zero app users have ad-blockers. That's not because ad-blocking an app is harder than ad-blocking the web – it's because reverse-engineering an app triggers liability under IP laws like Section 1201 of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, which can put you away for 5 years for a first offense. That's what I mean when I say that "IP is anything that lets a company control its customers, critics or competitors:
https://locusmag.com/2020/09/cory-doctorow-ip/
I predicted that apps would open up all kinds of opportunities for abusive, monopolistic conduct back in 2010, and I'm experiencing a mix of sadness and smugness (I assume there's a German word for this emotion) at being so thoroughly vindicated by history:
https://memex.craphound.com/2010/04/01/why-i-wont-buy-an-ipad-and-think-you-shouldnt-either/
The more control a company can exert over its customers, the worse it will be tempted to treat them. These systems of control shift the balance of power within companies, making it harder for internal factions that defend product quality and customer interests to win against the enshittifiers:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/28/microincentives-and-enshittification/
The result has been a Great Enshittening, with platforms of all description shifting value from their customers and users to their shareholders, making everything palpably worse. The only bright side is that this has created the political will to do something about it, sparking a wave of bold, muscular antitrust action all over the world.
The Google antitrust case is certainly the most important corporate lawsuit of the century (so far), but Judge Amit Mehta's deference to Google's demands for secrecy has kept the case out of the headlines. I mean, Sam Bankman-Fried is a psychopathic thief, but even so, his trial does not deserve its vastly greater prominence, though, if you haven't heard yet, he's been convicted and will face decades in prison after he exhausts his appeals:
https://newsletter.mollywhite.net/p/sam-bankman-fried-guilty-on-all-charges
The secrecy around Google's trial has relaxed somewhat, and the trickle of revelations emerging from the cracks in the courthouse are fascinating. For the first time, we're able to get a concrete sense of which queries are the most lucrative for Google:
https://www.theverge.com/2023/11/1/23941766/google-antitrust-trial-search-queries-ad-money
The list comes from 2018, but it's still wild. As David Pierce writes in The Verge, the top twenty includes three iPhone-related terms, five insurance queries, and the rest are overshadowed by searches for customer service info for monopolistic services like Xfinity, Uber and Hulu.
All-in-all, we're living through a hell of a moment for piercing the corporate veil. Maybe it's the problem of maintaining secrecy within large companies, or maybe the the rampant mistreatment of even senior executives has led to more leaks and whistleblowing. Either way, we all owe a debt of gratitude to the anonymous leaker who revealed the unbelievable pettiness of former HBO president of programming Casey Bloys, who ordered his underlings to create an army of sock-puppet Twitter accounts to harass TV and movie critics who panned HBO's shows:
https://www.rollingstone.com/tv-movies/tv-movie-features/hbo-casey-bloys-secret-twitter-trolls-tv-critics-leaked-texts-lawsuit-the-idol-1234867722/
These trolling attempts were pathetic, even by the standards of thick-fingered corporate execs. Like, accusing critics who panned the shitty-ass Perry Mason reboot of disrespecting veterans because the fictional Mason's back-story had him storming the beach on D-Day.
The pushback against corporate bullying is everywhere, and of course, the vanguard is the labor movement. Did you hear that the UAW won their strike against the auto-makers, scoring raises for all workers based on the increases in the companies' CEO pay? The UAW isn't done, either! Their incredible new leader, Shawn Fain, has called for a general strike in 2028:
https://www.404media.co/uaw-calls-on-workers-to-line-up-massive-general-strike-for-2028-to-defeat-billionaire-class/
The massive victory for unionized auto-workers has thrown a spotlight on the terrible working conditions and pay for workers at Tesla, a criminal company that has no compunctions about violating labor law to prevent its workers from exercising their legal rights. Over in Sweden, union workers are teaching Tesla a lesson. After the company tried its illegal union-busting playbook on Tesla service centers, the unionized dock-workers issued an ultimatum: respect your workers or face a blockade at Sweden's ports that would block any Tesla from being unloaded into the EU's fifth largest Tesla market:
https://www.wired.com/story/tesla-sweden-strike/
Of course, the real solution to Teslas – and every other kind of car – is to redesign our cities for public transit, walking and cycling, making cars the exception for deliveries, accessibility and other necessities. Transitioning to EVs will make a big dent in the climate emergency, but it won't make our streets any safer – and they keep getting deadlier.
