Humans and Algorithms: The Newest Online Culture Conflict

0:00

Spread, a social platform similar to PI.FYI, focuses on promoting meaningful human engagement by avoiding brands, bots, and ads. The founder, Rogers, aims to connect users with content that resonates with them, rather than maximizing time-on-site. While some experts, like Jonathan Stray from UC Berkeley, believe that algorithmic curation can be beneficial, others, like Rogers, argue that the tech industry’s focus on engagement may not always lead to socially desirable outcomes.

In response to concerns about algorithmic bias, Stray has launched the Prosocial Ranking Challenge, offering a $60,000 prize fund to develop feed-ranking algorithms that prioritize socially desirable outcomes. Meanwhile, some users are turning to chronological feeds and group messaging to escape engagement-driven algorithms on mainstream social media platforms.

Despite the appeal of ad-free and controlled environments in group chats, they can still harbor biases and echo chambers similar to algorithmic feeds. The pursuit of a perfect information feed remains an ongoing challenge.

Elana Klein
Elana Klein
Elana Klein is the assistant to the global editorial director. Previously, she worked at Business Insider and New Orleans Public Radio. Her writing has also appeared in The Cut. She studied political economy at Tulane University and lives in Brooklyn.

Latest stories

Ad

Related Articles

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here
Captcha verification failed!
CAPTCHA user score failed. Please contact us!

Ad
Continue on app