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  1. 6. I think #COVID19 infection rates of student populations should also be taken into account. Students and households were affected differentially. Our paper on Ontario showed higher rates for student infections in schools in more deprived areas. This could have varied cognitive and policy effects, e.g., more closures in some areas or individual exclusion during infection periods.

    Here's a useful commentary on #PIRLS by the UNESCO GEM Report Team.

    world-education-blog.org/2023/

    #Education

  2. 6. I think #COVID19 infection rates of student populations should also be taken into account. Students and households were affected differentially. Our paper on Ontario showed higher rates for student infections in schools in more deprived areas. This could have varied cognitive and policy effects, e.g., more closures in some areas or individual exclusion during infection periods.

    Here's a useful commentary on #PIRLS by the UNESCO GEM Report Team.

    world-education-blog.org/2023/

    #Education

  3. 6. I think #COVID19 infection rates of student populations should also be taken into account. Students and households were affected differentially. Our paper on Ontario showed higher rates for student infections in schools in more deprived areas. This could have varied cognitive and policy effects, e.g., more closures in some areas or individual exclusion during infection periods.

    Here's a useful commentary on #PIRLS by the UNESCO GEM Report Team.

    world-education-blog.org/2023/

    #Education

  4. 6. I think #COVID19 infection rates of student populations should also be taken into account. Students and households were affected differentially. Our paper on Ontario showed higher rates for student infections in schools in more deprived areas. This could have varied cognitive and policy effects, e.g., more closures in some areas or individual exclusion during infection periods.

    Here's a useful commentary on #PIRLS by the UNESCO GEM Report Team.

    world-education-blog.org/2023/

    #Education

  5. 6. I think #COVID19 infection rates of student populations should also be taken into account. Students and households were affected differentially. Our paper on Ontario showed higher rates for student infections in schools in more deprived areas. This could have varied cognitive and policy effects, e.g., more closures in some areas or individual exclusion during infection periods.

    Here's a useful commentary on #PIRLS by the UNESCO GEM Report Team.

    world-education-blog.org/2023/

    #Education

  6. 2. This is generally true of international assessments. The last round of #PIRLS was conducted in 2021 during intermittent global #School closures which were very context specific. Meaning closures wouldn’t account for all differences as there were already existing differences.

    3. Singapore, for example, coming out on top isn’t that surprising as it generally performs highly. Compare to South Africa where there has been disinvestment in #Education and #Reading for some years.

  7. 2. This is generally true of international assessments. The last round of #PIRLS was conducted in 2021 during intermittent global #School closures which were very context specific. Meaning closures wouldn’t account for all differences as there were already existing differences.

    3. Singapore, for example, coming out on top isn’t that surprising as it generally performs highly. Compare to South Africa where there has been disinvestment in #Education and #Reading for some years.

  8. 2. This is generally true of international assessments. The last round of #PIRLS was conducted in 2021 during intermittent global #School closures which were very context specific. Meaning closures wouldn’t account for all differences as there were already existing differences.

    3. Singapore, for example, coming out on top isn’t that surprising as it generally performs highly. Compare to South Africa where there has been disinvestment in #Education and #Reading for some years.

  9. 2. This is generally true of international assessments. The last round of #PIRLS was conducted in 2021 during intermittent global #School closures which were very context specific. Meaning closures wouldn’t account for all differences as there were already existing differences.

    3. Singapore, for example, coming out on top isn’t that surprising as it generally performs highly. Compare to South Africa where there has been disinvestment in #Education and #Reading for some years.

  10. 2. This is generally true of international assessments. The last round of #PIRLS was conducted in 2021 during intermittent global #School closures which were very context specific. Meaning closures wouldn’t account for all differences as there were already existing differences.

    3. Singapore, for example, coming out on top isn’t that surprising as it generally performs highly. Compare to South Africa where there has been disinvestment in #Education and #Reading for some years.

