company:google

  • Playing Space Invaders With Your Own Voice
    https://hackernoon.com/playing-space-invaders-with-your-own-voice-f0bc7581e9bc?source=rss----3a

    Photo by Andre HunterAfter some time testing voice #games in my Alexa device, one question came to my mind…Why not try to convert a classic game control system to a Voice User Inteface?So let’s do a simple experiment with a Space Invaders written in #javascript.Final result (Kind of)After some walkarounds I made a requirement list in order to reach my target:Speech RecognitionSpeech SynthesisAn NLU or set of hardcode rules to match my utterances to intentsImplementation of the web reactions to these intentsWell, once I had more or less clear what I was looking for, I use the second engineer lesson: don’t reinvent the wheel. So, once again I whispered something to Google and it led me to something called Woice.Once I went through the tutorial for creating a new application, I charged the SDK (...)

    #ai #voice-assistant #ux

  • Top 5 New #seo Trends For Your Website in 2019
    https://hackernoon.com/top-5-new-seo-trends-for-your-website-in-2019-da84c3ac3a45?source=rss---

    SEO Trends 2019Google has made changes regarding mobile responsiveness and website speed related efforts to make sure they’re delievering the most optimized search results. Now, let’s get into the nitty-gritty of these changes right away.Mobile-First IndexingProceeding from last years trend of mobile raking, Google is still doing much effort in looking at a mobile version of your website for the purpose of ranking and indexing. This does not matter whether you have a mobile version on your website. If not, Google still looks at a desktop version to rank your page. However, users with mobile devices won’t be able to navigate and read your page. This page is not displayed to them. For that case, you will need to update your website for mobile browsing. In this way, Google will be able (...)

    #seo-trends-2019 #voice-search #seo-trends #ux-design

  • Avoiding consumer lock-in with the decentralised web
    https://hackernoon.com/avoiding-consumer-lock-in-with-the-decentralised-web-c618f28241ab?source

    Avoiding Consumer Lock-ins with the Decentralised WebThis is the third blog post in our series exploring aspects of the Arweave’s decentralised, permanent web. You can catch up with the other parts here and here.If you are like me, you have been an avid user of #google’s Gmail service since the first few months of the ‘private’ beta over a decade ago. Over this time, Google has rendered a fantastic service to us, with consistent releases of new features, fast and reliable service (I can only remember it being offline once when I needed it), and the simplicity that only great products can provide.Over this period, I have also given out my personal Gmail email address to hundreds of people — many of whom only have this mechanism of contacting me. Google has also sold access to my profile (...)

    #decentralization #privacy #data #blockchain

  • 10 Top Open Source AI Technologies For Startups
    https://hackernoon.com/10-top-open-source-ai-technologies-for-startups-7c5f10b82fb1?source=rss-

    In the area of technology research, Artificial intelligence is one of the hottest trends. In fact, many startups have already made progress in areas like natural language, neural networks, AI, machine learning and image processing. Many other big companies like Google, Microsoft, IBM, Amazon and Facebook are heavily investing in their own R&D.Hence, it is no surprise now AI applications are increasingly useful for small as well as large businesses in 2019. In this blog, I have listed top 10 open source AI Technologies for small businesses and startups.1) Apache SystemMLIt is the machine learning technology created at IBM that has reached one of the top-level project levels in the Apache Software Foundation and is a flexible and scalable machine learning system. The important (...)

    #machine-learning #artificial-intelligence #open-source #startup #open-source-ai

  • Tagging your entire knowledge Base
    https://hackernoon.com/tagging-your-entire-knowledge-base-80ce02c00daf?source=rss----3a8144eabf

    What has worked for us in the past is a treasure trove that we are not leveraging enoughDéjà vuI am trying to do something. I broadly know how to do it but I don’t know the exact details. I search for it on Google. Google is a very big name today because it lets you get access to relevant information very fast. But however there is one issue with Google search. There is too much of content. I call this content overload. For example let us say when I search “What is blockchain”, there are about 22,00,00,000 results that are available. How do I know what is good? I really don’t.But Google does a good job at showing the best results at the top. In fact a very good job at it and that is the reason Google has a market cap of 847 Billion USD. But still I am not happy many times as I can’t figure (...)

