All Things Alt-Tech Podcast Por nyman.media arte de portada

All Things Alt-Tech

All Things Alt-Tech

De: nyman.media
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Digital media veteran provides unfiltered commentary on alt-tech and the emerging digital ecosystem. If you are interested in next generation social platforms & browsers, privacy & free speech issues, or general banter on the creepy online media industry, this one is for you. Fair warning: contains rampant speculation, rants and potentially infectious ideas on crypto & stock speculations!© 2025 nyman media Economía
Episodios
  • Podcast: Big Tech’s Great Leap Forward: Towards a Chinese Style Internet
    Nov 6 2022

    Where we’re going, is to towards a censored, sanitized, corporate, Internet where the Party comes first, and any questioning of the new great leader will be cracked down upon. There is already a good example of what this looks like: China.

    According to the Chinese government, what it does is to protect "the safe flow of internet information and actively guides people to manage websites under the law and use the internet in a wholesome and correct way”. Jack Dorsey made an eerily similar statement in the latest senate hearing on Big Tech where he proclaimed that Twitter is seeking to 'ensure civic integrity' and 'prevent the undermining confidence in government'. (Apparently, that suddenly became an issue post-Trump).

    Looking to China, where the merger of corporate and state powers in nearly complete, the censorship is more advanced and widespread. Streaming companies need to set up censorship departments and vet all uploaded songs before they can be posted online. They also need to set up systems to punish uploaders of unapproved or illegal content, and blacklist repeat offenders. Come to think of it, YouTube already does that, with their three-strike policy, and with their de-platforming threats. Twitter also frequently demands users delete offending posts so they can resume their activity. So, we’re halfway there!

    Chinese obviously censor out unfavorable information, such as documentaries on their grave problems of air pollution — even any discussion around such issues is scrubbed out. This is very similar to the Soviet response to Chernobyl. There could not even be any recognition of there being a problem. Because as we all know all issues go away if you just stop talking about them. Expect similar speech controls to come to a social network and a search engine near you.

    So, what’s so dangerous about a little bit of stifling of free speech, redacting unpalatable truths, stifling conversation, etc? 'Enabling social unity' is exactly what the dems say they want to do these days. Let's look at what happened when the Coronavirus broke out in China. Nobody trusted the Chinese media, or the the narrative that was being told and curated online. You could not even freely communicate about the virus — conversations on messaging apps were being stomped out. Nobody bought the data around cases and deaths, fatality rates, etc. People trusted the organic social media clips more; the ones showing Chinese authorities welding buildings shut or people falling dead in the streets. People suspected that the real truth was being suppressed and trusted the unredacted, anecdotal information much more.

    And, we panicked. The Chinese, as well as the Europeans, and the Americans, and the Asians. I would posit that this would not have happened, had you had an open, honest Internet and a free media in China. Instead, you got a Streisand effect on steroids and complete mistrust, and panic spread like wildfire. Similarly, in the US, because of the stifling of conversation about election fraud, more people will probably believe it. And they will be even more infuriated when they are shadow banned and de-platformed on social media. So, prepare for more conspiracy theories, more distrust and more rage on all fronts. We're going to need a lot of popcorn.

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    18 m
  • Hail the new ministry of truth: Big Tech
    Nov 10 2020

    Yet again, fact is stranger than fiction, as more and more parallels between Big tech and the Ministry of Truth abound. Meanwhile, Jack Dorsey, Zuck, and Sundar Pichai were all summoned in front of Congress for another hearing (Twitter and Facebook both decided that the laptop from hell had to be memory holed; hidden from the collective consciousness of America as we entered the election).

    Today, we’re still having a debate, as to whether big tech is censoring, influencing, hampering free speech, etc. when it’s obvious that this is happening. Twitter got caught redhanded censoring a critical piece of information from a legitimate news source, at a critical moment in time; a development that would certainly have had a bearing on the election.

    The currents situation is reminiscent of 1984: in the dystopian society depicted, there were several ministries in government, one of them is the Ministry of Truth. (Of course, this is a complete misnomer because in reality it serves as the opposite: it is responsible for the falsification of events. They doctored the historical records to show a government-approved version of events).

    In actual fact, a sort of Ministry of Truth has actually long ago existed: In 1912, the Soviet newspaper industry created Pravda (which literally means truth). It did not start as a political publication, in fact it was a journal on social life. But Lenin decided that the party needed a voice in the news industry and that Pravda could convey the party line to the people. Again, Pravda had little to do with truth, but it was literally called the truth, in a perfectly Orwellian fashion.

    The Soviet Newspapers were were staffed by journalists who were undereducated and they lacked journalistic skill (in other words, exactly like today). The Soviet Press Corps did strive to raise the standards of the press, but also, had to maintain strong party support from the journalists -- which proved an impossible juxtaposition.

