Facebook: The Polarization Position

March 17, 2021

I find Silicon Valley “real” news amusing. I like the publications themselves; for example, Buzzfeed. I like the stories themselves; for example, “Polarization Is Good For America, Actually, Says Facebook Executive.”

How much of the Google method has diffused into Facebook? From my point of view, a magnetic influence exists. The cited article points out:

Facebook has created a ”playbook” to help its employees rebut criticism that the company’s products fuel political polarization and social division.

The idea is that employees comprise a team. The team runs plays in order to score. The playbook also directs and informs team members on their roles.

Trapped Priors As a Basic Problem of Rationality” explains how feedback loops lead to a reinforcement of ideas, data, and rationality otherwise not noticed.

Buzzfeed references this Facebook research document:

In the [Facebook] paper, titled “What We Know About Polarization,” Cox and Raychodhury [Facebook experts] call polarization “an albatross public narrative for the company.” “The implicit argument is that Facebook is contributing to a social problem of driving societies into contexts where they can’t trust each other, can’t share common ground, can’t have conversation about issues, and can’t share a common view on reality,” they write, adding that “the media narrative in this case is generally not supported by the research.” While denying that Facebook meaningfully contributes to polarization, Pablo Barberá, a research scientist at the company, also suggested political polarization could be a good thing during Thursday’s presentation. “If we look back at history, a lot of the major social movements and major transformations, for example, the extension of civil rights or voting rights in this country have been the result of increasing polarization,” he told employees.

The value of polarization and a game plan to make explicit a particular business method are high. The fact that the trappings of research are required to justify the game plan is interesting. But those trapped priors are going to channel Facebook’s behavior into easy-to-follow grooves.

Scrutiny, legal action, and “more of the same” will allow pot holes to form. Some will be deep. Others will be no big deal.

Stephen E Arnold, March 17, 2021

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