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Start Often, F*@k Achievements

Hello there. This week I delved into several background projects and stumbled upon some fascinating insights worth sharing.


🔖 Key Takeaways


📚 Highlights This Week

A nonprofit in NYC challenges corporate giants like Verizon by creating a decentralized, community-driven internet network called NYC Mesh. It offers low-cost or free internet access for residents.

Read more here.

Why this matters: Connectivity is a fundamental right, and projects like these reduce barriers to education, employment, and social interaction.


Karen Hao on how the tech giants are paying millions of ad dollars to bankroll clickbait actors, fueling the deterioration of information ecosystems around the world. Many of these actors *would not exist* without these payments from both platforms.

Over the past few weeks, the Facebook Papers have reaffirmed that FB has fueled the spread of hate speech & misinformation around the world. But there’s a crucial piece missing from the story. FB isn’t just amplifying misinformation. The company is also funding it.

Why this matters: It's not just amplification but direct funding that's eroding global information systems.


Casey Newton indicating that while other tech giants hide from their internal researchers, Twitter is doing its failing — and fixing — in public. Here's what Newton learned in the review.

Why this matters: Transparency and public accountability can lead to better algorithmic fairness and trustworthiness.


Disney's TikTok feature censored words like “gay” and “lesbian,” raising ethical questions about technology's role in inclusion.

Why this matters: Technology mirrors societal values. How can we build tools that uplift rather than exclude?


5. More Software Isn’t Better Software

A few months after Eugen Rochko earned his degree in computer science, he decided to push out an open sourced social network not too different from one of his favorite -- but flawed, in his view -- sites, Twitter. He named it Mastodon and it soon took off.

Mastodon is shared was created as free, open source software with a “copy-left” license, which means anyone can download it, run it, and change it, on the condition that they continue to work under the same license and freely share the altered version they are operating.

Last month, Rochko learned that Mastodon was being used to run Donald Trump’s new Truth Social network. Rochko may not agree with the views expressed on the new network. But, the licensing for the software indicates that he can not ask that they refrain from using Mastodon. Not only is Trump permitted to use the software for his own peculiar purposes, but the free software saves a startup like Truth Social millions of dollars in programming expenses. All Mastodon asks in return is that Truth Social then pay it forward. As of the date of this newsletter, Truth Social has now complied with this request by making the source code to publicly available in compliance with the license,” which is known as AGPLv3.

It remains to be seen what will happen if Truth Social doesn't comply with the license.

The battle between Mastodon and Trump’s Truth Social is a reminder that while the internet has changed, the ideals of free software haven't. That's a problem.

Why this matters: Open source challenges the centralized control of platforms like Truth Social while highlighting ethical dilemmas in software use.


Seth Godin explores the difference between folk wisdom and earned expertise, emphasizing the importance of valuing specialized knowledge.
Why this matters: As misinformation grows, the gap between feelings and expertise becomes more pronounced.


🛠️ DO: Combat Zoom Fatigue

new study recently published in the Journal of Applied Psychology showed that women and newer employees were more likely to feel exhausted by too much time on video calls. The reason helps to both illuminate the causes of Zoom fatigue and how we can all avoid it.

Simply stating that you support the right of your employees to choose when they switch on the camera, cutting unnecessary meetings, and making sure to schedule adequate breaks between calls can go a long way toward preventing burnout and getting the best out of others.
Solutions:


🌟 Closing Reflection

“Everyone is entitled to feelings about things, but expertise is earned.”
Seth Godin


Reflect and Engage

Thank you for reading Digitally Literate. Stay tuned for more insights and discussions. Connect with me at hello@digitallyliterate.net or explore Newsletter Index for all past issues.


Intrigued by the the SOFA principle after reading about it in Doug Belshaw's recent Weeknote.

SOFA stands for Start Often Finish rArely or Start Often F*@k Achievements

SOFA is the name of a hacker/art collective, and also the name of the principle upon which the club was founded. The point of SOFA club is to start as many things as possible as you have the ability, interest, and capacity to, with no regard or goal whatsoever for finishing those projects.