  11. More on #PIRLS which has been getting a lot of attention over the last week.

    To interpret results, important to note:

    1. There were large discrepancies in reading scores coming into the pandemic. Globally, >400 million couldn’t perform basic literacy tasks after having attended school. There were country-level differences between low-income and high-income countries, and within country differences between income groups.

    #Education #Reading #Assessment

  12. More on #PIRLS which has been getting a lot of attention over the last week.

    To interpret results, important to note:

    1. There were large discrepancies in reading scores coming into the pandemic. Globally, >400 million couldn’t perform basic literacy tasks after having attended school. There were country-level differences between low-income and high-income countries, and within country differences between income groups.

    #Education #Reading #Assessment

  13. More on #PIRLS which has been getting a lot of attention over the last week.

    To interpret results, important to note:

    1. There were large discrepancies in reading scores coming into the pandemic. Globally, >400 million couldn’t perform basic literacy tasks after having attended school. There were country-level differences between low-income and high-income countries, and within country differences between income groups.

    #Education #Reading #Assessment

  14. More on #PIRLS which has been getting a lot of attention over the last week.

    To interpret results, important to note:

    1. There were large discrepancies in reading scores coming into the pandemic. Globally, >400 million couldn’t perform basic literacy tasks after having attended school. There were country-level differences between low-income and high-income countries, and within country differences between income groups.

    #Education #Reading #Assessment

  15. More on #PIRLS which has been getting a lot of attention over the last week.

    To interpret results, important to note:

    1. There were large discrepancies in reading scores coming into the pandemic. Globally, >400 million couldn’t perform basic literacy tasks after having attended school. There were country-level differences between low-income and high-income countries, and within country differences between income groups.

    #Education #Reading #Assessment

  16. The international #PIRLS #Reading test scores came out on the 2021 assessment.

    Much attention has been on South Africa, where we learned that 81% of children in grade 4 could not read a few simple paragraphs and answer basic questions.

    This is an interesting article by Nic Spaull on lessons South Africa and other countries can learn from Brazil.

    #Education #EducationPolicy

    businesslive.co.za/bd/opinion/

  17. The international #PIRLS #Reading test scores came out on the 2021 assessment.

    Much attention has been on South Africa, where we learned that 81% of children in grade 4 could not read a few simple paragraphs and answer basic questions.

    This is an interesting article by Nic Spaull on lessons South Africa and other countries can learn from Brazil.

    #Education #EducationPolicy

    businesslive.co.za/bd/opinion/

  18. The international #PIRLS #Reading test scores came out on the 2021 assessment.

    Much attention has been on South Africa, where we learned that 81% of children in grade 4 could not read a few simple paragraphs and answer basic questions.

    This is an interesting article by Nic Spaull on lessons South Africa and other countries can learn from Brazil.

    #Education #EducationPolicy

    businesslive.co.za/bd/opinion/

  19. The international #PIRLS #Reading test scores came out on the 2021 assessment.

    Much attention has been on South Africa, where we learned that 81% of children in grade 4 could not read a few simple paragraphs and answer basic questions.

    This is an interesting article by Nic Spaull on lessons South Africa and other countries can learn from Brazil.

    #Education #EducationPolicy

    businesslive.co.za/bd/opinion/

  20. The international #PIRLS #Reading test scores came out on the 2021 assessment.

    Much attention has been on South Africa, where we learned that 81% of children in grade 4 could not read a few simple paragraphs and answer basic questions.

    This is an interesting article by Nic Spaull on lessons South Africa and other countries can learn from Brazil.

    #Education #EducationPolicy

    businesslive.co.za/bd/opinion/

  21. Rethinking #Education for a Climate-resilient Future

    The Center for Universal Education (CUE) and the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) will co-host an event at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C. to help advance discourse on #ClimateChange and the education nexus.

    Online viewers can submit questions via email to [email protected] or via Twitter at #ClimateSmartEd.