    #productivity #startup #reading #writing #habits

  • How Can AI Change #gaming Experience
    https://hackernoon.com/how-can-ai-change-gaming-experience-ed0741b9f51e?source=rss----3a8144eab

    We will see characters that can learn and adapt to the player.Photo by Mali MaederWhether you know it or not, you use artificial intelligence all the time. Maybe you own a smart speaker, you’ve seen a self-driving car, or you’ve used Google Photos to search for images of your cat.Now, there’s also a good chance you’ve played a video game that happens to have some AI in it, like God of War or Red Dead Redemption 2. What may surprise you is that those two types of AI are not the same thing.The AI in digital systems and autonomous vehicles is self-learning and really fast, but it’s also really unpredictable. Yet these two worlds are fast colliding, and once game developers have the right tools and the freedom to make games that really push the limits of AI, the results are going to be the stuff (...)

    #machine-learning #technology #artificial-intelligence #future

  • Tracking Phones, #Google Is a Dragnet for the #Police - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/04/13/us/google-location-tracking-police.html

    The tech giant records people’s locations worldwide. Now, investigators are using it to find suspects and witnesses near #crimes, running the risk of snaring the #innocent.

  • The Ultimate List of G2Crowd Alternatives and How To Select the Right Ones for Your #saas
    https://hackernoon.com/the-ultimate-list-of-g2crowd-alternatives-and-how-to-select-the-right-on

    What is G2Crowd?G2Crowd is one of the biggest software comparison websites with users reviews. Its business model is similar to those of Indeed.com, Monster.com, etc. Keeping it simple they usurp Google’s search result on a group of niche search terms like ‘Product name alternative’, ‘Product name pricing’ and many similar ones. Simply type-in any software name in ‘Product name’ and you got it.Why should you care?G2Crowd can be a source of social proof and new leads. I will focus on new leads part in this article. When passing the sales funnel your prospects usually go through the evaluation phase. To be more precise, your competition, pricing and value proposition is being checked at this stage. Prospects simply type ‘Your SaaS Name pricing’ in Google and are immediately transferred to the (...)

    #marketing #g2crowd-alternatives #g2-crowd #saas-marketing

  • How Artificial Intelligence Is Going To Change Our Lives
    https://hackernoon.com/how-artificial-intelligence-is-going-to-change-our-lives-48458706f6a?sou

    You are most probably reading this article on a smartphone or a computer. When you ask the time by just saying “what’s the time” to Siri on iPhone or to Google Assistant on Android or Cortana on Windows, you are using artificial intelligence. In the last ten years, improvements in artificial intelligence have been quite significant. But more are coming.What is Artificial Intelligence?If human thinking and thoughts can be introduced in a computer or computer-like devices, then it is called #ai or Artificial Intelligence. If you have seen science fiction movies or read novels, then you know about that. An artificial intelligent agent is a system that can perceive its environment and by that, it can take actions for maximizing its chances of success.Today, artificial intelligence is known as (...)

    #technology #artificial-intelligence #future-technology #ai-applications

  • Distributed Ledger Tech with David Sønstebø, Co-Founder of #iota
    https://hackernoon.com/distributed-ledger-tech-with-david-s%C3%B8nsteb%C3%B8-co-founder-of-iota

    Episode 37 of the Hacker Noon Podcast: An interview with David Sonstebo of IOTA, a permission-less distributed ledger for a new economy.Today’s show would not be possible without Digital Ocean.https://medium.com/media/bf142049d9704d537f79b510ba9ba4db/hrefListen to the interview on iTunes, or Google Podcast, or watch on YouTube.In this episode Trent Lapinski interviews David Sønstebø, the co-founder of IOTA, you get to learn about distributed technologies, edge computing and what is happening in #crypto today!“If you look at how much computational power something like AWS or Azure Microsoft, if you look at how much they have, it sounds impressive, and I’m not saying it isn’t, but when you compare it to the idle amount of computation that exists in all the phones, all the laptops, and all the (...)

