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Wired Magazine Slot Machine Russian Mafia
From the Cover นิตยสาร Wired ฉบับมีนาคม 2561 ‘Move Fast’ โดดเด่นด้วยภาพปกรูป มาร์ก ซักเคอร์เบิร์ก (Mark Zuckerberg) ผลงานของ Jake Rowland ศิลปินชาวนิวยอร์กที่โด่งดังด้านการถ่ายภาพ.
Humanity has been advancing the field of propaganda for as long as we've been at war or had political fights to win. But today, propaganda is undergoing a significant change based on the latest advances in the fields of big data and artificial intelligence.
Over the past decade, billions of dollars have been invested in technologies that customise ads increasingly precisely based on individuals' preferences. Now this is making the jump to the world of politics and the manipulation of ideas.
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Some recent military experiments in computational propaganda indicate where this could be taking us. In 2008, the US State Department, through its 'foreign assistance' agency USAID, set up a fake social network in Cuba. Supposedly concerned with public health and civics, its operatives actively targeted likely dissidents. The site came complete with hashtags, dummy advertisements and a database of users' 'political tendencies'. For an estimated $1.6m (£1m), USAID was, between 2009 and 2012, able to control a major information platform in Cuba with potential to influence the spread of ideas among 40,000 unique profiles. Building on this project in 2011, USCENTCOM (United States Central Command) -- the US military force responsible for operations in the broader Middle East region -- awarded a contract to a Californian firm to build an 'online persona management service', complete with fake online profiles that have convincing backgrounds and histories. The software will allow US service personnel to operate up to ten separate false identities based all over the world from their workstations 'without fear of being discovered by sophisticated adversaries'. These personas allow the military to recruit, spy on and manipulate peoples' behaviour and ideas.
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Such projects represent the first wave of computational propaganda, but they are constrained in their scale (and ultimately their effectiveness) by the simple fact that each profile has to be driven by an actual human on the other side. In 2015, we will see the emergence of more automated computational propaganda -- bots using sophisticated artificial intelligence frameworks, removing the need to have humans operate the profiles. Algorithms will not only read the news, but write it.
Wired Lays Out the Case to Regulate Google’s Ad Market
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In a recent article, Wired questions whether Google’s advertising market should be regulated in a similar way to the stock market as the company continues to dominate the billion-dollar online advertising industry. As explained by one industry expert, “Google both runs the largest exchange and competes as the biggest buyer and seller on that exchange. On top of that, it also owns YouTube, one of the biggest suppliers of ad inventory, meaning it competes against publishers on its own platform. And yet there are no laws governing any of it.