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Ousted propaganda scholar accuses Harvard of bowing to Meta

j45
71 replies
1d

Colleges and universities are like little countries, rarely answer to anyone and focused on their own insular practices.

loceng
32 replies
1d

It was only in the last few years did I realize the massive endowments many universities have make them ripe targets for bad actors to make their way into administration.

93po
31 replies
1d

The few very large unis i looked into all made massively more money off investment returns than any operational income. the year i reviewed for the university of texas system showed they could have charged zero tuition that year and still make a profit

there are absolutely kickbacks for people in control of those endowments choosing specific investment options with their many billions of dollars

sonicanatidae
29 replies
1d

My partner works at a major U in the US. Top 200ish.

They are solely focused on revenue. Teacher pay rarely raised, but that new upgrade for the stadium at a cool $120m, seems like a great idea.

FFS, her dept went past the paper budget for one semester, about 5 years ago. The resolution? Do without paper until the next semester.

That's what students insane tuition prices bought them. Apathy over education.

dehrmann
17 replies
23h37m

Teacher pay rarely raised

There's an oversupply of most PhDs, so there's no need to raise their pay. And that's for professors. Grad students that teach are practically free.

sonicanatidae
9 replies
23h18m

Ironically, she stopped at a Masters, after this same university forced her to restart her phd thesis 3 TIMES, due to changing staff. She worked on it one semester, then they changed her major professor. Worked on the 2nd one another semester, and they again changed her major professor. Considered a 3rd time and she just threw her hands up and said, fuck it, which I don't blame, at all.

She's still a full-time faculty member, has written/designed 3 courses for them, that are taught by herself and others to this day, and gets kudos every semester from students she's taught.

The college system is slightly less uncaring than the government. The big difference is the college system drains 20 years of your future income with insane pricing and if you get shit on due to THEIR changes, that's just your happy ass.

johnnyanmac
5 replies
22h47m

3 times is crazy. 3 times in one year is absolute insanity. I'd simply apply to a new university if I had a shred of interest left after that.

sonicanatidae
3 replies
22h30m

They killed any feelings of finishing it.

They are thorough in crushing dreams.

The best part about all of it? She got to PAY for the semesters that the school itself trashed.

selimthegrim
2 replies
22h14m

That’s nuts.

sonicanatidae
1 replies
21h24m

What was their consequence?

Nothing, so they really didn't give 2 shits about it.

THATS universities, today.

selimthegrim
0 replies
16m

Oh, I know, believe me.

selimthegrim
0 replies
22h15m

3 times happened to me too but not in one year and not at one school.

anonymouskimmer
2 replies
22h13m

I think the main problem with issues like this that happened to your partner is people fear making waves so much that they don't even consider going to a lawyer to enforce the implied contract that she had as a grad student with both the university and the original thesis professor.

Legal action is used even by unions to enforce their rights and contracts. If you don't have a union, legal action is the only strength a cog in the machine has. Use it, or get run over.

I'm not just writing out of my butt, I've successfully done this once. It is risky, but is it realistically any worse than what happened in this situation? It's not as if there's only one university awarding PhDs. And if you're swapping professors left and right, it's not as if staying at the university is really benefiting your original research goals.

sonicanatidae
1 replies
21h22m

One of the many things that pissed me off about it was they didn't even try to match her up with a prof in her specialty. Just threw her to the next prof available, because "Fuck it, not my life. That'll be $14k..thanks!"

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
21h13m

Wow. Insult to injury. Pretty crappy for the next professor, too.

xattt
1 replies
23h27m

There's an oversupply of most PhDs

Which PhDs are in undersupply?

golergka
0 replies
23h21m

AI researchers, by the looks of what tech is willing to pay for them.

pixl97
1 replies
22h14m

So what is undersupplied that makes prices high for students?

dehrmann
0 replies
14h23m

It's more that student loan availability, the questionable promise of a middle-class life, and selling "dream schools" makes it easy to sell a $150k product to someone who doesn't need it and can't actually afford it.

nobodyandproud
1 replies
23h8m

There’s an oversupply of administrators too.

sonicanatidae
0 replies
19h41m

Honest question:

When is there not a glut of administrators in any industry?

FireBeyond
0 replies
22h26m

Grad students that teach are practically free.