    #hackernoon-podcast #blockchain #iot

  • 10 Great Articles On Data Science And Data Engineering
    https://hackernoon.com/10-great-articles-on-data-science-and-data-engineering-d5abdf4a4a44?sour

    Data science and #programming are such rapidly expanding specialities it is hard to keep up with all the articles that come out from Google, Uber, Netflix and one off engineers. We have been reading several over the past few weeks and wanted to share some of our top blog posts for this week April 2019!We hope you enjoy these articles.Building and Scaling Data Lineage at NetflixBy: Di Lin, Girish Lingappa, Jitender AswaniImagine yourself in the role of a data-inspired decision maker staring at a metric on a dashboard about to make a critical business decision but pausing to ask a question — “Can I run a check myself to understand what data is behind this metric?”Now, imagine yourself in the role of a software engineer responsible for a micro-service which publishes data consumed by few critical (...)

    #python #big-data #machine-learning #data-science

  • The Urgent Quest for Slower, Better News | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/culture/annals-of-inquiry/the-urgent-quest-for-slower-better-news

    In 2008, the Columbia Journalism Review published an article with the headline “Overload!,” which examined news fatigue in “an age of too much information.” When “Overload!” was published, Blackberrys still dominated the smartphone market, push notifications hadn’t yet to come to the iPhone, retweets weren’t built into Twitter, and BuzzFeed News did not exist. Looking back, the idea of suffering from information overload in 2008 seems almost quaint. Now, more than a decade later, a fresh reckoning seems to be upon us. Last year, Tim Cook, the chief executive officer of Apple, unveiled a new iPhone feature, Screen Time, which allows users to track their phone activity. During an interview at a Fortune conference, Cook said that he was monitoring his own usage and had “slashed” the number of notifications he receives. “I think it has become clear to all of us that some of us are spending too much time on our devices,” Cook said.

    It is worth considering how news organizations have contributed to the problems Newport and Cook describe. Media outlets have been reduced to fighting over a shrinking share of our attention online; as Facebook, Google, and other tech platforms have come to monopolize our digital lives, news organizations have had to assume a subsidiary role, relying on those sites for traffic. That dependence exerts a powerful influence on which stories that are pursued, how they’re presented, and the speed and volume at which they’re turned out. In “World Without Mind: the Existential Threat of Big Tech,” published in 2017, Franklin Foer, the former editor-in-chief of The New Republic, writes about “a mad, shameless chase to gain clicks through Facebook” and “a relentless effort to game Google’s algorithms.” Newspapers and magazines have long sought to command large readerships, but these efforts used to be primarily the province of circulation departments; newsrooms were insulated from these pressures, with little sense of what readers actually read. Nowadays, at both legacy news organizations and those that were born online, audience metrics are everywhere. At the Times, everyone in the newsroom has access to an internal, custom-built analytics tool that shows how many people are reading each story, where those people are coming from, what devices they are using, how the stories are being promoted, and so on. Additional, commercially built audience tools, such as Chartbeat and Google Analytics, are also widely available. As the editor of newyorker.com, I keep a browser tab open to Parse.ly, an application that shows me, in real time, various readership numbers for the stories on our Web site.

    Even at news organizations committed to insuring that editorial values—and not commercial interests—determine coverage, it can be difficult for editors to decide how much attention should be paid to these metrics. In “Breaking News: the Remaking of Journalism and Why It Matters,” Alan Rusbridger, the former editor-in-chief of the Guardian, recounts the gradual introduction of metrics into his newspaper’s decision-making processes. The goal, he writes, is to have “a data-informed newsroom, not a data-led one.” But it’s hard to know when the former crosses over into being the latter.

    For digital-media organizations sustained by advertising, the temptations are almost irresistible. Each time a reader comes to a news site from a social-media or search platform, the visit, no matter how brief, brings in some amount of revenue. Foer calls this phenomenon “drive-by traffic.” As Facebook and Google have grown, they have pushed down advertising prices, and revenue-per-click from drive-by traffic has shrunk; even so, it continues to provide an incentive for any number of depressing modern media trends, including clickbait headlines, the proliferation of hastily written “hot takes,” and increasingly homogeneous coverage as everyone chases the same trending news stories, so as not to miss out on the traffic they will bring. Any content that is cheap to produce and has the potential to generate clicks on Facebook or Google is now a revenue-generating “audience opportunity.”