    13 April 9:30 am EDT

    #EducationPolicy #International #SpringMeetings

    brookings.edu/events/rethinkin

  22. Pelittää pelittää
    ei tarvi setäselittää
    Tää juna kulkee vaan
    ja kyllähän mä saan
    Vaan ihan turhaan
    kuvittelet mun kykenevän

    MURHAAN

    Mutta naan-leipää
    nielen ennemmin kuin seipään
    ja sun pään
    mun haaroväliin seivästän

    Säällä kuin säällä
    päällä kuin päällä

    otan mitä saan

    mitä vaan

    pyyhepaiva.fi/pelittaa-pelitta

    #runo #pyyhepäivä #pyyhepaiva #towelday

  23. Söin voileivän
    Seivästän tän
    Keihäskisan karsinnan
    Din-Dan
    DONG MAN
    Krokon Bogman (?)
    Song of the Millenium
    Robbie William S
    -Tahi - nan - Leivän
    Olikin majoneesi
    eikä sinappi

    pyyhepaiva.fi/soin-voileivan/

    #runo #pyyhepäivä #pyyhepaiva #towelday

  24. Weekly output: 5G platforms, AI in financial services, AI and supply chains, Kamala Harris on AI, AI infrastructure, Gmail’s AI calendar integration, Android 16, AI and information security

    It’s a rare week when my work doesn’t touch on AI at all, but moderating panels at a conference devoted to that subject–and writing up two other talks there–helped ensure that AI figured in all but two of the items below.

    3/10/2025: Practical means profitable: Telco talk about building services on 5G’s framework, Light Reading

    My MWC Barcelona coverage for outside clients closed out with this writeup for this trade-pub client–my first there in a few months–of a panel in which telco executives talked about how they were building new lines of business on their 5G platforms.

    Patreon readers, however, got one more post about MWC in which I shared three other highlights from the show.

    3/10/2025: Banking on AI for personalized customer experiences, HumanX

    The first panel I did at this conference–in Las Vegas for its first year, moving to San Francisco next year–had me quizzing Better.com’s Vishal Garg, Clearcover’s Kyle Nakatsuji, Honeybook’s Colleen Stauffer, Sunrise AI’s Deepak Shrivastava and S&P Global’s Bhavesh Dayalji about how they see AI changing customer service.

    3/10/2025: AI-powered supply chains: From farm to table and beyond, HumanX

    Since this panel–featuring Altana’s Peter Swartz, Fusion Fund’s Lu Zhang and Choco AI’s Daniel Khachab–focused on agriculture, I opened it by telling the audience that I found the subject particularly interesting because I eat food.

    3/11/2025: Kamala Harris Urges Those Working on AI to Consider Trust, Empathy, PCMag

    The former vice president–whom I last saw in person in October from much farther away–was a late addition to the conference agenda. I hustled to get from the airport to the conference hotel, check in, drop by bag and get over to the event in time to get a seat in the third row for the Sunday-evening program that ended with Harris.

    3/11/2025: Rethinking infrastructure: Custom solutions for the AI era, HumanX

    My big takeaway from the conversation I had onstage with Sid Sheth of d-Matrix and Ami Badani of Arm: Industry hype about AGI (“artificial general intelligence” that could replicate a human brain) is a distraction, and not a particularly helpful one at that.

    3/11/2025: Gmail Gets AI Calendar Feature That Apple Added to Its Mail App in 2007, PCMag

    I missed this Google announcement Monday but had to write about it once I realized that the feature Google touts as an AI advancement is something that Apple delivered with plain old software in Mac OS X Leopard 18 years ago.

    3/13/2025: Android 16 Inches Toward a Launch With Accessibility-Focused Third Beta Release, PCMag

    Google PR gave me an advance on the news of third beta release of Android 16.

    3/14/2025: Ex-Facebook CISO Warns: 95% of Bugs in Your AI System Haven’t Been Invented Yet, PCMag

    I always learn something when Alex Stamos talks about information security, and I was happy to share that with PCMag readers.

    #5G #AI #AIInfrastructure #AlexStamos #Android16 #AppleDataDetectors #Barcelona #customerService #cx #dataCenters #GoogleGemini #HumanX #informationSecurity #infosec #KamalaHarris #LasVegas #MacOSXLeopard #MWC #MWC2025 #supplyChains #Vegas

  25. Weekly output: 5G platforms, AI in financial services, AI and supply chains, Kamala Harris on AI, AI infrastructure, Gmail’s AI calendar integration, Android 16, AI and information security

    It’s a rare week when my work doesn’t touch on AI at all, but moderating panels at a conference devoted to that subject–and writing up two other talks there–helped ensure that AI figured in all but two of the items below.

    3/10/2025: Practical means profitable: Telco talk about building services on 5G’s framework, Light Reading

    My MWC Barcelona coverage for outside clients closed out with this writeup for this trade-pub client–my first there in a few months–of a panel in which telco executives talked about how they were building new lines of business on their 5G platforms.

    Patreon readers, however, got one more post about MWC in which I shared three other highlights from the show.

    3/10/2025: Banking on AI for personalized customer experiences, HumanX

    The first panel I did at this conference–in Las Vegas for its first year, moving to San Francisco next year–had me quizzing Better.com’s Vishal Garg, Clearcover’s Kyle Nakatsuji, Honeybook’s Colleen Stauffer, Sunrise AI’s Deepak Shrivastava and S&P Global’s Bhavesh Dayalji about how they see AI changing customer service.

    3/10/2025: AI-powered supply chains: From farm to table and beyond, HumanX

    Since this panel–featuring Altana’s Peter Swartz, Fusion Fund’s Lu Zhang and Choco AI’s Daniel Khachab–focused on agriculture, I opened it by telling the audience that I found the subject particularly interesting because I eat food.

    3/11/2025: Kamala Harris Urges Those Working on AI to Consider Trust, Empathy, PCMag

    The former vice president–whom I last saw in person in October from much farther away–was a late addition to the conference agenda. I hustled to get from the airport to the conference hotel, check in, drop by bag and get over to the event in time to get a seat in the third row for the Sunday-evening program that ended with Harris.

    3/11/2025: Rethinking infrastructure: Custom solutions for the AI era, HumanX

    My big takeaway from the conversation I had onstage with Sid Sheth of d-Matrix and Ami Badani of Arm: Industry hype about AGI (“artificial general intelligence” that could replicate a human brain) is a distraction, and not a particularly helpful one at that.

    3/11/2025: Gmail Gets AI Calendar Feature That Apple Added to Its Mail App in 2007, PCMag

    I missed this Google announcement Monday but had to write about it once I realized that the feature Google touts as an AI advancement is something that Apple delivered with plain old software in Mac OS X Leopard 18 years ago.

    3/13/2025: Android 16 Inches Toward a Launch With Accessibility-Focused Third Beta Release, PCMag

    Google PR gave me an advance on the news of third beta release of Android 16.

    3/14/2025: Ex-Facebook CISO Warns: 95% of Bugs in Your AI System Haven’t Been Invented Yet, PCMag

    I always learn something when Alex Stamos talks about information security, and I was happy to share that with PCMag readers.

    #5G #AI #AIInfrastructure #AlexStamos #Android16 #AppleDataDetectors #Barcelona #customerService #cx #dataCenters #GoogleGemini #HumanX #informationSecurity #infosec #KamalaHarris #LasVegas #MacOSXLeopard #MWC #MWC2025 #supplyChains #Vegas

  26. Weekly output: 5G platforms, AI in financial services, AI and supply chains, Kamala Harris on AI, AI infrastructure, Gmail’s AI calendar integration, Android 16, AI and information security

    It’s a rare week when my work doesn’t touch on AI at all, but moderating panels at a conference devoted to that subject–and writing up two other talks there–helped ensure that AI figured in all but two of the items below.

    3/10/2025: Practical means profitable: Telco talk about building services on 5G’s framework, Light Reading

    My MWC Barcelona coverage for outside clients closed out with this writeup for this trade-pub client–my first there in a few months–of a panel in which telco executives talked about how they were building new lines of business on their 5G platforms.