UCLA recently got hammered on this, after people shared a bunch of job posting for teaching posts for grad students with the disclaimer: "Note: this is an uncompensated position".

atlasunshrugged
3 replies
1d

Why are they so focused on that? It seems like a great way to drive a school into the ground.

scottyah
0 replies
23h10m

It's just so easy to track money as a measurement of success, all the other goals are too intangible that they tend to get left behind

Spooky23
0 replies
23h57m

Honest graft.

Awards and recognition for leaders. Where ethics rules are loose, fancy trips and steak dinners, etc.

93po
0 replies
23h51m

because the people controlling those endowments make tens of millions off of kickbacks and care a lot more about that than the school. additionally, all schools are operating in the same shitty way, they're all getting expensive and shitty and degrees are fairly non-optional for a lot of career paths so it's a captive market

strangattractor
1 replies
23h13m

I would occasionally visit some of my high school friends attending William and Mary in Va (in the 80s). One year the school decided the football stadium needed upgrading so the team could play football in a more competitive division. The students protested - saying they were happy going to watch their not so great team and they did not want to see the school divert interest from academics. The stadium was not built. The school listened to the students.

The problem is many schools are now status symbols similar to an iPhone. People go to them precisely because other people cannot afford them. There are many schools that can provide a similar undergraduate experience - William and Mary for example - but simply do not have the cachet. The alumni, the students, professors and administration all want the prestige. It doesn't have to be that way if people would stop buying into the BS.

sonicanatidae
0 replies
22h49m

That's just it. The University that my partner teaches at is already in the top of 2 fields and a major player in a 3rd.

They already had reasons for people to attend without adding another 50k seats to a stadium that already had more than that.

golergka
1 replies
23h22m

This just means that's what their customers, who pay the tuition, care about more.

sonicanatidae
0 replies
21h20m

Yes and no, I think.

If it was laid out, that their education would suffer, because the resources that might be put towards it are now put into Sports Team, I suspect they would balk more.

Spivak
1 replies
23h25m

but that new upgrade for the stadium at a cool $120m, seems like a great idea.

This doesn't have anything to do with universities specifically. There's always money for endeavors that have positive ROI. You can tell what a person, group, business or institution actually values by the things they spend money on that are true losses.

sonicanatidae
0 replies
21h22m

When a university focuses on everything except education, there is a problem.

jkestner
0 replies
23h19m

And here I thought I could stop buying supplies for our teachers when my kids go to college.

woah
0 replies
22h26m

there are absolutely kickbacks for people in control of those endowments choosing specific investment options with their many billions of dollars

This is a form of corruption that is present whenever anyone manages an investment fund, and not only specific to school endowments. This is why investment managers are licensed, and taking this kind of bribe could result in criminal penalties.

yieldcrv
24 replies
1d

A lot of people are looking for an all controlling force in the country or world

instead, I see a lot of demigods that rule their domain, curating complete autonomy as long as they stay within the confines they finessed

pastacacioepepe
13 replies
1d

You don't need a formal conspiracy when you have an elite with converging interests.

godelski
12 replies
23h38m

There's a joke from a comedian I forget if it is L̶o̶u̶i̶s̶ ̶C̶K̶ George Carlin o̶r̶ ̶n̶o̶t̶. But basically is along the lines that you don't have explicitly collude when you all come from the same backgrounds. The interests are aligned already. It's pointing out that representatives need to actually be from representative populations of people. But he did it in a funny way, this comment really isn't.

Edit: thanks lo_zamoyski. Here's a video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAFd4FdbJxs

pastacacioepepe
4 replies
22h31m

Yes I basically took verbatim what George Carlin said because it's one of the best points of view on "conspiracies" I've ever heard.

I don't understand how did you get the impression that I was trying to be funny? It's a fairly serious description of the reality we live in.

godelski
3 replies
22h19m

it's one of the best points of view on "conspiracies" I've ever heard.

It's actually how I often think of conspiracy. Not a bunch of men sitting in a room plotting together but a bunch of independent actors with convergent incentives. Also my litmus test for real bona fide conspiracy (Watergate or Contra Affair) vs crackpottery is if it can be boiled down to "wizards did it." It's always interesting that conspiracies work out to essentially making one feel safe in a world of all powerful but evil men rather than the discomfort of a chaotic world. Flat Earth stands out a bit because I still don't know who gains from it...