    Among Boczkowski’s areas of research is how young people interact with the news today. Most do not go online seeking the news; instead, they encounter it incidentally, on social media. They might get on their phones or computers to check for updates or messages from their friends, and, along the way, encounter a post from a news site. Few people sit down in the morning to read the print newspaper or make a point of watching the T.V. news in the evening. Instead, they are constantly “being touched, rubbed by the news,” Bockzkowski said. “It’s part of the environment.”

    A central purpose of journalism is the creation of an informed citizenry. And yet––especially in an environment of free-floating, ambient news––it’s not entirely clear what it means to be informed. In his book “The Good Citizen,” from 1998, Michael Schudson, a sociologist who now teaches at Columbia’s journalism school, argues that the ideal of the “informed citizen”––a person with the time, discipline, and expertise needed to steep him- or herself in politics and become fully engaged in our civic life––has always been an unrealistic one. The founders, he writes, expected citizens to possess relatively little political knowledge; the ideal of the informed citizen didn’t take hold until more than a century later, when Progressive-era reformers sought to rein in the party machines and empower individual voters to make thoughtful decisions. (It was also during this period that the independent press began to emerge as a commercial phenomenon, and the press corps became increasingly professionalized.)

    Schudson proposes a model for citizenship that he believes to be more true to life: the “monitorial citizen”—a person who is watchful of what’s going on in politics but isn’t always fully engaged. “The monitorial citizen engages in environmental surveillance more than information-gathering,” he writes. “Picture parents watching small children at the community pool. They are not gathering information; they are keeping an eye on the scene. They look inactive, but they are poised for action if action is required.” Schudson contends that monitorial citizens might even be “better informed than citizens of the past in that, somewhere in their heads, they have more bits of information.” When the time is right, they will deploy this information––to vote a corrupt lawmaker out of office, say, or to approve an important ballot measure.

    #Journalisme #Médias #Economie_attention

  • The Future of Cloud Computing with Joshua Strebel from Pagely
    https://hackernoon.com/the-future-of-cloud-computing-with-joshua-strebel-from-pagely-e502435cd4

    Episode 36 of the Hacker Noon Podcast: An interview with Joshua Strebel, CEO of Pagely and NorthStack.https://medium.com/media/0d1b47d6c24b20039a870c9dfbb22208/hrefListen to the interview on iTunes, or Google Podcast, or watch on YouTube.In this episode Trent Lapinski and Joshua Strebel discuss #serverless, cloud computing, #devops, #wordpress, and Joshua’s new project NorthStack.“You talk about AI and specifically around content publishing, there’s those crazy algorithms now that you can give it a sentence and a closing and it’ll write a thousand words in between and it will be on point. You’re like ‘I couldn’t have written this any better!” — Joshua StrebelThe Future of Cloud Computing with Joshua Strebel from PagelyProduction and music by Derek Bernard — haberdasherband.com/productionHost: Trent (...)

    #hackernoon-podcast #cloud-computing

  • Marissa Mayer Interview : How a Revenue Guarantee Almost Killed #google
    https://hackernoon.com/marissa-mayer-on-career-growth-and-how-a-revenue-guarantee-almost-killed

    Interview by Harj TaggarI remember when we made a huge revenue guarantee to AOL to get the account. We did a best-case scenario projection, a middle of the road projection, and a worst-case scenario projection. Worst-case scenario and middle of the road had us going out of business with the contract. The best-case scenario had us breaking even.Marissa Mayer was one of the earliest employees at Google and helped to shape both Gmail and Google Maps. Mayer became the CEO of Yahoo in 2012, a position she held until 2017 when Yahoo was acquired by Verizon for $4.48 billion. In 2018, she co-founded Lumi Labs, a startup incubator in Palo Alto focusing on consumer media and AI. Marissa Mayer recently sat down with Triplebyte’s CEO, Harj Taggar, to discuss her career in #tech and the advice she (...)