    Patreon readers, however, got one more post about MWC in which I shared three other highlights from the show.

    3/10/2025: Banking on AI for personalized customer experiences, HumanX

    The first panel I did at this conference–in Las Vegas for its first year, moving to San Francisco next year–had me quizzing Better.com’s Vishal Garg, Clearcover’s Kyle Nakatsuji, Honeybook’s Colleen Stauffer, Sunrise AI’s Deepak Shrivastava and S&P Global’s Bhavesh Dayalji about how they see AI changing customer service.

    3/10/2025: AI-powered supply chains: From farm to table and beyond, HumanX

    Since this panel–featuring Altana’s Peter Swartz, Fusion Fund’s Lu Zhang and Choco AI’s Daniel Khachab–focused on agriculture, I opened it by telling the audience that I found the subject particularly interesting because I eat food.

    3/11/2025: Kamala Harris Urges Those Working on AI to Consider Trust, Empathy, PCMag

    The former vice president–whom I last saw in person in October from much farther away–was a late addition to the conference agenda. I hustled to get from the airport to the conference hotel, check in, drop by bag and get over to the event in time to get a seat in the third row for the Sunday-evening program that ended with Harris.

    3/11/2025: Rethinking infrastructure: Custom solutions for the AI era, HumanX

    My big takeaway from the conversation I had onstage with Sid Sheth of d-Matrix and Ami Badani of Arm: Industry hype about AGI (“artificial general intelligence” that could replicate a human brain) is a distraction, and not a particularly helpful one at that.

    3/11/2025: Gmail Gets AI Calendar Feature That Apple Added to Its Mail App in 2007, PCMag

    I missed this Google announcement Monday but had to write about it once I realized that the feature Google touts as an AI advancement is something that Apple delivered with plain old software in Mac OS X Leopard 18 years ago.

    3/13/2025: Android 16 Inches Toward a Launch With Accessibility-Focused Third Beta Release, PCMag

    Google PR gave me an advance on the news of third beta release of Android 16.

    3/14/2025: Ex-Facebook CISO Warns: 95% of Bugs in Your AI System Haven’t Been Invented Yet, PCMag

    I always learn something when Alex Stamos talks about information security, and I was happy to share that with PCMag readers.

    #5G #AI #AIInfrastructure #AlexStamos #Android16 #AppleDataDetectors #Barcelona #customerService #cx #dataCenters #GoogleGemini #HumanX #informationSecurity #infosec #KamalaHarris #LasVegas #MacOSXLeopard #MWC #MWC2025 #supplyChains #Vegas

  27. Weekly output: 5G platforms, AI in financial services, AI and supply chains, Kamala Harris on AI, AI infrastructure, Gmail’s AI calendar integration, Android 16, AI and information security

    It’s a rare week when my work doesn’t touch on AI at all, but moderating panels at a conference devoted to that subject–and writing up two other talks there–helped ensure that AI figured in all but two of the items below.

    3/10/2025: Practical means profitable: Telco talk about building services on 5G’s framework, Light Reading

    My MWC Barcelona coverage for outside clients closed out with this writeup for this trade-pub client–my first there in a few months–of a panel in which telco executives talked about how they were building new lines of business on their 5G platforms.

    Patreon readers, however, got one more post about MWC in which I shared three other highlights from the show.

    3/10/2025: Banking on AI for personalized customer experiences, HumanX

    The first panel I did at this conference–in Las Vegas for its first year, moving to San Francisco next year–had me quizzing Better.com’s Vishal Garg, Clearcover’s Kyle Nakatsuji, Honeybook’s Colleen Stauffer, Sunrise AI’s Deepak Shrivastava and S&P Global’s Bhavesh Dayalji about how they see AI changing customer service.

    3/10/2025: AI-powered supply chains: From farm to table and beyond, HumanX

    Since this panel–featuring Altana’s Peter Swartz, Fusion Fund’s Lu Zhang and Choco AI’s Daniel Khachab–focused on agriculture, I opened it by telling the audience that I found the subject particularly interesting because I eat food.