I don't understand how did you get the impression that I was trying to be funny?

I didn't. I said Carlin was funny and that I was not. I honestly wasn't even aware you were referencing Carlin (at a direct level at least, since I did make the connection). It just reminded me of his statement (which now I understand as your intent. The subtle nod reference).

whatshisface
1 replies
22h9m

Conspiracies of the original kind do happen. Like the plot to kill Ceasar.

godelski
0 replies
21h26m

Of course, see my reference to Watergate and Contra Affairs. Would you not say those are real bona fide conspiracies of the original kind?

The litmus test is not about convergence, it is "wizards did it." Convergence is just a common kind of thing that crackpot conspiracies develop around. It's more rational when you understand convergence because crackpot conspiracy often is re-framed as a misinterpretation of the data.

Qualifiers are also important.

avgcorrection
0 replies
19h7m

It's always interesting that conspiracies work out to essentially making one feel safe in a world of all powerful but evil men rather than the discomfort of a chaotic world.

Hmm. Rather the comforting thought is in the mind of the so-called conspirators. Systemic theories about things like the Media (see mentioned Manufacturing Consent) get rejected as “conspiracies” because people (like in the Media) interpret it as saying that they, with full knowledge and intentionality are doing these things. Rather than that they are pawns in a larger system.

They are flattering themselves.

kjkjadksj
3 replies
23h16m

If you want to read about how the media is also roped into these incentive structures, read Manufacturing Consent by Herman and Chomsky.

smolder
2 replies
22h55m

There's no P in Chomsky, FYI.

kjkjadksj
1 replies
22h34m

Thanks, fixed.

godelski
0 replies
22h18m

Lots of corrections in this thread chain haha. It's actually a delight to see a chain of "ops, thanks" and no one fighting.

lo_zamoyski
1 replies
23h27m

George Carlin, and he wasn't joking. This was a point he made during an interview in all seriousness.

godelski
0 replies
23h5m

That was it thank! Updated my post

avgcorrection
0 replies
23h19m

Might be the comedian Avram Chomsky.

stareatgoats
3 replies
23h6m

You mean to say that no one is running the world, not even behind the scenes, or even behind behind the scenes? You are leaving us without anyone to blame! Daring I must say.

sroussey
1 replies
22h45m

Certainly not a way to get clicks. People are eager to see patterns—it’s in our wetware. For example: two podcasts about JFK: one is about a lone gunman, the other a secret conspiracy and coverup. Which will be more interesting? Get more of an audience?

wizzwizz4
0 replies
19h51m

Consider “Oswald: the man who took on the United States Secret Service, and won”. I'm not particularly interested in US history, but I think I'd find this much more interesting than yet another conspiracy podcast.

yieldcrv
0 replies
22h4m

funny, but another thing I think people miss is that there are opportunists for every outcome

think your controversial head of state is being controlled by their buddies from university that run some private equity funds

well so would the other head of state if they won the election! different buddies

its more like if you dont also have a plan for outsized influence, then thats the biggest outlier and inefficient way of navigating the system we have

fooop
2 replies
22h29m

the world these days is becoming more and more medieval: many different actors, all competing with one another, at different levels of power.

Imo, it's a good thing: regular ppl will be more suspicious about power overall and not make as many bad safety/convenience trades.

j45
1 replies
22h23m

Assuming people are educated and aware enough to begin with to recognize and then deal with it.

The right to read was literally only locked up a few hundred years ago.

fooop
0 replies
21h18m

these things are much more transparent than us experts like to think they are - people making "uneducated" decisions are often just making decisions that don't fall in line with the expectations of the "educated". Power is legible regardless of whether you know how to read or not (or code (or do immunological research)).

foobarian
2 replies
1d

Anybody working in University IT can attest to this :-)

bo1024
1 replies
23h12m

Anybody who has to work with University IT can also :)

j45
0 replies
22h24m

So anyone who works in universities sees and experiences bureaucracy.

Let’s strike a committee to study it until it’s forgotten.

bena
7 replies
1d

That's true of a lot of things. You really can't allow a system to police itself. Once you allow that, you've essentially given them carte blanche to run a fiefdom.

scottyah
2 replies
23h13m

But all the other systems are just systems too, and even a system of systems is just a system... Unless we have a God at the top there's no escape from the fiefdoms

j45
0 replies
22h26m

Systems for the many, vs the few can be quite different.