Last summer, my dear old pal Ted Kulczycky got in touch with me to tell me that Talking Heads were going to be all present in public for the first time since the band's breakup, as part of the debut of the newly remastered print of Stop Making Sense, the greatest concert movie of all time. Even better, the show would be in Toronto, my hometown, where Ted and I went to high-school together, at TIFF.
Ted is the only person I know who is more obsessed with Talking Heads than I am, and he started working on tickets for the show while I starting pricing plane tickets. And then, the unthinkable happened: Ted's wife, Serah, got in touch to say that Ted had been run over by a car while getting off of a streetcar, that he was severely injured, and would require multiple surgeries.
But this was Ted, so of course he was still planning to see the show. And he did, getting a day-pass from the hospital and showing up looking like someone from a Kids In The Hall sketch who'd been made up to look like someone who'd been run over by a car:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/doctorow/53182440282/
In his Globe and Mail article about Ted's experience, Brad Wheeler describes how the whole hospital rallied around Ted to make it possible for him to get to the movie:
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/music/article-how-a-talking-heads-superfan-found-healing-with-the-concert-film-stop/
He also mentions that Ted is working on a book and podcast about Stop Making Sense. I visited Ted in the hospital the day after the gig and we talked about the book and it sounds amazing. Also? The movie was incredible. See it in Imax.
That heartwarming tale of healing through big suits is a pretty good place to wrap up this linkdump, but I want to call your attention to just one more thing before I go: Robin Sloan's Snarkmarket piece about blogging and "stock and flow":
https://snarkmarket.com/2010/4890/
Sloan makes the excellent case that for writers, having a "flow" of short, quick posts builds the audience for a "stock" of longer, more synthetic pieces like books. This has certainly been my experience, but I think it's only part of the story – there are good, non-mercenary reasons for writers to do a lot of "flow." As I wrote in my 2021 essay, "The Memex Method," turning your commonplace book into a database – AKA "blogging" – makes you write better notes to yourself because you know others will see them:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/09/the-memex-method/
This, in turn, creates a supersaturated, subconscious solution of fragments that are just waiting to nucleate and crystallize into full-blown novels and nonfiction books and other "stock." That's how I came out of lockdown with nine new books. The next one is The Lost Cause, a hopepunk science fiction novel about the climate whose early fans include Naomi Klein, Rebecca Solnit, Bill McKibben and Kim Stanley Robinson. It's out on November 14:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865939/the-lost-cause
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/05/variegated/#nein
#pluralistic#hbo#astroturfing#sweden#labor#unions#tesla#adblock#ublock#youtube#prompt injection#publishing#robin sloan#linkdumps#linkdump#ai#tlds#anguilla#finance curse#ted Kulczycky#toronto#stop making sense#talking heads
137 notes
·
View notes
Text
Remember, in general, people who tell you voting doesn’t matter, or that not voting, by any means, is a good option, are people who’d benefit if your voice was silenced. Yes, even if they act like they’re on your side. Ever heard of astroturfing?
#politics#voting#astroturfing#signal boost#social justice#reproductive rights#lgbtqia+#lgbt#trans#lgbt rights#trans rights#climate change#my post
46 notes
·
View notes
Text
Just sayin'.
We wrote about this group in 2022. They are/were a form of political astroturfing.
Maybe they stayed home to read about J.D. Vance having sex with furniture. That's probably more entertaining than hearing Trump blathering incoherently for 90 minutes.
#donald trump#trump rallies#blacks for trump#astroturfing#trump's incoherent rants#maga#republicans#election 2024#vote blue no matter who
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
hey, do you wanna see how astroturfing works and why Reddit is on basically a complete blackout of Israel / Palestine news and information on all of the major subreddits?
identify a post that paints israel as the aggressor or in a negative light
flood the comments with as many contradicting opinions as humanly possible
directly contradict comments that have the most upvotes and are sympathetic to the cause you oppose. repeat prescribed talking points. minimize and normalize atrocities.
these are the same user who has been on reddit for... 32 days. and basically only posts on Jewish subs.
there are hundreds of examples just like this if you bother to go click around the reddit comments of just about any post regarding what's happening in Palestine right now.
