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Facebook plans to read news articles for you and give you its own interpretation of what they say

More narrative control.

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, join Reclaim The Net.

Facebook is riding high on a wave of the pandemic, having seen record usage numbers as people throughout the world suffer lockdowns and rely more than ever on social networks.

In a year when a lot of small businesses are shutting down or laying off employees โ€“ Facebook hired 20,000 more people to its workforce, an end-of-the-year meeting has heard, according to audio recordings BuzzFeed says it has had access to.

As for the future, โ€œwe are making itโ€ โ€“ that is what was said during the meeting chaired by CEO Mark Zuckerberg, where Facebook execs summed up 2020 as basically a good year for the tech giant, despite coming under pressure for political and social issues and despite antitrust probes and lawsuits.

What Facebook is โ€œmakingโ€ here in terms of shaping the future are ways of keeping users on the platform, while, critics fear, also dumbing them down, via a tool that would โ€œreadโ€ articles instead of people, and then explain to them what those articles meant to say. If that wasnโ€™t enough, the behemoth is also not abandoning plans to develop neural sensors capable of โ€œdetecting peopleโ€™s thoughts.โ€

Naturally, Zuckerberg would say, and perhaps even mean it, that these โ€œadvancementsโ€ will make the world a better place, comparing the speed at which Facebook is proceeding with these advancements to whatโ€™s for many the troublesome speed of the development of coronavirus vaccines.

Referring to machine learning as artificial intelligence, the article says Facebook execs have reiterated their commitment to reliance on this tech โ€“ that would โ€œessentially train itselfโ€ (otherwise, the point of machine learning) โ€“ in order to fight โ€œhate speech and misinformation.โ€

But if thereโ€™s little news there, the announcement of a tool dubbed TL;DR (internet slang for, โ€œtoo long, didnโ€™t readโ€) is more interesting. Its goal will be to discourage Facebook users from reading articles themselves and forming their own opinions, instead letting the giant summarize it for them โ€“ and keep them on the platform. Publishers, who are already at odds with Facebook and Google for taking their audiences and ad dollars, will certainly have something to say about this.

Otherwise, Facebook reportedly also has mind-reading neural sensors โ€œpluggedโ€ into peopleโ€™s brains in the works, as well as a universal translator, ร  la Star Trek.

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, join Reclaim The Net.

Logo with a red shield enclosing a stylized globe and three red arrows pointing upward to the right, next to the text 'RECLAIM THE NET' with 'RECLAIM' in gray and 'THE NET' in red

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Support the exposure of censorship and surveillance, and protect your digital rights:

Logo with a red shield enclosing a stylized globe and three red arrows pointing upward to the right, next to the text 'RECLAIM THE NET' with 'RECLAIM' in gray and 'THE NET' in red

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Support the exposure of censorship and surveillance, and protect your digital rights: