Tag Archive for White House

Chatbot Risks

Chatbot RisksChatbots are the latest rage on social media. As Time explained, they have been around since the 1960s. That’s when MIT professor Joseph Weizenbaum created a chatbot called ELIZA. Chatbots found a home on desktop messaging clients like AOL Instant Messenger. Chatbots went dormant as messaging transitioned away from desktops and onto mobile devices.

Sophiscated botBut they’re poised for a resurgence in 2016. There are two reasons for this. First, artificial intelligence and cloud computing has gotten better thanks to improvements in machine learning. Second, bots could be big money.

Tech titans have chatbots on social media

All the tech titans have released social bots on the web; Apple’s (AAPL) Siri, Facebook’s (FB) “bots on Messenger“, Google’s (GOOG) Allo, and Microsoft’s (MSFT) ill-fated Tay. They believe there’s a buck to be made here, and they’re scrambling to make sure they don’t get left out.

Social botThe July issue of the Communications of the ACM included an article, “The Rise of Social Bots,” which lays out social bots’ impact on online communities and society at large. The authors define a social bot as a computer algorithm that automatically produces content and interacts with humans on social media, trying to emulate and possibly alter their behavior.

The Business Insider published this infographic about the social bot ecosystem.

Business Insider infographic

Chatbots can be deceptive

The ACM article argues that social bots populate techno-social systems; they are often benign, or even useful, but some are created to harm by tampering with, manipulating, and deceiving social media users. The article offers several examples of how social bots can be a hindrance. The first example involves the Twitter (TWTR) posts around the Boston Marathon bombing. The researcher’s analysis found that social bots were automatically retweeting false accusations and rumors. The researchers argue that forwarding false claims without verifying the false tweets granted the false information more influence.

bots can artificially inflate political candidatesThe ACM article also discusses how social bots can artificially inflate political candidates. During the 2010 mid-term elections some politicians used social bots to inject thousands of false tweets to smear their opponents. This type of activity puts the integrity of the democratic process at risk. These types of attackers are also called astroturfing, or twitter-bombs.

Anti-vaxxer chatbots

The article offers another example of the use of social bots to influence an election in California. During the recent debate in California about a law on vaccination requirements there appears to be widespread use of social bots by opponents to vaccinations. This social bot interference puts an unknown number of people at risk of death or disease.

bot provoked stock market crashGreed is the most likely use of social bots. One example from the article is the April 2013 hack of the Twitter account of the Associated Press. In this case, the Syrian Electronic Army used the hacked account to posted a false statement about a terror attack on the White House which injured President Obama. This false story provoked an immediate $136 Billion stock market crash as an unwarranted result of the widespread use of social bots to amplify false rumors.

Chatbots manipulate social media reality

Research has shown that human emotions are contagious on social media. This means that social bots can be used to artificially manipulate social media users’ perception of reality without being aware they are being manipulated. The article says the latest generation of Twitter social bots has many “human-like” online behaviors that make it difficult to separate bots from humans. According to the authors, social bots can:

  • Search the web to fill in their profiles,
  • Post pre-collected content at a defined time
  • Engage in conversations with people,
  • Infiltrate discussions and add topically correct information.

Some bots garner attention.Some bots work to gain greater status by searching out and following popular or influential users or taking other steps to garner attention. Other bots are identity thieves, adopting slight variants of user names to steal personal information, picture, and links.

Strategies to thwart bad chatbots

The authors review several attempts to thwart these growing sophisticated bots.

1. Innocent-by-association – This theory measured the number of legitimate links vs. the number of social bots (Sybil) links a user has. This method was proven to be flawed. Researchers found that Facebook users are pretty indiscriminate when adding users. The article says that 20% of legitimate Facebook users accept any friend request and 60% accept friend requests with only one contact in common.

2. Crowdsourcing – Another approach to stop social bots is crowdsourcing. The crowdsourcing approach would rely on users and experts reviewing an account. The reviewers would have to reach a majority decision that the account in question was a bot or legit. The authors pointed out some issues with crowdsourcing.

