* * * "Nothing vast enters the life of mortals without a curse." Sophocles [eerie instrumental music playing] [interviewer] Why don't you go ahead? Yeah. Its up 189 percent for the preteen girls. Hi, So, it sounds crazy to say we need to change all that, but thats what we need to do. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website. And then it would change the entry. Thats whats changed. [reporter 7] Its not just fake news; its fake news with consequences. And look at when it was made. 3. Thats another way to fight. [Jaron] Thats a little too simplistic. Right? [automated voice] The government planned this event, created the virus, and had a simulation of how the countries would react. On the ground! I shouldnt trust anyone. Senator from Delaware, stands with his hands behind in front of the U.S. Capitol on August 12, 1974. The rates at which they get drivers licenses have been dropping. 3. They know when people are depressed. Ill see the exact same set of updates. But its not like that at all. Theyre paid for by advertisers. The Social Network Script Takeaway #3 The Social Network deposition scenes . 1. Its just the business model that has a problem. Netflix just released a new documentary called The Social Dilemma. The film's biggest mistake is a poorly-conceived dramatic re-enactment of some of the perils of social media. And weve moved away from having a tools-based technology environment to an addiction- and manipulation-based technology environment. I will say to my son, How many hours do you think youre spending on your phone? Hell be like, Its, like, half an hour. The intention could be: How do we make the world better?. People are blowing up actual physical cell phone towers. Six months. I mean, really. If you can go to somebody and you say, Give me $10 million, and I will change the world one percent in the direction you want it to change Its the world! Uh [laughs] I still am not 100 percent sure how this originally came about, but the idea that ordering a pizza meant ordering a trafficked person. 295 Followers. Its a hoax. [Tristan] We evolved to care about whether other people in our tribe think well of us or not cause it matters. One of the things that he pioneered was the use of scientific A/B testing of small feature changes. And I was like, Is anybody else thinking about this? [Rashida Richardson] We all simply are operating on a different set of facts. [Rene Diresta] Its not that highly motivated propagandists havent existed before. A dilemma. Its not in Facebooks business interest to give up the data. [Tristan] And the question now is whether or not were willing to admit that those bad outcomes are coming directly as a product of our work. . Edward Tufte. 75. Addeddate. Some videos and audios do not have any dialogues. How is the exploitation and manipulation of social media users for financial Wheres the existential threat?. First Draft: Transcripts without timestamps and speaker IDs are usually completed in 1 business day regardless of turnaround selected, or 2-3 business days if you include timestamps and . [knocks lightly on door] Ben. [mom] Isla, can you set the table, please? [Justin Rosenstein] I was the coinventor of Google Drive, Gmail Chat, Facebook Pages, and the Facebook like button. Later, I found out Larry Page had been notified about this presentation in three separate meetings that day. I think it could have been cut down significantly, and I did not find the dramatization helpful. We would say, You cant advertise to these age children in these ways. But then you take YouTube for Kids, and it gobbles up that entire portion of the attention economy, and now all kids are exposed to YouTube for Kids. Whats not okay is when theres no regulation, no rules, and no competition, and the companies are acting as sort of de facto governments. This means that Sorkin decided on an atypical script structure; one that interweaves time periods will still holding onto key story beats. You know, I I really do view it as existential. [Sandy Parakilas] I worked at Facebook in 2011 and 2012. Rather than offer a nuanced look at technology, it gives a distorted view of how social media platforms work to create a convenient scapegoat for what are difficult and complex societal problems. [Dan Sullivan] And who do you thinks responsible? Okay, you gotta leave it here, though, buddy. White House officials say they have no reason to believe the Russian cyberattacks will stop. Its not like theyre trying to benefit us. [Roger McNamee] So, Ive been an investor in technology for 35 years. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. When I went to work the next day, most of the laptops had the presentation open. [man 4] What I said was, I think the tools that have been created today are starting to erode the social fabric of how society works., [stage manager] Aza does welcoming remarks. Decreasing ad load. The Social Dilemma is a long diatribe, with some interesting ideas and observations thrown in along the way. Im just catching up on some news stuff. [Tristan] Many people call this surveillance capitalism, capitalism profiting off of the infinite tracking of everywhere everyone goes by large technology companies whose business model is to make sure that advertisers are as successful as possible. [reporter 2] Now, this was in Huntington Beach. [teacher] He brings a golden nugget to an officer in the army in San Francisco. They see completely different worlds because theyre based on these computers calculating whats perfect for each of them. [sighs] Ben? Cass, no ones forcing you to get one. [interviewer] Uh, youre making me feel like a lab rat. . [Shoshana] These markets undermine democracy, and they undermine freedom, and they should be outlawed. Who else is an IB student being forced to analyze this? Its a gradual change. Yeah. Im on the Internet right now. [Aza] The idea of humane technology, thats where Silicon Valley got its start. Directed by Jeff Orlowski, The Social Dilemma explores the . [AI] His scrolling speed is slowing. The film features interviews with many former employees, executives and other professionals from top tech companies and social media platforms, who provide their first-hand experiences of working in and around the tech industry. The film interviews former employees of top technology companies such as Google, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, and Mozilla, gleaning their opinions on how these companies have strong influences in today's . Her research found that limiting screen time to about one hour a day helped anxious teens and young adults feel better about their body image and their appearance. [reporter 2] Democracy is facing a crisis of confidence. Lets just get people tagging each other in photos all day long.. You know, its the the reality is, well, there were so many different forces at play. [Cynthia] Facebook really gave the military and other bad actors a new way to manipulate public opinion and to help incite violence against the Rohingya Muslims that included mass killings, burning of entire villages, mass rape, and other serious crimes against humanity that have now led to 700,000 Rohingya Muslims having to flee the country. Weve put deceit and sneakiness at the absolute center of everything we do. The two movies are The Social Network, which tells the story of how a po-faced Harvard dropout named Mark Zuckerberg created a powerful and highly profitable company; and The Social Dilemma, which . [reporter] These accounts were deliberately, specifically attempting to sow political discord in Hong Kong. Tattooed ballroom dancer and writer keeping it real about dance, mindset, Life, and the occasional film. Skip over A, The, etc. [Tristan] When I was at Google, I was on the Gmail team, and I just started getting burnt out cause wed had so many conversations about you know, what the inbox should look like and what color it should be, and And I, you know, felt personally addicted to e-mail, and I found it fascinating there was no one at Gmail working on making it less addictive. [Interviewer] Knowing what you know now, do you believe Facebook impacted the results of the 2016 election? Every day, I went home and I worked on it for a couple hours every single night. video games, credit cards, and cell phones. [reporter] Hes asking tech to bring what he calls ethical design to its products. This is supposed to be . Yeah. We are standing up, and we are we are standing up to this noise. [chuckles] And I just I think that we you know, the inventors, creators uh, you know, and its me, its Mark, its the you know, Kevin Systrom at Instagram Its all of these people um, understood this consciously, and we did it anyway. I mean, every other kid in her class had one. Uh Now, what are they being paid for? So, they will be safe in here until after dinner and everyone can just chill out. The Social Dilemma draws on interviews from dozens of technology experts who have been involved in the creation of social media, focusing its story on Tristan Harris, a former design ethicist for Google. The number who have ever gone out on a date or had any kind of romantic interaction is dropping rapidly. [interviewer] Think were gonna get there? [Cass] Wouldnt exactly call the stuff that youre watching news. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. Companies like Google and Facebook would roll out lots of little, tiny experiments that they were constantly doing on users. [Cynthia M. Wong] Some of the most troubling implications of governments and other bad actors weaponizing social media, um, is that it has led to real, offline harm. [Jaron] Financial incentives kind of run the world, so any solution to this problem has to realign the financial incentives. [Cass] Come on. [Jaron] It might sound strange, but its my world. [reporter] An extraordinary election took place Sunday in Brazil. THE SOCIAL DILEMMA (2020) - TRANSCRIPT. [Shoshana] They have more information about us than has ever been imagined in human history. There are quite a few