It can be different than systems designed for the few instead of the many

bena
0 replies
20h48m

Basically a system cannot be accountable to only itself. There must be an outside entity that can hold the system accountable.

However, even if you have two systems accountable to each other, once they realize that there's no third party that's holding the gestalt accountable, they're free to play tit-for-tat and essentially become a single entity.

It's kind of why "internal affairs" doesn't really work in police departments. They are part of the same system. If internal affairs clears the police, the police won't mess with internal affairs.

And I'm not saying there are easy solutions to implement. Because even if you have an entire web of systems configured in such a way that cooperation among some would be detrimental to the others so they would have incentives to keep each other in check, it would only take a sustained imbalance of power in order for the cooperators to neutralize the others so that they could create their own fiefdom.

But anywhere you do have a system that is only accountable to itself, you have a system that is likely rotting from the inside.

bo1024
2 replies
23h5m

"To summarize the summary of the summary: people are a problem." -Douglas Adams.

Insularity is both the strength and weakness of academia. Unfortunately, I feel we are sliding toward the worst of both worlds: an administrative "ruling class" that is insulated from consequences, but also allowed to constrain and control the educators/researchers.

petre
0 replies
20h43m

You were quite close to a 1917 style red revolution on US soil. Only the reds wore maga baseball caps that time and most of them were right wingers. Fortunately Trump backed down by the time the FBI tactical teams arrived. I don't think anyone is insulated by consequences, but I have yet to see a former US president go to prison.

j45
0 replies
22h27m

I am not so sure of that anymore.

There is some real case for institutionalization and being out of touch with the real world.

Add to that where those who can’t do but talk instead moving up in management to stand over the academics who are capable and immensely talented.

j45
0 replies
22h28m

Right but it doesn’t lessen it being true about this space.

Bureaucracies anywhere they exist tend to lean this way, in their own special way. Whether it’s enterprise, healthcare, government, education..

throw4847285
4 replies
22h5m

They're more like hedge funds that do some light educating on the side. Especially ones as rich as Harvard.

specialist
2 replies
21h31m

That's an unfair assessment.

Harvard et al also launder reputations, incubate reactionary movements, serve as a finishing school for the rich and powerful, stoke credentialing (eg grade inflation), and accelerate social inequity. For starters.

ratsmack
0 replies
20h24m

Just like so many organizations within government, universities have no accountability... status quo rules.

Der_Einzige
0 replies
18h31m

Uhh, reactionary movements are incubated in Christian right wing schools, not by Harvard professors writing yet another book about post modernism.

JacobThreeThree
0 replies
13h30m

Even hedge fund partners have to pay capital gains tax. Not Harvard!

hliyan
38 replies
1d

From regulatory capture through revolving doors and lobbying, to media capture through purchase, and now academic capture through donation, it seems no activity is safe from large concentrations of wealth.

seanw444
28 replies
1d

And it never will be. This is a human problem. No amount of laws and regulations will ever solve it.

Kapura
15 replies
1d

what if we had laws that prevented people from obtaining disproportionate amounts of wealth? Seems like it'd be a lot harder to buy a school if being a multi-billionaire is impossible.

firebat45
6 replies
1d

This is such a naive viewpoint. Let's say that people are not allowed to have more than 10 million dollars, but corporations are. Then it wouldn't be Zuckerberg's money, it would simply be Facebook's, wielded by Zuckerberg.

I hope you can see the ridiculousness is saying that corporations should be limited in wealth as well, but even if you can't, let's assume they are limited the same. Now it becomes easier to buy them off, because they are comparably smaller.

The only logical solution is to allow both corporations and individuals to accumulate as much wealth as they are able to. Rich people aren't the problem, corrupt people are. Instead of trying to make rich corrupt people less rich, why don't we try to make them less corrupt instead?

93po
2 replies
1d

We should just tax income over $10 million at 90% for both people and corporations. Maybe then we could have an actual healthcare system

lovecg
1 replies
23h39m

We should just tax income over $10 million at 90% for both people and corporations.

People - maybe. But why corporations? Isn’t that double taxation? The only way money leaves a corporation is through people which will be taxed eventually.