    #careers #marissa-mayer-interview #software-development

  • Hako
    https://hackernoon.com/hako-3825c3a033d7?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Hako on Iphone XRA super secure decentralized file sharing application powered by Web 3.0Hako uses protocol called proxy re encryption to secure and permission data efficiently.Hako LogoUnlike other file sharing services such as Dropbox and Google Drive, Hako does not place your keys in the hands of a large companies. The user is always in control of your keys and your data.Centralized storage has a single point of failure (the company) and require a user to be online (connected to the central servers) in order to transfer data and delegate access.PLEASE VOTEjust signup here and then upvote the two projects: https://coinlist.co/registerNCIPFS - CoinListHako - CoinListThe future of the web?Web 3.0 protocolsHako leverages Web 3.0 peer to peer protocols so users can directly share data, as (...)

    #coinlist #ipfs #security #dapps #nucypher

  • Choosing a #startup to Work For? Think Like an Investor.
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-choose-a-startup-to-work-for-by-thinking-like-an-investor-5567345

    I believe that most advice on choosing a startup to work for is wrong. Early employees at wildly successful startups suggest you assume the value of your equity is zero and instead optimize for how much you can learn. In this post I’ll argue that evaluating how likely a startup is to succeed should actually be the most important factor in your decision to join one. As a former partner at Y Combinator, I know a lot about how #investors do this. Now, as a founder and CEO of Triplebyte, I see how much less rigor the average job seeker applies to their decision and what they miss that investors would notice.First you should be sure you really want to work at a startup. This is not the right choice for everyone. Paul Buchheit, an early engineer at Google, says,“If you’re happy working where you (...)

    #software-development #programming #careers

  • danah boyd : When Good Intentions Backfire – Data & Society : Points
    https://points.datasociety.net/when-good-intentions-backfire-786fb0dead03

    I find it frustrating to bear witness to good intentions getting manipulated, but it’s even harder to watch how those who are wedded to good intentions are often unwilling to acknowledge this, let alone start imagining how to develop the appropriate antibodies. Too many folks that I love dearly just want to double down on the approaches they’ve taken and the commitments they’ve made. On one hand, I get it — folks’ life-work and identities are caught up in these issues.

    I’ve never met an educator who thinks that the process of educating is easy or formulaic. (Heck, this is why most educators roll their eyes when they hear talk of computerized systems that can educate better than teachers.) So why do we assume that well-intended classroom lessons — or even well-designed curricula — might not play out as we imagine? This isn’t simply about the efficacy of the lesson or the skill of the teacher, but the cultural context in which these conversations occur.

    In many communities in which I’ve done research, the authority of teachers is often questioned. Nowhere is this more painfully visible than when well-intended highly educated (often white) teachers come to teach in poorer communities of color. Yet, how often are pedagogical interventions designed by researchers really taking into account the doubt that students and their parents have of these teachers? And how do we as educators and scholars grapple with how we might have made mistakes?

    From the outside, companies like Facebook and Google seem pretty evil to many people. They’re situated in a capitalist logic that many advocates and progressives despise. They’re opaque and they don’t engage the public in their decision-making processes, even when those decisions have huge implications for what people read and think. They’re extremely powerful and they’ve made a lot of people rich in an environment where financial inequality and instability is front and center. Primarily located in one small part of the country, they also seem like a monolithic beast.

    As a result, it’s not surprising to me that many people assume that engineers and product designers have evil (or at least financially motivated) intentions. There’s an irony here because my experience is the opposite. Most product teams have painfully good intentions, shaped by utopic visions of how the ideal person would interact with the ideal system. Nothing is more painful than sitting through a product design session with design personae that have been plucked from a collection of clichés.

    Most products and features that get released start with good intentions, but they too get munged by the system, framed by marketing plans, and manipulated by users. And then there’s the dance of chaos as companies seek to clean up PR messes (which often involves non-technical actors telling insane fictions about the product), patch bugs to prevent abuse, and throw bandaids on parts of the code that didn’t play out as intended. There’s a reason that no one can tell you exactly how Google’s search engine or Facebook’s news feed works. Sure, the PR folks will tell you that it’s proprietary code. But the ugly truth is that the code has been patched to smithereens to address countless types of manipulation and gamification (e.g., SEO to bots). It’s quaint to read the original “page rank” paper that Brin and Page wrote when they envisioned how a search engine could ideally work. That’s so not how the system works today.

