The Asian Age

People must be smarter than the tools

- NAVEENA GHANATE

The phrase of the era is ‘ Informatio­n is oil’ and those who have it will certainly get power. In this era based on technology, each one among you leaves a digital footprint online which is now indirectly being used by politician­s to influence your thoughts.

When you reveal your political views on Facebook or Twitter, you are actually revealing your political identity which is otherwise a secret ballot.

Just because Facebook constantly nags you to update your political views, relationsh­ip status, sexual orientatio­n etc., it doesn’t mean it is planning to block you if you do not do so.

The early designers of FB recognised the importance of giving users “a little dopamine hit every once in a while” in the form of “likes” and comments. Facebook’s founding president Sean Parker had earlier said, “It literally changes your relationsh­ip with the society. It probably interferes with productivi­ty in weird ways. God only knows what it’s doing to our children’s brains”.

User is being manipulate­d at every stage on platforms like Facebook, Google, Twitter etc. and are not just connecting people but acting as spyware. The need for social validation is what brings users to access social media and this desperatio­n of human psychology is being targeted by spywares. This data is then being sent to marketers to influence you by showing more of what you like or comment or search for.

There will be a point of time when users want to de- addict themselves from this dopamine- driven effect of social media. That is when Facebook started seeing passive users who merely scroll and do not divulge details. It was affecting their business. So Mark Zuckerberg said that he decided to fix Facebook by making people more active on it by providing relevant informatio­n at the onset of 2018.

Any measure taken by apps ultimately boils down to using more of these platforms and more time being spent. Once the user’s attention is on the platform, the companies will be able to get better revenue by selling it to the advertiser­s.

According to Christophe­r Wylie, the whistleblo­wer, Cambridge Analytica was “creating a web of this informatio­n online so that people will start going down the rabbit hole, clicking on blogs, websites etc., that make them think things are happening that may not be”.

This work is done by IT Cells of every party, who have social media coordinato­rs starting from the booth level to nationalle­vel. The job of these co- ordinators is to identify your affiliatio­ns based on your posts, and keep bombarding you with informatio­n.

During the UP elections, voters were receiving several messages on Whatsapp and social media based on their interactio­ns. These messages were not just about whom to vote, but the flaws of Opposition parties and also about the atrocities taking place. Some of the users even got messages about mayhem faced by Hindus in Kashmir while they were voters of UP. Another Facebook man, who was the former vice- president of the site Chamath Palihapiti­ya said at the Stanford Business School event, “The short- term, dopamine- driven feedback loops that we have created are destroying how society works”.

Technology is like a Frankenste­in’s monster; the more you feed the beast, in the worst possible way it will destroy. If you like something and leave it, it is going to haunt you. Haunt you to download apps, like pages, check images.

According to Srinivas Kodali, independen­t security researcher, people should understand that there is no delete button in the technology world.

“There is lot of data being collected by parties and nobody knows what kind of data is being collected. This data will be used to target you.”

Some parties are late entrants in the game of likes and are playing around with flaws in technology.

Even though they are voicing opinions using the latest and greatest technologi­cal platforms available, Congress has demanded to return to the ballot paper instead of electronic voting machines ( EVMs).

It took decades for the common man to embrace technology and every time a party asks them to go back to paper, they are dragging the civilisati­on back.

While parties try to educate people on which one- ballot paper or EVM is best, have they ever released any white paper on how their IT cell or apps function or how much electoral data they have? The only answer to the question on how much data can be used is when Election Commission comes into picture and frames rules in this unregulate­d territory.

But for now, ultimately the onus lies on the person who is giving informatio­n. In the last five years, the meaning of digital literacy has changed from computer education to being able to use smartphone­s. Due to this learning by experience and depending on smartphone­s, people often tend to give away important informatio­n to others knowingly and unknowingl­y which is tailoring their views or political affiliatio­ns.

Cyber Security experts often ask one tough question, why is it that people feel the need to put up everything on social media. It is because "We always think it won't happen to us".

Our negligence is the root cause for political parties to play around with our ideologies and allowing social media platforms to manipulate us and take away all the data. In the Cyber world, people have been identified as the weakest link among the technology, process and users.

In India, people have only three identities — Aadhaar, e- mail- ID and cellphone. Each of this is extremely powerful. As Steve Jobs said, “It’s not the tools that you have faith in — tools are just tools. They work, or they don’t work. It’s people you have faith in or not”.

CYBER SECURITY EXPERTS OFTEN ASK ONE TOUGH QUESTION, WHY IS IT THAT PEOPLE FEEL THE NEED TO PUT UP EVERYTHING ON SOCIAL MEDIA. IT IS BECAUSE “WE ALWAYS THINK IT WON'T HAPPEN TO US”.

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