22 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ok final Eurovision post:
I genuinely am a bit speechless at the Olly Alexander discourse saying his performance was too sexual and inappropriate.
This is a performance featuring fully clothed male dancers dancing together on a show for adults that aired post-watershed in the UK. None of the dancers even kissed let alone 'simulated sex' apart from in as much as their CLOTHED bodies at points pushed together just as a male & female dancer's would - and in fact DO - not just in the majority of Eurovision performances, but in the majority of performances on Strictly Come Dancing, the UK's flagship 'family' entertainment programme.
This discourse is naked homophobia and Puritanism and I'm not here to breeze past it. Call it out if you see it. It's not about 'protecting' anyone, it's about erasing us.
Again.
#lgbtq#eurovision#eurovision 2024#homophobia#terf island#section 28#text post#uk politics#astroturfing
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
youtube
youtube
#amber heard#johnny depp is a wife beater#tortoise media#spear campaign#online harassment#bots#astroturfing#abuse#there is curiously little thumbs up for these two videos#for this level of quality and subject#if you can please watch and show your opinion#they say in the video that while they have the material to study many experts did not want to get involved for 'reasons'#it's still going on and the only way to get actual facts out is by promoting it and showing our opinion#this is genuine moment that would help since youtube won't promote#Youtube
8 notes
·
View notes
Text
see, tumblr, this is why we don't believe everything we hear online.
#voting is a civic duty not a moral litmus test#us politics#2024 election#disinformation#astroturfing#russian disinformation#Tenet Media#you are not immune to propaganda
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Astroturfing: A Deceptive Marketing Practice
Astroturfing is a deceptive marketing practice that involves creating the illusion of widespread grassroots support for a product, brand, or organization. It is often used to mislead consumers into believing that a product or service is more popular or well-regarded than it actually is. Astroturfing can take many different forms, but some of the most common include: Fake reviews: Astroturfers…
View On WordPress
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
Watch "The Third Party Bid That Could Sabotage Trump and Biden" on YouTube
youtube
When we said to overthrow the two-party duopoly, this was not what we were talking about! Astroturfing at its finest.
#this is not a game#2024 election#kyrsten sinema#joe manchin#no labels#wtf is this bullshit#astroturfing#Youtube#billionaire#corporatocracy#oligarchs
3 notes
·
View notes
Video
youtube
2 notes
·
View notes
Text
I've been suspicious of this account on Twitter for a while. I follow a lot of OSINT sources on Ukraine stuff (and because military reporting is terribe) so it gets constantly recommended. Finally had to block it. The entire rest of the account is virulently antisemitic - I don't mean just Israel-critical, I mean constant one-note jew-bashing, actual lies about the war, etc. So bad that Elon has recommended it and then had to retract the tweet (see Washington Post, here and Rolling Stone, here). I strongly suspect it's a Hezbollah front account.
So yes, it's 1000% astroturfing. Iran and Russia want Trump to win, and invest money in dividing the left to promote that agenda.
To be clear, there are plenty of reasons to be critical of Israel and of US policy towards Israel. But those spaces online are also flooded with astroturfing campaigns, often working for foreign governments. We've been here before - heck, I have a former student who was cited in the Mueller report from research she did about Russian disinformation on Twitter during the last go around.
Please be careful. Think! When you see something online, ask if it has an agenda, compare it with its post history, look for patterns of extreme language, etc.
7K notes
·
View notes
Text
#magic the gathering#mtg art#wotc#wizards of the coast#astroturfing#Fishing for compliments#mark rosewater
0 notes
Text
youtube
It's SO OVER for Dubai
#philion#astroturfing#influencer marketing#la cattedrale nel deserto#“...conosco il parroco... don alì!”
0 notes
Text
A new corporate astroturf just dropped:
Regardless if you support AI art or not, this is NOT the kind of organization that deserves anyone's support if they consider themselves anti-capitalist in any way. The Chamber of Progress is an anti-union astroturf organization back by several large tech companies, including Amazon and Google:
0 notes