    Powerful actors have always tried to manipulate the news media, especially State actors. This is why the fourth estate is seen as so important in the American context. Yet, the game has changed, in part because of the distributed power of the masses. Social media marketers quickly figured out that manufacturing outrage and spectacle would give them a pathway to attention, attracting news media like bees to honey. Most folks rolled their eyes, watching as monied people played the same games as State actors. But what about the long tail? How do we grapple with the long tail? How should journalists respond to those who are hacking the attention economy?

    In short, I keep thinking that we need more well-intended folks to start thinking like hackers.

    Think just as much about how you build an ideal system as how it might be corrupted, destroyed, manipulated, or gamed. Think about unintended consequences, not simply to stop a bad idea but to build resilience into the model.

    As a developer, I always loved the notion of “extensibility” because it was an ideal of building a system that could take unimagined future development into consideration. Part of why I love the notion is that it’s bloody impossible to implement. Sure, I (poorly) comment my code and build object-oriented structures that would allow for some level of technical flexibility. But, at the end of the day, I’d always end up kicking myself for not imagining a particular use case in my original design and, as a result, doing a lot more band-aiding than I’d like to admit.

    #Hacker #Freaks #Résilience #danah_boyd

  • France in the #blockchain Ecosystem with Karim Sabba from #paris Blockchain Week
    https://hackernoon.com/france-in-the-blockchain-ecosystem-with-karim-sabba-from-paris-blockchai

    Episode 35 of the Hacker Noon Podcast: An interview with Karim Sabba, French entrepreneur and founder of Paris Blockchain Week. Paris Blockchain Week is April 16–17, 2019 in Paris, France, Use code: HACKERNOON30 for a 30% discount.Listen to the interview on iTunes, or Google Podcast, or watch on YouTube.https://medium.com/media/fc1d92a51507e9eca88d7af519edd8e9/hrefIn this episode Trent Lapinski interviews Karim Sabba, French entrepreneur and founder of Paris Blockchain Week.“I jumped into this new ecosystem where I saw returns that I had never seen in my life. And that was what caught me in. That was the bait, and it was a good bait. But afterwards I started to dive into all those projects and I remember, I don’t want to name it because my apprehension of this was a bit weird, but (...)

    #crypto #blockchain-week-paris #hackernoon-podcast

  • Progressive Web Apps: Apple App Store, Google Play Store, It Was Nice Knowing You
    https://hackernoon.com/progressive-web-apps-apple-app-store-google-play-store-it-was-nice-knowi

    Is the end coming for the Apple App Store and Google Play Store? The title is obviously an exaggeration, but in all seriousness, the time has come for a new wave of #mobile technology to come to the fore. In 2018, Twitter announced that it has started offering its mobile PWA as its main site. PWA? What’s that?Progressive Web Apps (PWA) is the future of mobile apps and the web, pushed by heavyweights in the industry especially Google. With features such as adding to home screen, offline support, push notifications and more, a PWA offers a user experience approaching that of a native mobile app.Here’s how a PWA works. Imagine you have a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) app that is also PWA compliant. You just need to visit the app using a normal URL in your mobile browser. If you have (...)

    #mobile-app-development #progressive-web-app #web-development #open-source

  • YouTube Executives Ignored Warnings, Let Toxic Videos Run Rampant - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-04-02/youtube-executives-ignored-warnings-letting-toxic-videos-run-rampant

    Wojcicki’s media behemoth, bent on overtaking television, is estimated to rake in sales of more than $16 billion a year. But on that day, Wojcicki compared her video site to a different kind of institution. “We’re really more like a library,” she said, staking out a familiar position as a defender of free speech. “There have always been controversies, if you look back at libraries.”

    Since Wojcicki took the stage, prominent conspiracy theories on the platform—including one on child vaccinations; another tying Hillary Clinton to a Satanic cult—have drawn the ire of lawmakers eager to regulate technology companies. And YouTube is, a year later, even more associated with the darker parts of the web.