methods to combat the allure of social media, but there is one you can do right now after reading this. This documentary-drama hybrid explores the dangerous human impact of social networking, with tech experts sounding the alarm on their own creations. Now, down. And thats how Facebook works. Citations are alphabetized by the first significant letter in the citation. Some real big things. Irina Raicu. [Jeff Seibert] You are giving the computer the goal state, I want this outcome, and then the computer itself is learning how to do it. I actually had to write myself software to break my addiction to reading Reddit. [Alex] My kids dont use social media at all. And theyll be running many different programs, many different products on those same machines. What you should be asking yourself is: Why doesnt that e-mail contain the photo in it? Uh-oh. 1. I have, like, 1,000 more snips to send before dinner. [on TV] Here to talk about the latest research. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022) | Transcript. His phone A.I. It is no way for sane adults to act. [Kyrie Irving] You know, like, you click the YouTube click and it goes, like, how deep the rabbit hole goes. The number of teenage girls out of 100,000 in this country who were admitted to a hospital every year because they cut themselves or otherwise harmed themselves, that number was pretty stable until around 2010, 2011, and then it begins going way up. [Tristan] I wish more people could understand how this works because it shouldnt be something that only the tech industry knows. In Myanmar, when people think of the Internet, what they are thinking about is Facebook. [Engagement AI] Dont show him sports updates. [Sandy] Weve created a system that biases towards false information. WhatsApp has done it. The new Netflix documentary-drama "The Social Dilemma" has sparked some social media users to abandon their accounts but it's unlikely to put a dent in the tech giants it takes on. For the last ten years, the biggest companies in Silicon Valley have been in the business of selling their users. 5. [Tristan] Um [sighs] Im just trying to Like, I want people to see Like, theres a problem happening in the tech industry, and it doesnt have a name, and it has to do with one source, like, one, [Tristan] When you look around you, it feels like the world is going crazy. [Jaron] Throughout history, every single time somethings gotten better, its because somebody has come along to say, This is stupid. Maybe the government is using the coronavirus as an excuse to get everyone to stay inside because something else is happening. 2. Arthur C. Clarke. [Tristan] Persuasive technology is just sort of design intentionally applied to the extreme, where we really want to modify someones behavior. Sinopsis Social Dilemma. Because then it forces you into this vicious cycle where youre like, Whats the next thing I need to do now? [Bailey] I was one of the really early employees at Instagram. Later that day, there was, like, 400 simultaneous viewers, so it just kept growing and growing. Eventually, this culminated in a man showing up with a gun, deciding that he was gonna go liberate the children from the basement of the pizza place that did not have a basement. There are lots of potential applications for this resource, including: Quickly familiarizing . That is magic. Di Indonesia, film ini pun masuk dalam popular search di Netflix Indonesia. I mean, people in every department saying, I totally agree. I see this affecting my kids. I see this affecting the people around me. We have to do something about this. It felt like I was sort of launching a revolution or something like that. Lets squeeze in a sneaker ad before it starts. It has its own goals, and it has its own means of pursuing them by using your psychology against you. This is not a radical proposal. [Lynn] Theres no one bad guy. I mean, this one is less. Social media isnt a tool thats just waiting to be used. [Sandy Parakilas] And so, all of this data that were that were just pouring out all the time is being fed into these systems that have almost no human supervision and that are making better and better and better and better predictions about what were gonna do and and who we are. These cookies do not store any personal information. Even the wonderfully talented Skyler Gisondo cannot make a sequence work where he plays a teenager seduced by extremist disinformation, and the scenes with Vincent Kartheiser embodying the formulas that fight our efforts to pay . Irina Raicu is the director of the Internet Ethics Program ( @IEthics) at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, Santa Clara University. And they discovered that they were able to do that. [Growth AI] Cross-referencing him against comparables in his geographic zone. [Tristan] What I see is a bunch of people who are trapped by a business model, an economic incentive, and shareholder pressure that makes it almost impossible to do something else. The other side of the screen, pointed at my