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About The nugget. (Sisters, Or.) 1994-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 2020)
Wednesday, September 16, 2020 The Nugget Newspaper, Sisters, Oregon In the PINES By T. Lee Brown What a great year It9s been a tough year for kids, including mine. Tough year for parents, including me. Tough year for educa- tors. Guess who9s not hav- ing a tough year? Multi-zillion-dollar tech corporations, that9s who. The smoke-choked, politically divided, pan- demic mess that is 2020 has brought riches of users and data to companies that make money from digi- tal device use. If you9re Fortnite, Amazon, TikTok, or Google, this year is for you! For the rest of us? Dang, 2020 suuuuuucks. We don9t have normal concerts and parties and school. Fun vacations and hugs from grandparents are a rarity. It9s understandable that we9d turn to some extra tech for comfort, though we know it9s kinda unhealthy. Our family usually shuts off devices from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday. That way we get 24 hours of real presence and together- time. It9s called Digital Shabbat. Even something so basic feels harder to do nowadays. This week we cheated, leav- ing my husband9s phone on in case my family in Lane County had to evacuate. By Saturday night I was glued to the fire websites, weeping over the loss of my favorite spot on the McKenzie River. Kinda unhealthy, yes. Also understandable, given the circumstances. But what if our tech use in general goes far beyond kinda- unhealthy? What if we9ve entered an era of deep, cor- rosive wrongness that9s destroying our culture, our democracy, and our kids? Experts believe we have entered that era. People are starting to catch on. Soaring into the Top Ten on Netflix this week came a documentary called <The Social Dilemma.= It fea- tures high-level technolo- gists from companies like Google, Twitter, Pinterest, and Facebook/Instagram/ Whatsapp. These folks were try- ing to create something good 4 or at least cool Fall Cleaning! FREE ESTIMATES! • Window & gutter cleaning, power washing • Residential & commercial screen cleaning/repair & glass restoration • Housekeeping & deep cleaning • Monthly, bi-monthly, move in/out Mendoza’s Cleaning Services LLC 541-610-5760 • Cesar CITY OF SISTERS NOTICE OF SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARING 4 while making lots of money. Instead they created a monster. Big-name investor Roger McNamee explains that for 50 years, tech companies made money selling hard- ware and software 4 a nice, simple business. Then everything changed. <For the last 10 years,= he says in the film, <the big- gest companies in Silicon Valley have been in the busi- ness of selling their users.= Wait, what? Who? Yep, they are selling us. We the People. They9re not just selling ads targeted at us. They9re not just selling information about us. They are selling our attention and behavior 4 which they9re remarkably good at nudg- ing, shifting, and changing. They9re selling our choices, our focus, and our future. Even the people who build the technology find themselves unable to resist its influence. Brewing a great beer doesn9t make your liver magically immune to alcohol. Tech giants unleash a constant barrage of scien- tific experiments on users. As the wolf told Little Red Riding Hood: the better to manipulate you with, my dear. <You are a lab rat,= explains Sandy Parakilas, What’s Cooking? former operations manager at Facebook and product manager at Uber. <We9re all lab rats.= He points out that we9re not lab rats for something positive, like developing a cure for cancer. <We9re just zombies,= he says, <and they want us to look at more ads so they can make more money.= Call it Big Data or call it Surveillance Capitalism. In the end, tech companies are selling you and me. They not only learn everything about our behavior 4 who our friends are, where we drive, what images we look at, what links we click 4 they modify that behavior. Being aware of the manipulation does little to prevent it. They9re selling our kids, too. Parents who try to be responsible about their kids9 screen time are finding it hard during Covid. When we checked in with Sisters School District last week, we were handed a Google Chromebook and a login to the Canvas platform. Canvas is a cloud-based learning management sys- tem that received a crummy privacy rating of 63 percent and a Warning label from Common Sense Media. The Chromebook tablet allows Google to aggregate behavior data about children worldwide, insuring a life- time of future corporate earnings. Most users have no idea how their data is used and abused. I don9t have that excuse. I9ve been research- ing and sounding the alarm about all this for several years. I quit social media and Amazon Prime. We don9t play video games. Geolocation is turned off on my phone. Etcetera. But my family still gets sucked in. Trapped in our house (that we are fortunate to have), keep- ing distance (from germs and humans alike), looking through pea-soup smoke at a dim salmon-orange dot in the sky (apparently it9s called the sun), it9s hard to imagine disconnecting any further. And so the Chromebook comes on for math. Zoom 4 notorious for privacy problems 4 brings relatives together for video chats. YouTube 4 one of the worst tech media offenders 4 offers groovy old music videos. A series on Netflix takes our minds off the social infrastructure crum- bling around us. Glued to my screen, fall- ing down the rabbit hole, I can almost believe that 2020 is tolerable. Yeah, sure. It9s been a great year. LEARNING AT HOME THIS YEAR? TAPAS, FLATBREADS & DINNER SPECIALS… TRY OUR PAELLA! Dine-In, Outdoor Seating Tues.-Fri., 3 to 8 p.m., Sat., Noon to 8 p.m. 391 W W. 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