  • It will not scale to large existing social networks like Facebook or Twitter.
  • “Experts” need to be paid to check accounts.
  • It exposes user’s personal information related to the account to unknown users and “experts.”

3. Feature-based detection is the third method the researchers noted by the authors. Feature-based bot detection uses behavior-based analysis with machine learning to separate human-like behavior from bot-like behavior. Some of the behaviors that these types of applications include:

  • The number of retweets.
  • Age of account.
  • Username length.

4. Sybil until proven otherwise – The Chinese social network RenRen uses the fourth method noted by the author. This network uses a “Sybil until proven otherwise” approach. According to the article, this approach is better at detecting unknown attacks, like embedding text in graphics.

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Use your brainWhile people’s ability to critically assimilate information, is beyond technology, the authors call for new ways to detect social bot-generated spam vs. real political discourse.

The researchers speculate there will not be a solution to the social bot problem. The more likely outcome is a bot arms race, like what we are seeing in the war on SPAM and other malware.

Related articles
  • Man vs. Machine: What do Chatbots Mean for Social Media? (blogs.adobe.com)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

POTUS Declares War on Patent Trolls

POTUS Declares War on Patent TrollsPresident Barack Obama has declared that it is time to get tough on “patent trolling.” Paul Marks at New Scientist writes that when ordinary activities like using Wi-Fi in a coffee shop or updating smartphone apps provoke lawsuits you know something is seriously amiss with the legal system. Firms that buy up obvious patents that the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) should never have granted in the first place are called patent trolls according to the author.

US Patent and Trademark OfficeThe troll then “asserts” these patents by threatening to sue businesses that infringe them. Many will then settle out of court and pay an often business-crippling license fee.

As followers of Bach Seat know, there are a number of patent troll lawsuits related to wireless.  In 2011, Boston University’s law school estimated that dealing with patent trolling cost businesses in the US $29 billion (rb- which I originally covered here).

Seal of the President of the United StatesPresident Obama says the cash should have been spent on generating products, services, and jobs. So the White House is asking Congress to force the USPTO to narrow the scope of patents within the next six months so that whole fields cannot be trolled. Mr. Obama also wants to prevent patents from being asserted against the users of technologies, like coffee shops, rather than manufacturers. The White House says trolls will have to come clean about their identity, and not hide their “abusive litigation and settlement extraction” behind a thicket of shell companies.

This is a bold step forward by President Obama, and if these legislative proposals are enacted the playing field will be leveled,” Alan Schoenbaum, general counsel for the troll-fighting web hosting firm Rackspace told New Scientist. What’s crucial, Mr. Schoenbaum says, is that the President’s changes make sure trolls have something to lose when they fail in court. In essence, the U.S. legal system is unbalanced. In the UK, for instance, the loser pays. “That keeps frivolous lawsuits down to a minimum,” he says. “But ‘loser pays’ is rare in the U.S.

Rackspace logoThe author asks how can patent trolls be identified? Rackspace’s Schoenbaum says there are plenty of ways, “Trolls don’t invent, make or develop anything. Between 70 and 90% of their patents are software or business-method patents, and in virtually all cases the patent is invalid.

But San Francisco-based, “patent buster” Gregory Aharonian, who invalidates patents by finding previous inventions using the same ideas, told New Scientist he thinks it will be trickier to identify patent trolls. He told the author, “It is going to be hard for Obama to deal with the troll definition problem … Anyone who asserts an invalid patent, under any conditions, is a troll.” Mr. Aharonian says that some large technology firms behave like trolls when they assert overly broad or obvious patents they never exploit.

The only move that will crush the troll phenomenon is vastly improved patent quality, Mr. Aharonian says. “What upsets people Stack of moneymore is not the assertion tactics, but the crap being asserted.”

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This story barely had a full news cycle. The opportunity is dead and lost as the White House spin machine deals with the PRISM spying scandal.