As for the healthcare system, it doesn’t need more money. It needs an extreme regulation and red tape shake up. We could have vastly better healthcare today for the same amount of money that’s already there if not for the bureaucratic mess and an army of administrators tending to it.

93po
0 replies
13h48m

If you don't tax corporations then people will just buy their mansions and yachts through the company.

Double taxation already happens today.

istjohn
1 replies
1d

Just who is buying off these corporations if no one has vast wealth?

lovecg
0 replies
23h35m

Foreign entities? Of course, we should ban that as long as we’re at it. Next you’ll have people using vastly superior foreign products, we better ban that as well. And if people decide to leave the country en masse because they’re too morally weak and desire wealth, we can’t have that either, so better build a wall.

thomastjeffery
0 replies
1d

Your argument is founded on naivete.

Of course doing something halfway would not accomplish much.

meesles
2 replies
1d

Loopholes will be found, wealth will be concentrated in new ways, and then the wealth will be used to revert laws to benefit the wealthy. The laws won't change in the first place since money has captured most political systems as well.

bcrosby95
1 replies
1d

Yes, give up and don't try, on the scale of things you will be dead and forgotten anyways - a failure in every sense of the word regardless of what you do.

meesles
0 replies
41m

Even people famous in their time are forgotten in short order. A good lesson for those deluding themselves into thinking they'll be an exception. Better to be remembered as a decent human being to your loved ones.

holmesworcester
1 replies
1d

That would tip the balance of power to another corrupting influence. Corporations, say. Or professional associations representing highly-educated high earners like doctors or lawyers. Or to politically savvy deca-millionaires who use their money with more focused attention. And that's setting aside the question of how and whether you could prevent the existence of billionaires, which would lead to offshoring and (plausibly at least) dramatic unintended changes in what kinds of social and technological change happens. But either way, coalitions corrupting institutions is not a soluble problem generally. It gets solved with acts of effort and courage like this one, and by discussions like this.

tivert
0 replies
1d

That would tip the balance of power to another corrupting influence. Corporations, say. Or professional associations representing highly-educated high earners like doctors or lawyers.

Even if what you say is true, which I do not grant, your implication is akin to "we should not punish criminals, because some other criminals will rise to take their place." It's a defeatist meme that mainly serves to protect the interests of the already-powerful.

Some work is never done, but that is not a reason to give up on it.

Tempest1981
1 replies
1d

There are some billionaires who are literally asking to be taxed more. Not much success convincing US govt.

mrguyorama
0 replies
23h34m

Because they are full of shit. Where is the "pro billionaire tax" think tank and super-PAC they are funding?

random_kris
0 replies
1d

And the party is in charge of enforcing those laws right ?

tivert
6 replies
1d

> From regulatory capture through revolving doors and lobbying, to media capture through purchase, and now academic capture through donation, it seems no activity is safe from large concentrations of wealth.

And it never will be. This is a human problem. No amount of laws and regulations will ever solve it.

Come on. Wealth is literally a creature of "law and regulations," and changes to them can definitely "solve it." That's trivially shown by the through a thought experiment where we imagine legal changes that lead to Zuckerberg having his wealth confiscated and Facebook being placed under the control of some person or entity who is not its ally and is not allowed to profit from it.

I think I need to make extra-clear that my example is an extreme one to clearly disprove your point, not the only regulatory option available or a policy proposal. Don't get distracted by irrelevant details.

Defeatist memes like what you said circulate widely to encourage paralysis, but they're propaganda or its derivatives, not truth.

whelp_24
5 replies
1d

We shouldn't sit on our hands or whatever but wealth isn't a creation of laws, it's a bit of the inverse. Some laws can remove wealth and some laws are gonna take a lotta of guns and manpower (resources ==wealth) to implement.

istjohn
2 replies
1d

Without laws, you have anarchy. Laws create the institutions necessary to have an economy capable of creating wealth.

sobkas
1 replies
1d

Without laws, you have anarchy. Laws create the institutions necessary to have an economy capable of creating wealth.

Without laws you don't have anarchy, you just have rule of strongest. Anarchy can have laws but no authority that enforces them.

seanw444
0 replies
22h14m

If we moved into a world without government and laws, it'd be replaced by a sort of modernized feudalism. Not anarchy.

tivert
0 replies
1d

We shouldn't sit on our hands or whatever but wealth isn't a creation of laws, it's a bit of the inverse.

