what's in your filter bubble? or, how has the internet censored you today?

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What’s in Your Filter Bubble?Or, how has the internet censored you today?

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As presented at the 2012 Oregon Library Association Conference.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

What’s in Your Filter Bubble?Or,

how has the internet censored you today?

Page 2: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

• Personalization• Editorial Role• The web is a land

of opportunity (ie $$$$$)

Page 3: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 4: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

In Portland:Me – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

S. – 30s, male, PhD but works for a health insurance company, Libertarian

D. – 40s, female, model maker, far left

In Corvallis:L. – 30s ?, Female, Librarian, politics unknown

In Eugene:M. – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

In Helena:A. – 30s, Female, Librarian, politics unknown

In NYC:D. – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

L. – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

In Tallahassee:A. – 30s, Male, Librarian, politics unknown

Page 5: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 6: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 7: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 8: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 9: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Browser: Google ChromeGoogle Account: [email protected]

Browser: FirefoxGoogle Account: [email protected]

Page 10: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Browser: Internet ExplorerGoogle Account: not signed in

Page 11: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 12: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

And then this happened…

Page 13: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

“Emily, did you know that viewers of this show also like (Planned) Parenthood?”

Page 14: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 15: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

• My test searches were bad.• My test subjects weren’t

representative enough.• I have created my own bubble and

Google has aided and abetted me in doing so.

• #*@#$*@&!!!

The Conclusion?

Page 16: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

How old I am

What degrees I’ve earned and where I earned them

Who are my friends

Who are my family

Who I have dated

Where I live

Where and when I’ve traveled and with whom

Where I work

My bike route to work

What organizations I support financially

My political views

What car I drive

What bike I ride

Who I email most often and what I say

When my cat died and what vet hospital I patronized

My favorite blog

My favorite food this week and last year

My favorite author

Omg what does the internet Google know about me???

Page 17: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Who I had happy hour with on July 29, 2010 and where we were

What videos I’ve watched on YouTube and when and how many times

What kind of phone I use and what applications are on it and when I use those applications

My penchant for fictional family dramas

What podcasts I listen to

What book my book club is reading, where we’re meeting, and when…

Omg what does the internet Google know about me???

Page 18: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

1. Burn your cookies.

2. Erase your web history.

3. Tell Facebook to keep your data private

4. It’s your birthday and you can hide it if you want to.

5. Turn off targeted ads, and tell the stalking sneakers to buzz off.

6. Go incognito.

7. Or better yet, go anonymous.

8. Depersonalize your browser.

9. Tell Google and Facebook to make it easier to see and control your filters.

10.Tell Congress you care.

So What do we do?

Pariser’s 10 Ways to Pop your Filter Bubble

thefilterbubble.com/10-things-you-can-do

Page 19: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

1. Be aware and informed.

2. Tell local decision-makers you care.

3. Tell Congress you care.

4. Use a different search engine.

5. Build mutually beneficial relationships with vendors.

6. Create our own tools.

7. Integrate awareness into our actions and interactions.

8. Provide feedback when asked.

9. Discover what the Internet already knows and change it.

10. Spread the word.

So What do we do?

A Librarian’s 10 ways to pop the filter bubble

Page 20: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

• flickr.com/photos/39580703@N02/6122020531/• flickr.com/photos/cakper/5978028199/• flickr.com/photos/mirindas/5890851809/• flickr.com/photos/ncc_badiey/3095099782/• flickr.com/photos/84568447@N00/2278294489/

Thanks to the folks who have licensed their flickr images with creative commons licenses.

Page 21: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

On the Media Interview Transcript with Eli Pariser

onthemedia.org/2011/may/20/the-filter-bubble/transcript/

The Filter Bubble Web site

thefilterbubble.com

Eli’s TED Talk

ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles.html

Other resources

Page 22: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Emily Ford

Urban & Public Affairs Librarian

Portland State University

Branford P. Millar Library

[email protected]

Questions/comments/ETC

Page 23: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

What’s in Your Filter Bubble?Or,

how has the internet censored you today?

Page 24: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

• Personalization• Editorial Role• The web is a land

of opportunity (ie $$$$$)

This book was written and published.

Pariser shows how we are being algorithmically filtered. This filtering is to achieve a few things:

PersonalizationMarketing

We’ve all personalized things. We personalize our houses with paint colors, our bodies with tattoos, our identities with our clothing, etc. and this all translated to the web. Our cell phones and our e-mail inboxes have so many personalization options. They are intended to optimize the functionality of these tools so that we can be effective and have fun doing it.

But the thing is--the personalization is going farther than that. Our web search results are based on who we are, not on what is “true.” Based on the web sites you visit most frequently, the time you spend on a site, how many links you click on from a particular site, you are being tracked and algorithms have been developed that will further personalize your web experience. Sounds good, right?

The problem is that technology is being put in a place to be an editor. It is deciding what is important for you to see and read and discover. Sounds a lot like what we do as librarians, right? At least in academic libraries, it’s a lot like what we do.

But here’s the problem– these editorial decisions are not based on a worldview or education. They are based on $$$. Quote the NY times bit in Pariser’s book here.

Talk about AXCIOM

Page 25: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

If my world was indeed captured in a little bubble, I wanted to investigate it and understand it. So I decided I’d try to (unscientifically) see if I could find evidence of my filter bubble.

