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George Soros at the World Economic Forum in Davos George Soros at the World Economic Forum in Davos

 

28 January, 2018. Facebook and Google have become “obstacles to innovation” and are a “menace” to society whose “days are numbered”, said billionaire investor and philanthropist George Soros at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday.

 “Mining and oil companies exploit the physical environment; social media companies exploit the social environment,” said the Hungarian-American businessman, according to a transcript of his speech.

“This is particularly nefarious because social media companies influence how people think and behave without them even being aware of it. This has far-reaching adverse consequences on the functioning of democracy, particularly on the integrity of elections.”

In addition to skewing democracy, social media companies “deceive their users by manipulating their attention and directing it towards their own commercial purposes” and “deliberately engineer addiction to the services they provide”. The latter, he said, “can be very harmful, particularly for adolescents”.

“The power to shape people’s attention is increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few companies. It takes a real effort to assert and defend what John Stuart Mill called ‘the freedom of mind’. There is a possibility that once lost, people who grow up in the digital age will have difficulty in regaining it. This may have far-reaching political consequences.”

Soros warned of an “even more alarming prospect” on the horizon if data-rich internet companies such as Facebook and Google paired their corporate surveillance systems with state-sponsored surveillance – a trend that’s already emerging in places such as the Philippines.

“This may well result in a web of totalitarian control the likes of which not even Aldous Huxley or George Orwell could have imagined,” he said.

The companies, which he described as “ever more powerful monopolies” are unlikely to change their behaviour without regulation.

“The internet monopolies have neither the will nor the inclination to protect society against the consequences of their actions. That turns them into a menace and it falls to the regulatory authorities to protect society against them,” he said.

He said Davos was a good place to announce: “Their days are numbered.”

He also echoed the words of world wide web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee when he said the tech giants had become “obstacles to innovation” that need to be regulated as public utilities “aimed at preserving competition, innovation and fair and open universal access”.

During the same speech, Soros also criticised Donald Trump’s leadership, saying he had put the US on course for a nuclear war with North Korea.

Soros is the latest high-profile business person to speak out about these internet platforms at Davos. Earlier this week, Salesforce’s chief executive, Marc Benioff, said that Facebook should be regulated like a cigarette company because it’s addictive and harmful.

In November, Roger McNamee, who was an early investor in Facebook, described Facebook and Google as threats to public health.

In the same month Facebook’s founding chairman, Sean Parker, criticised his former employer: “God only knows what it’s doing to our children’s brains,” he said.

-The Guardian

1 comment

  • Aisea Matiu
    Aisea Matiu Sunday, 28 January 2018 15:40 Comment Link

    What a brilliant forum it was, and an excellent occasion for the free spirits, where many of the independent thinkers and doers, as well as the great political and economic minds, of the world across states and fields gathered together to reflect upon the vital role played by both creation and innovation in the current state of the art!

    I wonder if Tonga was ever represented in this great World Economic Forum at least as a mere observer, especially in having a critical familiarisation and appreciation of the key role of creation and innovation in both the political and economic affairs led by inquiry and research as opposed to mere imitation and repetition, informed by a sense of dependency mentality.

    What I mean is that Tonga, by actively, reflectively and attentively involved in this great occasion, should not "cut and paste" things but rather "test and taste" them, with a view to mediate these ideas, alongside the local physical and social environments, and not to impose external ideologies on the local situation, as in the ongoing problematic wholesale imposition of democracy and capitalism on Tonga.

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