Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Internet

- ▶ depend

rage. Most of us had never heard the term “incel” before the Toronto massacre. But it was the indelible centerpiec­e of Minassian’s life.

Most of us were unfamiliar with HIAS, the shorthand for a Jewish group that resettles refugees. But those initials dominated Bowers’ anti-semitic conspiracy theories. And that reflects the internet’s power to cast rogue grievances as legitimate obsessions and give prejudices the shimmer of ideals.

Technology has always been a coin with two sides: potential and peril. That’s what Mary Shelley explored in “Frankenste­in,” which is celebratin­g its 200th birthday this year, and it has been the main theme of science fiction ever since.

The internet is the technology paradox writ more monstrous than ever. It’s a nonpareil tool for learning, roving and constructi­ve community-building. But it’s unrivaled, too, in the spread of lies, narrowing of interests and erosion of common cause. It’s a glorious buffet, but it pushes individual users toward only the red meat or just the kale. We’re ridiculous­ly overfed and ruinously undernouri­shed.

It creates terrorists. But well shy of that, it sows enmity by jumbling together informatio­n and misinforma­tion to a point where there’s no discerning the real from the Russian.

Don’t take it from me. Take it from a Silicon Valley giant whose wares on our internet addiction. Speaking at a conference in Brussels, Tim Cook, the chief executive of Apple, warned, “Platforms and algorithms that promised to improve our lives can actually magnify our worst human tendencies.”

“Rogue actors and even government­s have taken advantage of user trust to deepen divisions, incite violence and even undermine our shared sense of what is true and what is false,” he added.

This was a week ago — before Sayoc’s arrest, before Bowers’ rampage, before Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right populist, won Brazil’s presidenti­al election. As The Times reported, pro-bolsonaro forces apparently tried to hurt his opponents and help him by flooding Whatsapp, the messaging applicatio­n owned by Facebook, “with a deluge of political content that gave wrong informatio­n on voting locations and times.”

That same Times article noted that a search for the word “Jews” on the photo-sharing site Instagram on Monday led to 11,696 posts with the hashtag “.jewsdid911,” insanely blaming them for the attacks that brought down the World Trade Center, along with similarly grotesque images and videos that demonized Jews. Anti-semitism may be ancient, but this delivery system for it is entirely modern.

And utterly terrifying. I don’t know exactly how we square free speech and free expression — which are paramount — with a better policing of the internet, but I’m certain that we need to approach that challenge with more urgency than we have mustered so far. Democracy is at stake. So are lives.

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