Huh? Maybe in the deep, deep past; but definitely not now. Even back then, where there were no states and little social organization, there was still custom within groups that worked like law.

Some laws can remove wealth and some laws are gonna take a lotta of guns and manpower (resources ==wealth) to implement.

Zuckerberg and Facebook have no army and no means to raise one, despite the wealth they have. They are totally, utterly at the mercy of laws and regulations.

UncleMeat
0 replies
23h50m

Mark Zuckerburg's wealth is absolutely a creation of laws. Almost all of his wealth comes from his ownership of a corporation. The corporation only exists because of laws. It is only a sale-able asset because of laws.

lapinot
2 replies
1d

The good old "we have always been that way". If perhaps hard to imagine for you, there are tons of social structures where wealth cannot be used to purchase power (ie where currency buys you some stuff but not labor from other humans). See the recent book https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dawn_of_Everything. Very much a perspective changing book.

lovecg
1 replies
23h48m

I’m going to guess that not many of those social structures achieved things like low infant mortality, not dying from randomly stubbing your toe, the internet, space travel, and the like. If I was presented with a choice, I’d pick a modern Western state any time, flawed as they may be.

lapinot
0 replies
22h49m

Your argument is a straw-man. You're conflating taking inspiration from something and adopting it verbatim (your first two examples are particularly hilarious in this regard). Also i've yet to find a compelling argument defending that western capitalism is a necessity for high-tech (you second two examples). In particular schools, academia and software are fields where not commercial-centric relationships are thriving and deemed superior by a fair share of practitioners.

istjohn
0 replies
1d

Well, you can prevent the concentration of wealth in the first place.

Thomas Jefferson wrote, "But the consequences of this enormous inequality producing so much misery to the bulk of mankind, legislators cannot invent too many devices for subdividing property....Another means of silently lessening the inequality of property is to exempt all from taxation below a certain point, and to tax the higher portions of property in geometrical progression as they rise"[0].

0. https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-08-02-0...

happytiger
0 replies
1d

That’s not the point. Corruption (which is what this is) is NOT binary, it’s a problem that exists on spectrum.

We don’t solve spectrum problems, we reduce and minimize them. Just because they exist to a degree and never are remediated doesn’t mean we shouldn’t seek to minimize them.

Corruption can lead to tax evasion, poor tax administration, and exemptions that disproportionately favor the well-connected and wealthy population groups in society and must be rallied against if we seek civil societies.

We’ll never get rid of it. As you say. But if we don’t act against it these problems will grow like cancer and become insidious, infecting every aspect of society, so it’s deeply important not to embrace an apathetic approach or present them as inevitable.

They are intrinsic, but the level we tolerate — the “degree of corruption” — which I would argue is pretty high in this case, is most certainly counterable and definitely can be reduced.

downrightmike
4 replies
1d

Universities have been dirty since they embraced price gouging on tuition in the 90's. There is no way what they are providing can be considered fair or reasonable.

Upvoter33
2 replies
1d

I don't think tuition is the problem (in this case!); it's the endless need for "fundraising". If you need to get huge gifts, inevitably you will be corrupted by the needs/wants of the gift givers.

pphysch
1 replies
1d

Harvard has over $50,000,000,000 in assets. It sure doesn't seem like it "needs" to raise another $500,000,000. It's greed through and through.

geodel
0 replies
1d

Huh, and where does that big amount come from? By taking huge donations. Its like saying Apple can sell iPhone for free since they are insanely rich. They are reach because they charge large amount of money for a fucking phone. Money either increases or decreases its not gonna stay at same level.

jwestbury
0 replies
1d

since they embraced price gouging on tuition in the 90's.

(Caveat that the following is US-centric.) I'd love to see the data showing actual price gouging, because the data I've seen has generally suggested that per-student spending hasn't even increased at a pace equivalent to inflation; rather, funding didn't increase with enrolment, leading to students paying for an ever-higher share of their education.