Related articles
  • Stop Patent Trolls (sweenylegal.com)

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

UN Tries to Control the Internet Again

UN Tries to Control the Internet AgainInfoSecurity reports that even after much of the free world refused to sign the controversial new ITU WCIT-12 treaty in December 2012, U.S. Many argued this would give the UN control of the Internet. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Commissioner Robert M. McDowell warned, ‘the worst is yet to come.’

ITU logoThe United States,” he said, “should immediately prepare for an even more treacherous ITU treaty negotiation that will take place in 2014 in Korea. Those talks could expand the ITU’s reach even further.” McDowell seems convinced that the ITU’s desire to control the internet is not a passing fancy, but a long-term intent. He may be right, and it may come before 2014.

Last week the ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré released his draft report for the Fifth World Telecommunication/Information and Communication Technology Policy Forum 2013. “This draft report of the Secretary-General to the WTPF-2013,” it states, “aims to provide a basis for discussion at the Policy Forum, incorporating the contributions of ITU Member States and Sector Members, and serving as the sole working document of the Forum focusing on key issues on which it would be desirable to reach conclusions.

ITU’s takeover attemptSuggested themes for discussion include, “Global Principles for the governance and use of the Internet,” and “On the basis of reciprocity, to explore ways for greater collaboration and coördination between ITU and relevant organizations – including, but not limited to, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the Internet Society (ISOC) and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) – involved in the development of IP-based networks and the future internet, through cooperation agreements, as appropriate, to increase the role of ITU in Internet governance to ensure the largest benefits to the global community.”

This is exactly what caused disarray in December’s WCIT in Dubai the commissioner states.

Meanwhile, a ‘de-fund the ITU petition has appeared on the White HouseWe the People’ website. A supporting website gives full details. “Fighting on behalf of the Internet,” it states, The United States government and fifty-four other countries rejected the ITU’s takeover attempt, but this is a single battle in a war that the ITU will continue to fight. The ITU is spending more than $180M/year to oppose the Internet and is drawing from its reserves more heavily each year ($9M in 2010, up from $5.5M in 2009), as progressive countries withdraw their payments from the ITU’s war-chest.

The ten most oppressive countries in the Open Net Initiative’s ranking of online freedom all sided against the internet, and none of them are giving the ITU as much as the U.S. is. If all the countries that stood with the Internet against the ITU’s attack withdraw their funding, it claims, “the ITU’s membership revenue will be reduced by 74%.

The petition also calls for future U.S. delegations to be reduced “to no more than one USG representative, tasked primarily with communicating a U.S. position that the ITU’s only legitimate area of authority is radio communications.” The long-term danger from such entrenched views on both sides is that the worldwide nature of the internet might fracture into one internet under multi-stakeholder governance in the ‘free’ world, and a series of heavily government-regulated Internets elsewhere.

Freedom and prosperity are at stake,” warned Commissioner McDowell.

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I have warned about the United Nations’ attempt to take over the Internet since November.

Related article

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tech Regulatory Capture

ATech Regulatory Captures I have noted from my Bach Seat, the revolving door or regulatory capture between the federal government and the tech titans isn’t new. The tech titans like Google (GOOG), Facebook, and Apple (AAPL) hire former feds to protect their turf while their web 2.0 applications attract attention from lawmakers and regulators concerned about issues like privacy, competition, pricing, and other aspects of the online economy.

Tech Firms Capture White House Staffers

Tech Firms Hiring White House Staffers“These companies are at the crosshairs of privacy and policy issues and they see people in the White House and federal government as protectors of their plans to expand into new markets,” Jeffrey Chester, an online privacy advocate and executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy told the Washington Post. “These are uber influence-makers they are hiring.”

Three examples of this in the Washington Post article are:

  • Google’s green energy initiative hired consultant Colin Crowell, who is both a former senior adviser to the FCC’s chairman and a former aide to Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.).
  • AT&T’s (T) lobbying leader James Cicconi, is a former staffer for George W. Bush. Mr. Cicconi has a long track record of regulatory success at the FCC and approval of several mergers for AT&T.
  • AT&T also hired Bill Clinton spokesman Mike McCurry heads Arts & Labs, a group that has lobbied against Internet access rules known as net neutrality, for AT&T, Verizon and cable companies.

