Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Phil Spencer isn’t retiring as the chief of Xbox “anytime soon”

    July 2, 2025

    Affluent Travelers Are Ditching Business Class for Business Jets

    July 2, 2025

    The Next Acetaminophen Tablet You Take Could Be Made From PET

    July 2, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » The Latest Online Culture War Is Humans vs. Algorithms
    Business

    The Latest Online Culture War Is Humans vs. Algorithms

    News RoomBy News RoomApril 29, 20243 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Brands and bots are barred from Spread, and, like PI.FYI, the platform doesn’t support ads. Instead of working to maximize time-on-site, Rogers’ primary metrics for success will be indicators of “meaningful” human engagement, like when someone clicks on another user’s recommendation and later takes action like signing up for a newsletter or subscription. He hopes this will align companies whose content is shared on Spread with the platform’s users. “I think there’s a nostalgia for what the original social meant to achieve,” Rogers says.

    “You’ve got way too much information for anybody to consume, so you have to reduce it somehow.”

    Jonathan Stray, UC Berkeley

    So you joined a social network without ranking algorithms—is everything good now? Jonathan Stray, a senior scientist at the UC Berkeley Center for Human-Compatible AI, has doubts. “There is now a bunch of research showing that chronological is not necessarily better,” he says, adding that simpler feeds can promote recency bias and enable spam.

    Stray doesn’t think social harm is an inevitable outcome of complex algorithmic curation. But he agrees with Rogers that the tech industry’s practice of trying to maximize engagement doesn’t necessarily select for socially desirable results.

    Stray suspects the solution to the problem of social media algorithms may in fact be … more algorithms. “The fundamental problem is you’ve got way too much information for anybody to consume, so you have to reduce it somehow,” he says.

    In January, Stray launched the Prosocial Ranking Challenge, a competition with a $60,000 prize fund aiming to spur development of feed-ranking algorithms that prioritize socially desirable outcomes, based on measures of users’ well-being and how informative a feed is. From June through October, five winning algorithms will be tested on Facebook, X, and Reddit using a browser extension.

    Until a viable replacement takes off, escaping engagement-seeking algorithms will generally mean going chronological. There’s evidence people are seeking that out beyond niche platforms like PI.FYI and Spread.

    Group messaging, for example, is commonly used to supplement artificially curated social media feeds. Private chats—threaded by the logic of the clock—can provide a more intimate, less chaotic space to share and discuss gleanings from the algorithmic realm: the trading of jokes, memes, links to videos and articles, and screenshots of social posts.

    Disdain for the algorithm could help explain the growing popularity of WhatsApp within the US, which has long been ubiquitous elsewhere. Meta’s messaging app saw a 9 percent increase in daily users in the US last year, according to data from Apptopia reported by The Wrap. Even inside today’s dominant social apps, activity is shifting from public feeds and toward direct messaging, according to Business Insider, where chronology rules.

    Group chats might be ad-free and relatively controlled social environments, but they come with their own biases. “If you look at sociology, we’ve seen a lot of research that shows that people naturally seek out things that don’t cause cognitive dissonance,” says Stoldt of Drake University.

    While providing a more organic means of compilation, group messaging can still produce echo chambers and other pitfalls associated with complex algorithms. And when the content in your group chat comes from each member’s respective highly personalized algorithmic feed, things can get even more complicated. Despite the flight to algorithm-free spaces, the fight for a perfect information feed is far from over.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleFiido Air review: so lightweight you’ll forget it’s an e-bike
    Next Article I’m a Boy. Does Playing Female Characters in Video Games Make Me Gay?

    Related Posts

    Affluent Travelers Are Ditching Business Class for Business Jets

    July 2, 2025

    Airplane Wi-Fi Is Now … Good?

    July 2, 2025

    Business Travel Is Evolving Faster Than Ever. We’ll Help You Navigate It

    July 2, 2025

    Airport Lounges Are Sexy Again—if You Can Get In

    July 2, 2025

    Business Class Ain’t What It Used to Be. Don’t Tell First Class

    July 2, 2025

    Sam Altman Slams Meta’s AI Talent-Poaching Spree: ‘Missionaries Will Beat Mercenaries’

    July 2, 2025
    Our Picks

    Affluent Travelers Are Ditching Business Class for Business Jets

    July 2, 2025

    The Next Acetaminophen Tablet You Take Could Be Made From PET

    July 2, 2025

    Google’s fix for Pixel 6A battery overheating issues arrives next week

    July 2, 2025

    Racist videos made with AI are going viral on TikTok

    July 2, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Business

    Airplane Wi-Fi Is Now … Good?

    By News RoomJuly 2, 2025

    Expensive and erratic, in-flight Wi-Fi has been more of a punchline than a pipeline over…

    Blizzard cancels all new content for its tower defense mobile game Warcraft Rumble in light of recent heavy layoffs at parent company Microsoft.

    July 2, 2025

    How Nintendo locked down the Switch 2’s USB-C port and broke third-party docking

    July 2, 2025

    Business Travel Is Evolving Faster Than Ever. We’ll Help You Navigate It

    July 2, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.