    The conundrum isn’t just that videos questioning the moon landing or the efficacy of vaccines are on YouTube. The massive “library,” generated by users with little editorial oversight, is bound to have untrue nonsense. Instead, YouTube’s problem is that it allows the nonsense to flourish. And, in some cases, through its powerful artificial intelligence system, it even provides the fuel that lets it spread.

    Mais justement NON ! Ce ne peut être une “bibliothèque”, car une bibliothèque ne conserve que des documents qui ont été publiés, donc avec déjà une première instance de validation (ou en tout cas de responsabilité éditoriale... quelqu’un ira en procès le cas échéant).

    YouTube est... YouTube, quelque chose de spécial à internet, qui remplit une fonction majeure... et également un danger pour la pensée en raison de “l’économie de l’attention”.

    The company spent years chasing one business goal above others: “Engagement,” a measure of the views, time spent and interactions with online videos. Conversations with over twenty people who work at, or recently left, YouTube reveal a corporate leadership unable or unwilling to act on these internal alarms for fear of throttling engagement.

    In response to criticism about prioritizing growth over safety, Facebook Inc. has proposed a dramatic shift in its core product. YouTube still has struggled to explain any new corporate vision to the public and investors – and sometimes, to its own staff. Five senior personnel who left YouTube and Google in the last two years privately cited the platform’s inability to tame extreme, disturbing videos as the reason for their departure. Within Google, YouTube’s inability to fix its problems has remained a major gripe. Google shares slipped in late morning trading in New York on Tuesday, leaving them up 15 percent so far this year. Facebook stock has jumped more than 30 percent in 2019, after getting hammered last year.

    YouTube’s inertia was illuminated again after a deadly measles outbreak drew public attention to vaccinations conspiracies on social media several weeks ago. New data from Moonshot CVE, a London-based firm that studies extremism, found that fewer than twenty YouTube channels that have spread these lies reached over 170 million viewers, many who were then recommended other videos laden with conspiracy theories.

    So YouTube, then run by Google veteran Salar Kamangar, set a company-wide objective to reach one billion hours of viewing a day, and rewrote its recommendation engine to maximize for that goal. When Wojcicki took over, in 2014, YouTube was a third of the way to the goal, she recalled in investor John Doerr’s 2018 book Measure What Matters.

    “They thought it would break the internet! But it seemed to me that such a clear and measurable objective would energize people, and I cheered them on,” Wojcicki told Doerr. “The billion hours of daily watch time gave our tech people a North Star.” By October, 2016, YouTube hit its goal.

    YouTube doesn’t give an exact recipe for virality. But in the race to one billion hours, a formula emerged: Outrage equals attention. It’s one that people on the political fringes have easily exploited, said Brittan Heller, a fellow at Harvard University’s Carr Center. “They don’t know how the algorithm works,” she said. “But they do know that the more outrageous the content is, the more views.”

    People inside YouTube knew about this dynamic. Over the years, there were many tortured debates about what to do with troublesome videos—those that don’t violate its content policies and so remain on the site. Some software engineers have nicknamed the problem “bad virality.”

    Yonatan Zunger, a privacy engineer at Google, recalled a suggestion he made to YouTube staff before he left the company in 2016. He proposed a third tier: Videos that were allowed to stay on YouTube, but, because they were “close to the line” of the takedown policy, would be removed from recommendations. “Bad actors quickly get very good at understanding where the bright lines are and skating as close to those lines as possible,” Zunger said.

    His proposal, which went to the head of YouTube policy, was turned down. “I can say with a lot of confidence that they were deeply wrong,” he said.

    Rather than revamp its recommendation engine, YouTube doubled down. The neural network described in the 2016 research went into effect in YouTube recommendations starting in 2015. By the measures available, it has achieved its goal of keeping people on YouTube.

    “It’s an addiction engine,” said Francis Irving, a computer scientist who has written critically about YouTube’s AI system.

    Wojcicki and her lieutenants drew up a plan. YouTube called it Project Bean or, at times, “Boil The Ocean,” to indicate the enormity of the task. (Sometimes they called it BTO3 – a third dramatic overhaul for YouTube, after initiatives to boost mobile viewing and subscriptions.) The plan was to rewrite YouTube’s entire business model, according to three former senior staffers who worked on it.