Facebook Hires Former Clinton Spokesman

Facebook logoThe Washington Post reports that Facebook recently hired former Clinton White House spokesman Joe Lockhart to its communications team, as the company faces increased scrutiny caused by the company’s global expansion and treatment of data shared by the site’s more than 600 million users and its privacy practices. Mr. Lockhart, who served as press secretary for President Bill Clinton will be vice president of global communications. Mr. Lockhart will be located at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters and report to Elliott Schrage, VP of global communications, marketing, and public policy.

Facebook has also hired former George W. Bush deputy chief of staff, Joel Kaplan, to head its D.C. federal lobbying and policy shop. The Facebook office had just one employee in 2007 and now has a dozen on staff.

Larry Summers to Join VC Firm

Andreesen Horowitz logoSilicon Valley venture fund Andreesen Horowitz has added former White House economic director Larry Summers as an exclusive “long-term” special adviser. The Washington Post reports. Marc Andreesen, a co-founder of the venture capital investment firm, said the appointment brings the former government official’s international economic expertise to a fast-changing high-tech industry where Internet companies are quickly expanding overseas and fundamentally changing the way business markets work. Summers doesn’t have experience in tech, but that’s not why the venture firm wants him, they said. As the former Treasury secretary and a noted economist, the venture firm wants his economic knowledge to help companies think more broadly about how they can break into new markets and bring their services to various industries.

Andreesen Horowitz, with investments in Facebook, Digg, and Zynga, said Mr.Summers will receive “long-term” compensation, which would probably include a stake in companies or the fund, but Andreesen declined to give more details on their arrangement.

AT&T Gave Cash to Merger Backers

ATT logoEliza Krigman at POLITICO.com reports that AT&T (T) is lining up support for its acquisition of T-Mobile from a slew of groups with no obvious interest in telecom deals, except that they’ve received big piles of AT&T’s cash.

AT&T says it supports nonprofit groups because it’s the right thing to do — and not because of any quid pro quo. “For decades, AT&T has proudly supported numerous diverse groups and organizations,” a company spokesperson told POLITICO.

But not everyone’s buying it according to the article, “The money that nonprofits receive from their corporate sponsors sticks not only in their bank accounts but in their minds,” Ellen Miller, executive director of the Sunlight Foundation, told POLITICO.com. “This is what I think of as deep lobbying — there is an expectation that when push comes to shove, these groups will come out in favor of their benefactors.”

Politico logoAT&T’s corporate giving arm, the AT&T Foundation, doled out $62 million in 2009 to support a variety of arts and education programs, charities, and organizations according to the article. Jim Cicconi, AT&T’s senior vice president and top lobbyist, chairs the foundation. some of the payments AT&T has made include

The NAACP received a $1 million contribution from AT&T in 2009 and has received funding in the six figures dating to 2006, according to the group’s annual reports. The NAACP was one of the first groups to announce public support of the T-Mobile acquisition. William Barber, head of the North Carolina chapter of the NAACP, told POLITICO that AT&T’s financial support did not influence his group’s decision to write to the FCC in support of the merger.

GLAAD which has received $50,000 from AT&T, recently backed the merger deal. Rich Ferraro, a GLAAD official, told POLITICO, “We do not make policy decisions based on what’s best for our corporate sponsors.”

The Columbia Urban League received a $25,000 grant from the AT&T Foundation in 2009 to offer “underserved populations with resources to help their children achieve academic success,” according to the foundation’s IRS Form 990. On May 27, the group’s president and CEO, James McLawhorn, wrote to urge the FCC to approve AT&T’s acquisition of T-Mobile.