brain, got me to watch one more video. [man] SARS, coronavirus. [CNN] What does it look like to be a country thats entire diet is Facebook and social media? And yet, in that world, any time two people connect, the only way its financed is through a sneaky third person whos paying to manipulate those two people. Thank you . the social dilemma transcript with timestamps. [Shoshana] How do we use subliminal cues on the Facebook pages to get more people to go vote in the midterm elections? [vlogger] I share this stuff because I care. And perhaps most importantly, our human our physiology, our brains have evolved not at all. [teacher] Now, many of you in the audience are geniuses already. [Tristan] You know, I really struggled to try and figure out how, from the inside, we could change it. Me too! [Justin Rosenstein] Even talking about an AI is just a metaphor. [vlogger] They can control our minds, so that they can keep their secrets. [Tristan] It basically just said, you know, never before in history have 50 designers20- to 35-year-old white guys in Californiamade decisions that would have an impact on two billion people. What do they do with that data? And the Internet is just a new, even more efficient way to do that. Now, just imagine for a second that Wikipedia said, Were gonna give each person a different customized definition, and were gonna be paid by people for that. So, Wikipedia would be spying on you. Two billion people will have thoughts that they didnt intend to have because a designer at Google said, This is how notifications work on that screen that you wake up to in the morning. And we have a moral responsibility, as Google, for solving this problem. Sit down and see if you can get comfy. We are more profitable to a corporation if were spending time staring at a screen, staring at an ad, than if were spending that time living our life in a rich way. [Tim] I tried through willpower, just pure willpower Ill put down my phone, Ill leave my phone in the car when I get home. I think I told myself a thousand times, a thousand different days, I am not gonna bring my phone to the bedroom, and then 9:00 p.m. rolls around. A reclusive, morbidly obese English teacher attempts to reconnect with his estranged teenage daughter. Excellent! [Chamath] We curate our lives around this perceived sense of perfection because we get rewarded in these short-term signals hearts, likes, thumbs-up and we conflate that with value, and we conflate it with truth. [officer 2] Hey! We are a nation of people who have isolated ourselves to only watch channels that tell us that were right. Hes talking all about deleting social media, which you gotta do. [Cass] But that stuff is just propaganda. The older teen girls, 15 to 19 years old, theyre up 70 percent, compared to the first decade of this century. We weren't expecting any of this when we created Twitter over 12 years ago. Yeah, actually, if you can put that thing away for, like, a whole week I will buy you a new screen. [vlogger] Nine out of ten people are dissatisfied right now. Cause those are the only two choices. Transcript Joe Biden, then a U.S. Absolutely not. Addeddate. [Tristan] How does this come across on camera if I were to do, like, this move, [Tristan] Exactly. All of the things weve ever done, all the clicks weve ever made, all the videos weve watched, all the likes, that all gets brought back into building a more and more accurate model. [Tristan] But it wasnt about who you wanted to vote for. The main argument made is that Social Media is Bad. [interviewer] Why dont you go ahead? The more they talk about it and the more they divide us, the more they have the power, the more. I was in the pantry, you know, typing away on an e-mail or sometimes looking at Pinterest. Clients generally request timestamp at the beginning and the very end of the transcription. After just a couple of days, it's recorded over . At these companies like like Google, theres just massive, massive rooms, some of them underground, some of them underwater, of just computers. I dont know if I feel that way anymore. How could you use everything we know about the psychology of what persuades people and build that into technology? You know, Snapchat has done it. countermeasures. Turnaround times depend on the Transcription Type ordered. Netflix's new documentary The Social Dilemma has a single, and simple, message: Put down your phone, you're being manipulated. countermeasures to protect oneself against social media. [Tim Kendall] Everyone in 2006 including all of us at Facebook, just had total admiration for Google and what Google had built, which was this incredibly useful service that did, far as we could tell, lots of goodness for the world, and they built this parallel money machine. Each person has their own reality, with their own facts. There are 13,694 people behaving just like him in his region. One country can manipulate another one without actually invading its physical borders.
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