    It centered on a way to pay creators that isn’t based on the ads their videos hosted. Instead, YouTube would pay on engagement—how many viewers watched a video and how long they watched. A special algorithm would pool incoming cash, then divvy it out to creators, even if no ads ran on their videos. The idea was to reward video stars shorted by the system, such as those making sex education and music videos, which marquee advertisers found too risqué to endorse.

    Coders at YouTube labored for at least a year to make the project workable. But company managers failed to appreciate how the project could backfire: paying based on engagement risked making its “bad virality” problem worse since it could have rewarded videos that achieved popularity achieved by outrage. One person involved said that the algorithms for doling out payments were tightly guarded. If it went into effect then, this person said, it’s likely that someone like Alex Jones—the Infowars creator and conspiracy theorist with a huge following on the site, before YouTube booted him last August—would have suddenly become one of the highest paid YouTube stars.

    In February of 2018, the video calling the Parkland shooting victims “crisis actors” went viral on YouTube’s trending page. Policy staff suggested soon after limiting recommendations on the page to vetted news sources. YouTube management rejected the proposal, according to a person with knowledge of the event. The person didn’t know the reasoning behind the rejection, but noted that YouTube was then intent on accelerating its viewing time for videos related to news.

    #YouTube #Economie_attention #Engagement #Viralité

  • Best 2019’s Companies To Hire Dedicated Full Stack Developers For Startups & SME’s in India/USA
    https://hackernoon.com/best-2019s-companies-to-hire-dedicated-full-stack-developers-for-startup

    Here is the list of top full stack development companies in India & USA. These best full stack software companies are selected based on Google, Clutch, Glassdoor & Goodfirms review.The emergence of revolutionary technologies are not alien to us, we all have felt and seen its effect on our world. I also have a clear understanding of how these technologies make us advanced in terms of technical facilities and their effects.These digital advancements have made it a mandate for businesses to build smart software solutions in order to keep up the pace. Hence, the demand of #full-stack development companies is increasing.However, finding the right tech partner from a pool of full-stack development companies is quite challenging. In order to facilitate your selection, I have prepared a (...)

    #mobile-apps #web-development #startup #mobile-app-development

  • Google employees call for removal of rightwing thinktank leader from AI council
    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/apr/01/google-kay-coles-james-removal-employees-letter

    Staffers criticized the appointment of Heritage Foundation president Kay Coles James in a letter published on Monday A group of Google employees have called for the removal of a rightwing thinktank leader from the company’s new artificial intelligence council, citing her anti-LGBT and anti-immigrant record. Employees published a letter on Monday criticizing the appointment of Kay Coles James, the president of the Heritage Foundation, to Google’s newly formed advisory council for “the (...)

    #Google #HeritageFoundation #GoogleSearch #algorithme #Dragonfly #drone #éthique #censure #migration #LGBT #ProjectMaven (...)

    ##travail
    https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/0bbbd5584385eba24f16d9e96a94dd50c3327e9e/0_184_3874_2326/master/3874.jpg

  • Tips and Tricks to Make Alexa Smarter by the Best Alexa Commands and Skills
    https://hackernoon.com/tips-and-tricks-to-make-alexa-smarter-by-the-best-alexa-commands-and-ski

    Voice assistants like Amazon Alexa and Google assistant has taken technology by storm. Even businesses are taking more interest in disruptive technologies and leverage the benefits for their good.The market share of Amazon Alexa is high in comparison to Google home. There are more and more devices that are coming with built-in Alexa, whether you are buying an Echo product from Amazon or third-party devices.Hence, you need to be aware of Top Alexa commands that make your life easy by obeying your commands. We have been keeping an eye on the Best Alexa Skills you need to know, here is the list of top Alexa commands.1. Radio and MusicOne of the top most used skills and commands for the Alexa are for playing music and radio.If you want to play something instantly, then it is much easier to (...)

    #amazon-echo #smart-tv #alexa-commands #smart-home #alexa-skills