Some public interest groups question whether AT&T is now cashing in on its status as one of the country’s biggest corporate donors. I wrote about AT&T’s habit of showering everyone with money here

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Tech Regulatory Capture

Tech Regulatory CaptureRegulatory capture occurs when governmental bodies created to act in the public interest instead advances the commercial or special interests that dominate the industry or sector it is charged with regulating. Regulatory capture is a form of government failure, as it can encourage large firms to exploit the public.

Sunlight: Congress’ Revolving Door to Telecom, Cable Firms

Congress' Revolving Door to Telecom, Cable FirmsAccording to a 2010 Washington Post article, broadband providers including Comcast, Time Warner Cable, AT&T and Verizon Communications have amassed armies of former government officials to lobby against net neutrality and other regulations at the Federal Communications Commission, according to a report by the Sunlight Foundation. The nonprofit public interest organization said those firms hired 276 former government officials, including 18 former members of Congress, to fight against rules that would require them to treat all Web sites and content equally on their networks.

AT&T (T) has hired Republicans and Democrats from the US House and Senate to lobby for them including:

  • Jim Davis former Democratic congressman from Florida;
  • Trent Lott former Republican senator from Mississippi;
  • Vic Fazio former Democratic representative from California;
  • John Breaux former Republican senator from Louisiana;
  • J.C. Watts former Republican representative from Oklahoma.

Comcast (CMCSA) has also hired former politicians like:

Verizon (VZ) hired Republican representative Jack Fields from Texas.

The cable industry trade group National Cable & Telecommunications Association, hired Chip Pickering, a former Republican congressman from Mississippi.

The US Telecom Association, the Broadband Association hired Al Wynn former Democratic representative from Maryland.

Revolution LLC.

Revolution LLC.Ron Klain is General Counsel of former AOL CEO Steve Case’s Revolution LLC. Prior to joining Mr. Case’s firm Mr. Klain has extensive public service, most recently as a senior White House aide to President Obama, and Chief of Staff to Vice President Biden. He has also served as Chief of Staff or Staff Director for Vice President Al Gore, Attorney General Janet Reno, the Senate Democratic Leadership Committee, and the Senate Judiciary Committee. Mr. Klain was also Associate Counsel to President Clinton and a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Byron White. He has served as a top debate preparation advisor to Presidents Obama and Clinton, and Democratic Presidential nominees Al Gore and John Kerry.

State Department’s Katie Stanton Moves to Twitter

State Department's Katie Stanton Moves to TwitterTwitter has captured Katie Stanton, a special adviser at the State Department and former White House staffer. She is heading to Twitter to work on international business strategy according to the Washington Post.  Ms. Stanton tweeted her move to the social information platform’s San Francisco office. The Post says Ms. Stanton will be a vice president driving Twitter’s international business strategy and operations. Ms. Stanton previously worked at Google as a product manager for the search engine’s finance application.

She joined the White House as the director of citizen participation after working on new media strategies for President Obama’s election campaign. Stanton moved to the State Department last year, working with Alec Ross, senior adviser for innovation, on how to use social media tools and technology for diplomatic goals.

Facebook Hires White House Adviser as New VP

Facebook Hires White House Adviser as New VPAppScout reported that Facebook has captured an economic adviser to President Obama to serve as its new vice president of global public policy.  Marne Levine is the special assistant to the president for economic policy and chief of staff for the National Economic Council at the White House.

“With over 70 percent of our users living outside the United States, her unique mix of government and Internet industry experience will be invaluable to help Facebook address some of the most interesting questions at the intersection of technology and public policy,” Elliot Schrage, vice president of global communications at Facebook, said in a statement.

Levine will work out of Facebook’s D.C. office where she will oversee and coördinate interactions with governments and non-governmental organizations, Facebook said. She will also help to build Facebook policy teams in Asia, the Americas, and Europe.

According to the article Ms, Levine helped launch an online peer-to-peer payment platform and helped manage its privacy and compliance issues which are probably why Facebook hired her so she can lobby her former boss on privacy and banking issues.

Related articles

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.