    3/11/2025: Kamala Harris Urges Those Working on AI to Consider Trust, Empathy, PCMag

    The former vice president–whom I last saw in person in October from much farther away–was a late addition to the conference agenda. I hustled to get from the airport to the conference hotel, check in, drop by bag and get over to the event in time to get a seat in the third row for the Sunday-evening program that ended with Harris.

    3/11/2025: Rethinking infrastructure: Custom solutions for the AI era, HumanX

    My big takeaway from the conversation I had onstage with Sid Sheth of d-Matrix and Ami Badani of Arm: Industry hype about AGI (“artificial general intelligence” that could replicate a human brain) is a distraction, and not a particularly helpful one at that.

    3/11/2025: Gmail Gets AI Calendar Feature That Apple Added to Its Mail App in 2007, PCMag

    I missed this Google announcement Monday but had to write about it once I realized that the feature Google touts as an AI advancement is something that Apple delivered with plain old software in Mac OS X Leopard 18 years ago.

    3/13/2025: Android 16 Inches Toward a Launch With Accessibility-Focused Third Beta Release, PCMag

    Google PR gave me an advance on the news of third beta release of Android 16.

    3/14/2025: Ex-Facebook CISO Warns: 95% of Bugs in Your AI System Haven’t Been Invented Yet, PCMag

    I always learn something when Alex Stamos talks about information security, and I was happy to share that with PCMag readers.

    #5G #AI #AIInfrastructure #AlexStamos #Android16 #AppleDataDetectors #Barcelona #customerService #cx #dataCenters #GoogleGemini #HumanX #informationSecurity #infosec #KamalaHarris #LasVegas #MacOSXLeopard #MWC #MWC2025 #supplyChains #Vegas

  28. Weekly output: 5G platforms, AI in financial services, AI and supply chains, Kamala Harris on AI, AI infrastructure, Gmail’s AI calendar integration, Android 16, AI and information security

    It’s a rare week when my work doesn’t touch on AI at all, but moderating panels at a conference devoted to that subject–and writing up two other talks there–helped ensure that AI figured in all but two of the items below.

    3/10/2025: Practical means profitable: Telco talk about building services on 5G’s framework, Light Reading

    My MWC Barcelona coverage for outside clients closed out with this writeup for this trade-pub client–my first there in a few months–of a panel in which telco executives talked about how they were building new lines of business on their 5G platforms.

    Patreon readers, however, got one more post about MWC in which I shared three other highlights from the show.

    3/10/2025: Banking on AI for personalized customer experiences, HumanX

    The first panel I did at this conference–in Las Vegas for its first year, moving to San Francisco next year–had me quizzing Better.com’s Vishal Garg, Clearcover’s Kyle Nakatsuji, Honeybook’s Colleen Stauffer, Sunrise AI’s Deepak Shrivastava and S&P Global’s Bhavesh Dayalji about how they see AI changing customer service.

    3/10/2025: AI-powered supply chains: From farm to table and beyond, HumanX

    Since this panel–featuring Altana’s Peter Swartz, Fusion Fund’s Lu Zhang and Choco AI’s Daniel Khachab–focused on agriculture, I opened it by telling the audience that I found the subject particularly interesting because I eat food.

    3/11/2025: Kamala Harris Urges Those Working on AI to Consider Trust, Empathy, PCMag

    The former vice president–whom I last saw in person in October from much farther away–was a late addition to the conference agenda. I hustled to get from the airport to the conference hotel, check in, drop by bag and get over to the event in time to get a seat in the third row for the Sunday-evening program that ended with Harris.

    3/11/2025: Rethinking infrastructure: Custom solutions for the AI era, HumanX

    My big takeaway from the conversation I had onstage with Sid Sheth of d-Matrix and Ami Badani of Arm: Industry hype about AGI (“artificial general intelligence” that could replicate a human brain) is a distraction, and not a particularly helpful one at that.