    Finally, in the 1930s, the Institute of Journalism threw in the towel, ended its drive for professional journalism and standards, threw out the existing key figures, and government officials revised the entire curriculum to just meet their propaganda goals.

    We are at that stage of throwing principles to the wind today. Look at how journalists and the news media behaves, for instance in how they censor uncomfortable stories concerning Hunter Biden, or more recently, how they called Joe Biden as the early winner in several key states (while sitting on Trump’s wins that were even more obvious).

    Over a 100 years old, Pravda is still alive to this day, still led by pro-Kremlin editors — but it’s of course but a shadow of its former self. It’s now effectively a tabloid, as that’s what they’ve had to resort to to cling on to some sort of readership. The same thing is happening to the legacy news media in the west. It’s getting ever click-battier and tabloid-like, by the day, while getting further and further away from any semblance of journalism. Looks like history is repeating.

    Supporters of taim.io.

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    18 m
  • Censorship in the Soviet Union vs the US: is history repeating?
    Oct 20 2020
    In the USSR, to maintain the various official government narratives, certain facts, news and entire persons had to be silenced at all cost. In fact, when the Bolsheviks seized power in Russia in 1917, one of their first decisions was to limit free speech through censorship, of course all the while claiming they were promoting freedom. In the same year, the Soviet government signed the Degree on Press which effectively prohibited criticism of the Bolsheviks’ authority. Following this event you had 70 years of strangled freedom of expression, and severe punishments for those who dared to speak up. Undesirable people were removed from literature, and also from photos, posters and paintings. While image retouching is easier these days, outright redactions of images is now more difficult — or? Back in the USSR, complete censorship was possible because of centralization; because of the top-down structure. All media in the Soviet Union was controlled by the state — television and radio, newspapers, magazine, and book publishing. Today, all media is in the hands of just a handful of corporations — we have a different kind of top-down structure, and therefore, censorship is just as possible. More so, even, because we’re now in a digital world — you can control the flow of information with more precision, and on an individual basis, and you can influence what each individual sees, doesn’t see, or think they see. (You think you’re seeing a certain consensus; e.g. a majority supporting your favorite candidate/initiative/idea/etc, but what you’re just seeing is a squelched conversation; a curated flow of information). During the Soviet era, book manuscripts had to pass rigorous approvals processes, and state owned publishing house decided whether or not to publish and distribute a certain book. It wasn’t just political messaging that was throttled, the censorship affected novels and poetry as well. Doctor Zhivago was was banned, as it focused too much on individual characters, and presumably this style of storytelling was not conducive to fostering the collectivist Soviet culture. It was not a complete silencing of the dissenting voices though, but rather a selective bottlenecking of certain views and information. Some books which were accepted, for example, such as speeches by Leonid Brezhnev were printed up in huge quantities. Some of the less favored works might be published in limited numbers and just not distributed widely. This is what we would call shadow banning today. It was, and is so machiavellian in that it enables a facade of openness; it suggests that while there are dissenting views, they are few and insignificant (and by extension, if you share these views you are also part of the lunatic fringe). As more and more Soviet people got their own radio receivers and foreign radio broadcasts became available, this presented a problem for the Soviet apparatchiks, as they obviously couldn’t easily censor foreign broadcasts, let alone live foreign broadcasts. The solution was to install massive radio jamming stations. These were in effect, anti-radios. Of course, even these radio jamming stations were secret — so secret that they had to be redacted whenever they were visible in photographs. This type of jamming, we can see today. We see how unfavorable publications are being redacted from newsfeeds and search results, as well as the endless de-platforming efforts. This goes all the way to web hosting providers blocking certain undesirable websites. But back in the Soviet Union, the doctoring of photos and pulling books, etc. those are only examples of outright and overt official censorship in Soviet. There was also a secondary type of censorship that arises as a consequence. With enough force and repercussions, the secondary effect of censorship might be self-censorship; a certain self-control by authors themselves. There were of course, a minority of brave people opposing censorship, and they resorted to circulating handmade copies of the banned literature. This self-publishing is called samizdat. (It’s what we’d call alt-tech today, or alternative media). This was not easy, and it was dangerous. All Soviet-produced typewriters were inventoried, and what you wrote on them, was trackable. The KGB collected each typewriter’s typographic sample at the factory and stored them in the government directory. Every typewriter has their own minute little individual fingerprint, and this allowed the KGB to identify the device that was used to type or print a certain text (and arrest the offending originator). Anyway, there were some Easter European typewriters, which did not have their samples taken and were more difficult to trace. Of course these were purchased by Soviet citizens, and were smuggled back into the Soviet Union. The brave rogue publishers These brave rogue publishers used a variety of techniques, including carbon paper, computer printers and even printing ...
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    17 m
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