|
|
||||||||
Our Stock Market, which art on Wall Street,
Hallowed be Thy Name.
Thy tickers tick,
Thy whims be met,
In Washington as they are in New York.
Give us this day our dividends,
And lead us not into inflation.
Relenteth Thee now from Thy great wrath
As we offer up to Thee our children
And our children's children
That they may sate Thine insatiable hunger
For we know that Thou art a jealous god,
Visiting the debts of the fathers upon the sons
Even to the third or fourth generation.
We entreat Thee therefore:
Accept this our offering,
That the trespasses of the rich may be forgiven.
And deliver us from economic depression,
For Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory
Forever and ever.
Amen.
Labels: politics
|
|
||||||||
Buy Charlie and the Chocolate Factory from Amazon.com and Amazon will suggest related products. The BFG by Roald Dahl. A Godiva assortment. Edward Scissorhands on DVD. You buy, Amazon learns, Amazon recommends.
Tell Pandora your favorite band and Pandora plays you songs. If you like a song, upvote it. If you hate a song, downvote it. Pandora uses your votes to find other bands it thinks you'll like. It creates a personal radio station that constantly adapts to your unique tastes.
You see a story on reddit.com about Barack Obama's childhood. You upvote the story, and now reddit recommends other stories it thinks you'll like. You start seeing more stories about Barack Obama.
We live in the Recommendation Age. Everywhere we turn, the world finds out what we want and gives us more of it.
This is a good thing. It's good for marketers. What we want, we buy more of. And it's good for us. We see more of what we want and less of what we don't.
But there is a hidden danger in the widespread use of recommendation engines. When all you see is what you want, you don't see very much.
Look again at reddit.com. Reddit is a news aggregator. Anyone can submit a story. Reddit shows the story to other users who say whether it appeals to them. Their votes decide whether reddit shows the story to more users or quietly drops it. It's democracy-as-editor.
But reddit recommends news based on what you've voted for, and herein lies the problem. The more you applaud stories about McCain, the more you see stories about McCain. Eventually you only see stories about McCain. You become a member of the McCain news ghetto.
Look up Audacity of Hope on Amazon—what recommendations do you get? Great Speeches by African Americans by James Daley, then five other books about Barack Obama. The customer who likes Obama will find a lot more reasons to like Obama.
Imagine a world where all your information—news, music, books—comes to you through recommendations. That's a world fine-tuned to leave your prejudices intact. Next time you go to the polls, you think, "All I hear about McCain is wonderful. How can anyone not vote for McCain?" The guy next to you, who lives in the Obama news ghetto, thinks, "All I hear about Obama is wonderful. How can anyone not vote for Obama?" One of you sees the world through rose-tinted glasses, the other blue-tinted. You're living in different worlds.
Of course, self-ghettoization is nothing new. We all tend to surround ourselves with Yes-men. Republicans watch FOX, Democrats watch CNN. Human beings generally avoid challenging ideas. We cling to the familiar. That's nothing new.
What's new about recommendation engines is the degree to which they make self-ghettoization possible. When people got their news through papers, magazines, and TV, they saw a lot of stories they never asked for. They probably ignored much of what they disagreed with, but at least they were exposed to it. Now, when you get all your information through recommendations, you agree with everything you see. What you don't see are new or challenging ideas—even those that might help you. You remain cocooned in blissful ignorance.
It's ironic that recommendation engines—such a populist idea, so democratic and egalitarian—present the greatest threat to free speech we've seen in the last hundred years. It used to be that a loud-mouthed maverick whom nobody wanted to listen to could still find an editor to publish him if his ideas were good enough. But in the Recommendation Age, the only writers who get exposure are the writers who say what we want. Writing and marketing have melded into one.
The people who get their news, books, music, and other information primarily through recommendation engines still represent a fairly small proportion of society. But that proportion is growing each year. Even traditionally monolithic news sources like CNN.com are moving into recommendation-based services. It's hard to imagine that ten years from now a majority of voters and consumers will still get their news through broadcast TV and newspapers.
Our society is already riddled with factions. Open discussion is becoming a lost art. As people come to hear more and more of what they already believe and less and less of what they don't, these divisions will only become deeper. If the election of 2008 looks like this, what will 2012 look like?
It's up to us to get out of our ghettoes. We should keep using recommendation engines, sure. But we should make a habit of seeking out new and unfamiliar news and ideas. Go read a book you wouldn't normally read. Visit sites you wouldn't normally visit. Watch a news program you would normally avoid.
A society where information ceases to flow is a dead society. It doesn't matter whether the information stops because of martial law, bad reporting, or a culture of convenience. If we close our ears to everyone but yes-men, we can enjoy a long period of peaceful agreement. But the longer we avoid controversy, the fatter and sloppier our ideas will become. The longer we hide inside our ghettos, the greater the shock when we discover we're dead wrong.
Labels: technology