    3/11/2025: Gmail Gets AI Calendar Feature That Apple Added to Its Mail App in 2007, PCMag

    I missed this Google announcement Monday but had to write about it once I realized that the feature Google touts as an AI advancement is something that Apple delivered with plain old software in Mac OS X Leopard 18 years ago.

    3/13/2025: Android 16 Inches Toward a Launch With Accessibility-Focused Third Beta Release, PCMag

    Google PR gave me an advance on the news of third beta release of Android 16.

    3/14/2025: Ex-Facebook CISO Warns: 95% of Bugs in Your AI System Haven’t Been Invented Yet, PCMag

    I always learn something when Alex Stamos talks about information security, and I was happy to share that with PCMag readers.

    #5G #AI #AIInfrastructure #AlexStamos #Android16 #AppleDataDetectors #Barcelona #customerService #cx #dataCenters #GoogleGemini #HumanX #informationSecurity #infosec #KamalaHarris #LasVegas #MacOSXLeopard #MWC #MWC2025 #supplyChains #Vegas

  29. CW: Threads, AI ja semmoista Fedissä yleisesti paheksuttavaa

    Käytän aika paljon Threadsia. En siksi, että pitäisin Metasta, vaan koska tykkään olla kärryillä laajemmista ilmiöistä. Threadsissa on myös paljon AI-puolen sovelluskehittäjiä, tech-ihmisiä ja designereitä, joita ei Fedissä ole.

    Postaan Threadsiin samat kuin muuallekin poislukien AI/vibekoodausjutut, jotka aiheuttaisivat täällä joukkolynkkaamista sekä keskustelut tietenkin ihmisten kanssa, jotka postaavat vain siellä. Threadsista on tavallaan tullut kuin Twitter, kun kaikki ovat siirtyneet sinne, mutta siellä on parempi moderointi ja suurin osa Fedin suojausmekanismeista (sanamutetus, rajoittaminen, mutetus, jne).

    Threadsista piti tulla osa Fediversumia ja olin kiinnostunut tekniikan kehittymisestä. Jenkeissähän se onnistuikin yksisuuntaisesti, esim @barackobama voi seurara täältä, mutta kehitys tyrehtyi. Elättelin salaa naiivia toivoa siitä, että EU:n myötä Meta kytkisi Fedi-yhteensopivuuden kaikkialle käyttöön ja jollain tapaa alkaisi toimia sen myötä eettisemmin. Mutta niin ei koskaan tapahtunut.

    Threadsin moderoinnista voi olla montaa mieltä, mutta enimmäkseen öyhöt pysyy pois kommenteista. X:ssä sai jokaiseen tusinan paskakommentteja. Threadsissa moista ei tapahdu.

    Viime aikoina Threadsin algoritmiseinällä mennään kohusta toiseen. "62 miljoonaa miestä" on erityisesti trendannut (CNN:n paljastusreportaasi), jonka narratiivissa olet raiskari ja osa ongelmaa, jos puutut misinformaatioon. Threadissa kärjistetään ja pöyristytään jatkuvasti. Aina jotakuta ollaan seivästämässä. Jättäydyn yleensä pois kokonaan näistä keskusteluista.

    Näistä huolimatta olen Threadsissa ja viihdyn siellä enimmäkseen. Kai tämä on jonkinlaista maailman paskuuden hyväksymistä myös osaltaan. Porukka noituu, että Microsoft, Google, Meta ja moni muu on maailman pahinta kastia. Mutta näistä on käytännössä mahdotonta irroittautua, esimerkiksi yrittäminen ja sitä kautta toimeentuloni lakkaisi kokonaan jos lopettaisin LinkedInin (Microsoft), GitHubin (Microsoft), Google Workspacen (olen jälleenmyyjä), Metan Businessin käyttämisen.

    Olen osa ongelmaa.

    Ihminen on osa ongelmaa.

    Tulipas tästä manifesti, vaikka alunperin piti vain jakaa Threads-uutisia 😅

    #Some #SomeFi #Threads #Meta #SosiaalinenMedia