I tried to repeat the gist of what Pariser did when he talked about having two separate people google the same thing at the same time and see what happened. In his case, “Brooke Gladstone: …Even a small search yields different results for different people, says Pariser, as when two people he knows searched “BP” during the oil spill.ELI PARISER:And one person saw information about the oil spill - what you can do about it, the environmental consequences - and another person saw stock tips - here’s how the BP stock is doing, here’s investment information. You know, this could lead to some pretty bad decisions.” – from the On the Media transcript

Page 26: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

In Portland:Me – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

S. – 30s, male, PhD but works for a health insurance company, Libertarian

D. – 40s, female, model maker, far left

In Corvallis:L. – 30s ?, Female, Librarian, politics unknown

In Eugene:M. – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

In Helena:A. – 30s, Female, Librarian, politics unknown

In NYC:D. – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

L. – 30s, Female, Librarian, far left

In Tallahassee:A. – 30s, Male, Librarian, politics unknown

So I tried to replicate the experiment that Parisier talks about in his book. For background, he asked two women to google the same thing at the same time. The search was “bp.”

Page 27: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

No difference

Page 28: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Not really any difference

Page 29: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Except this one. This particular result came from S. – 30s, male, PhD but works for a health insurance company, Libertarian

Page 30: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

So I tried to have my participants re-do the search that Pariser had the ladies do. My subjects searched for BP. I noticed some slight differences, as in those who live in areas with BP gas stations had those mapped and listed up top. Other than that, there was not much difference at all.

Page 31: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Browser: Google ChromeGoogle Account: [email protected]

Browser: FirefoxGoogle Account: [email protected]

So then I thought maybe it’s a browser thing? And I tried an experiment on myself. At work I have two browsers open, one with work stuff, one with personal. And I don

Page 32: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Browser: Internet ExplorerGoogle Account: not signed in

And I tried using IE, too, which I try to never use.

Page 33: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

My conclusion was: meh. It failed. Yeah, maybe my searches were a little different, but nothing of significance.

Page 34: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

And then this happened…

I was innocently curled up on my big arm chair sipping on wine with the dog sleeping by my feet, about to watch one of my shows on Hulu (I don’t have cable).

Page 35: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

“Emily, did you know that viewers of this show also like (Planned) Parenthood?”

This popped onto my screen. (Parentheses is what I heard– I’m still not sure if that’s what it said.)

Page 36: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?
Page 37: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

• My test searches were bad.• My test subjects weren’t

representative enough.• I have created my own bubble and

Google has aided and abetted me in doing so.

• #*@#$*@&!!!

The Conclusion?

Page 38: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

How old I amWhat degrees I’ve earned and where I earned them

Who are my friendsWho are my family

Who I have datedWhere I live

Where and when I’ve traveled and with whomWhere I work

My bike route to work

What organizations I support financiallyMy political views

What car I driveWhat bike I ride

Who I email most often and what I sayWhen my cat died and what vet hospital I patronized

My favorite blogMy favorite food this week and last year

My favorite author

Omg what does the internet Google know about me???

So I looked at my Google Dashboard. And I downloaded my Facebook data. And this is just a sample list of what Google and Facebook, combined, know about me. Potentially what has been sold to companies like Axciom. This more information than my partner, my parents, and best friends know about me.

Page 39: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Who I had happy hour with on July 29, 2010 and where we were

What videos I’ve watched on YouTube and when and how many times

What kind of phone I use and what applications are on it and when I use those applicationsMy penchant for fictional family dramas

What podcasts I listen toWhat book my book club is reading, where we’re meeting, and when…

Omg what does the internet Google know about me???

And it can get even more precise…

Page 40: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

1. Burn your cookies.

2. Erase your web history.3. Tell Facebook to keep your data

private

4. It’s your birthday and you can hide it if you want to.

5. Turn off targeted ads, and tell the stalking sneakers to buzz off.

6. Go incognito.

7. Or better yet, go anonymous.8. Depersonalize your browser.

9. Tell Google and Facebook to make it easier to see and control your filters.

10.Tell Congress you care.

So What do we do?

Pariser’s 10 Ways to Pop your Filter Bubble

thefilterbubble.com/10-things-you-can-do

OMG What does Google Think I should Know?OMG What does Google Want me to know?

Education/Awareness—librarians are really good at this.Opting out – Delete cookies regularly. Have your browser ask about

cookies. Use plugins like Disconnect.Talk to your local and national decision-makers– technology decisions

can have impacts that reach far into the future

Page 41: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

1. Be aware and informed.

2. Tell local decision-makers you care.

3. Tell Congress you care.

4. Use a different search engine.

5. Build mutually beneficial relationships with vendors.

6. Create our own tools.

7. Integrate awareness into our actions and interactions.

8. Provide feedback when asked.

9. Discover what the Internet already knows and change it.

10. Spread the word.

So What do we do?

A Librarian’s 10 ways to pop the filter bubble

Local decision makers may include your library director, your supervisor, etc. Without having these conversations I don’t think we’ll get anywhere, which is why I moved them up on the list.

Duckduckgo

Page 42: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

• flickr.com/photos/39580703@N02/6122020531/• flickr.com/photos/cakper/5978028199/• flickr.com/photos/mirindas/5890851809/• flickr.com/photos/ncc_badiey/3095099782/• flickr.com/photos/84568447@N00/2278294489/

Thanks to the folks who have licensed their flickr images with creative commons licenses.

Page 43: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

On the Media Interview Transcript with Eli Pariseronthemedia.org/2011/may/20/the-filter-bubble/transcript/

The Filter Bubble Web site

thefilterbubble.comEli’s TED Talk

ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles.html

Other resources

Page 44: What's in your filter bubble? Or, how has the internet censored you today?

Emily Ford

Urban & Public Affairs LibrarianPortland State University

Branford P. Millar Library

[email protected]

Questions/comments/ETC