🧠 My posts
I
published an updated version of my annual trends deck, thinking
about what COVID means for tech this summer. Link
🗞 News
Facebook
content moderation #∞. FB's
own internal 'civil rights audit' board says FB isn't
doing enough to take down hate speech of all kinds (though it
has made some progress). There are real philosophical problems here
- how does a tool used by over a billion people decide what
they can say to each other, and how does that spread and
amplified by automated suggestion tools? No-one doubts it
should do something, and very few people would like it to (say)
monitor all of our private WhatsApp chats, but where are the lines
in the middle? I have some opinions on this and there are
many others, but what's not in dispute is that Facebook has totally
failed to articulate a coherent position of its own. Part of
the problem is that a corporation lacks legitimacy to make
such decisions, and FB has reacted by creating external
advisory groups, like
this one, but if you do that, then don't you have to do
what they say? Link (PDF)
More
US tech antitrust: the US
legislature's antitrust committee is having a hearing later this
month, with the CEOs of Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon all
summoned. Expect a lot of canned talking points (down a shot
of espresso every time someone says 'innovation'), but this
reflects the ongoing impetus for... something. It is not at all
clear why breaking up these companies would solve any of the
problems people care about, but one should also ask if such action
is plausible, given on one hand the state of current US
politics and on the other the fact that these are national
champions in the face of a growing perception of a strategic
challenge from China. But that doesn't mean that, say, Google's
ad-tech stack or Amazon marketplace won't get kneecapped at some
point. Link
HK
security law versus global tech. The new Hong Kong security laws effectively give
Chinese state security agencies unlimited powers in HK, and one
aspect of that is that they can demand access to user data
from any tech platform operating in HK, covering both users in HK
and users anywhere else. This is backed by both fines and the
scope to imprison local staff. So what does Google do if Chinese
police arrest their staff in HK and demand Gmail data for activists
in Germany? One answer, of course, is end-to-end encryption, but
that doesn't work for everything. So, companies are
wondering if they have to leave - which China of course would
welcome. Link
US
banning TikTok? The US
secretary of state says he's considering banning TikTok and a bunch
of other Chinese social apps, following India last week. Not clear
if he has the legal authority to do this, and I rather doubt TikTok
is really the main vector for stealing US secrets (remember the OPM
'hack'? The US handed over admin access to some of its most
sensitive data to... Chinese IT contractors). But the macro theme
isn't going away. On one hand, the view that the Chinese
state is now a generational strategic adversary is
rapidly going from 'China hawks/cranks' to mainstream consensus on
both the US and Europe, and on the other, the ongoing global
diffusion of tech means that the next cool new social app
isn't necessarily made in California anymore. And a deeper
problem: define 'Chinese'? Tiktok's parent company, Bytedance, has
tried to ring-fence it as an 'outside-China' subsidiary, separate
from Douyin inside China, but it's clearly still seen as Chinese.
Equally, Zoom is based in Silicon Valley, but the founder is a
Chinese national, and most of the engineering is in China, subject
to direct Chinese state coercion. So what's the threshold? And can
you really just stop Americans (or Germans, or Koreans)
liking and using something made in China? Link
Amazon
bans/unbans TikTok. Amazon
sent an email to all employees saying they had to remove the TikTok
app from any phones with access to Amazon email for security
reasons - and then retracted it an hour later, saying this
was a mistake. Um. OK. Link
Apple
shifting supply away from China? Reuters has some smoke signals that Foxconn
(Taiwanese, but makes iPhones for Apple on the Chinese mainland) is
investing $1bn expanding iPhone capacity in India. Apple has
already been building capacity in India due to local import taxes
(and has tiny share there) but must also be thinking about
geopolitical exposure to Chinese manufacturing, though for obvious
reasons it would have to do this under the radar. For context, it's
worth understanding that Apple's final assembly and
manufacturing excellence mostly happens in contract manufacturing
in the Shenzhen ecosystem, but most of the high-value components
(screens, chips, image sensors etc) are made outside China. Link
Palantir
has filed for IPO. Palantir
was founded way back in 2003 to help governments, the
military and law enforcement use modern tools to analyse their
data: the client base and the fact that Peter 'Voldemort' Thiel was
one of the founders make it rather controversial politically,
and since it's remained private until now (at a valuation of as
much as $20bn, apparently) no-one can look under the hood to see
what's really going on. The other reason to look
under the hood is that a lot of people in tech tend to
presume that Palantir is really just a big outsourcing shop,
charging out 'data scientists' by the hour
rather than being a 'real' software company (remember the
joke that a data scientist is just a statistician who lives in
Silicon Valley), and that the magical seeing eye is just a bunch of
Excel files and IF statements. 🤷🏻♂️ Link
🔮 Reading
Useful
profile of ASML and the very very expensive, high-tech
machines involved in the chip industry, which China does not
and cannot build, but badly wants to. Link
Study
of images and misinformation in WhatsApp groups in India. Link
Grocery
stores are accelerating automation and self-checkout as a result of
Covid. Link
A
group of right-wing US media outlets, as well as some more serious
titles, were tricked into running comment pieces written by people
who didn't exist, and were in fact invented by a middle-eastern
propaganda campaign. Link
People
are watching Quibi, but in tech and media the main entertainment
value is the behind-the-scenes drama. Link
Ten
years of the Times digital paywall. A big gamble, many people said
it was insane, and it was a huge success. Link
The Harvard
Business School 'online classroom' looks like a parody to me. Link
😮 Interesting things
Great
footage of the Caproni Ca.60, a 9-wing (yes, really),
8-engine seaplane intended to fly 100 passengers across the
Atlantic in 1921. You could think of metaphors, or just admire
the insanity. Link
How to
use a rotary telephone dial as a USB keyboard. Link
Statistical
analysis: football commentary uses different terms to praise
players from different ethic backgrounds. Link
Six
months ago today: the first BBC report on a 'new virus' in central
China. All under control, claim authorities. Link
📊 Stats
The
SCMP has a new report on the Chinese internet (free and longer paid
versions available). Link
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