(As for private universities... fine, I'm okay calling it price gouging.)

gumballindie
3 replies
1d

Politics (as in the game of power) and corruption are human nature. Pushing back against these are equally human nature. The worse it gets the more intense the push back. The push back seems to be at moment taking the shape of voting in far right or trump like politicians accross the world. They won't solve the issue. Therefore the next level of intensity may very well be revolution.

doublemint2203
2 replies
1d

imho, you're wrong: it may not be "human nature" as much as it is prisoner's dilemma. few, but some, humans are just as inherently averse to corruption as someone may be inherently prone to it. it's a matter of "if I don't take this bribe, someone else will"

dinkleberg
1 replies
23h30m

That is still human nature. Not everyone will exhibit those traits, but when looking at the entirety of humanity, these traits are certainly part of our nature.

And the prisoner's dilemma is a way of exploring/explaining these traits (though I expect these aren't exclusive to humans).

doublemint2203
0 replies
20h24m

hmm. I suppose a sentient ant may not reach a Nash equilibrium, but the best equilibrium. Then through that lens, yeah. I can see how you see it as human nature.

yellow_lead
27 replies
1d

Her actual whistleblower declaration contains a lot of the evidence some may be looking for:

https://live-whistleblower-aid.pantheonsite.io/wp-content/up...

To sum up the first few pages after skimming it, Facebook tried to bribe her (well "fund" her research), she refused. Later she had a meeting with the former head of comms at Facebook, who was now on the Dean's council, where he became incredibly angry with her research (page 4, 13). Following this, she got an email from the Dean of the Kennedy school which sounds very much like someone tattled to them and they now want to "review" her research (see page 5, 15). It continues from here.

jcheng
24 replies
23h43m

Not sure why I decided to spend so much time on this on a Monday morning but I've read to page 35, and the picture is much more muddled.

It looks like the FB Archive project gains momentum and launches but Dr. Donovan and the TASC get sidelined along the way (which understandably is very upsetting, you can feel the pain on every page). It does seem clear that the Dean doesn't approve of Dr. Donovan/TASC and he eventually shuts the group down, but if he allows the Facebook project to move forward under other groups that are also within the Kennedy school, then the title of this post is pretty misleading. (Oh, maybe why the actual article title says "initial team" instead of just "team".)

BTW, not a particular fan of Meta, no feelings about Harvard/Kennedy school, never heard of any of these people before except Frances Haugen and Dr. Latanya Sweeney.

macksd
16 replies
23h19m

I think sidelining the lead researcher and giving the project to another group is accurately described at "gutting a team". No, they didn't end the project, but the series of events described seems to be insinuating that she could have led the project if she was willing to have her work funded by Facebook, listen to one of their former people, etc. So if that was their goal, and they just got someone else to do the work, is that any better?

tensor
4 replies
20h44m

That's not quite what I imagine when I hear the term "gutting a team." Gutting a team is when then very significantly reduce its size and priority. Simply switching leadership of a project isn't gutting a team, it's normal university politics and infighting.

If they are forcing funding by Facebook/Meta, then that does seem like a conflict of interest, but is a quite a different headline.

ImPostingOnHN
2 replies
19h27m

From what I gathered, they didn't simply switch leadership, they removed it entirely, along with the person doing the most work, replacing them with nothing, which effectively shut down the project.

Is there someone continuing it that I missed?

jcheng
1 replies
15h53m

According to the complaint, "the project" was FB Archive, which Dr. Donovan came up with the idea for and was the only person in the room with the actual source material. The Public Interest Tech Lab was the organization actually tasked with building out FB Archive, which they did, and it shipped: https://fbarchive.org

I think Dr. Donovan's complaint is not that it didn't happen, so much as she was not allowed to play a larger role in it despite having the desire, the people, the funding, and the right--as the person who came up with the idea and the person who provided the material, without which there would be no project. (And then worse, history rewritten to exclude her contributions)

ImPostingOnHN
0 replies
12h25m

Who exactly did the university get to replace the lead researcher they dismissed*?

Who remains at the university doing the research halted by the dismissal* of the lead researcher?

* – whether overtly or via constructive dismissal

rrobukef
0 replies
19h56m

The sidelining is to show damages to her reputation etc. Page 50 or so starts the description alleging how the administration and the dean gutted her department by blocking, reallocating funds, stopping hiring, and refusing to extend contracts when funds are available.

cbsmith
4 replies
22h10m

Fair, but it raises the question of the motives behind it. It would seem they didn't necessarily have a problem with the research, but rather with the lead researcher. There's complicated issues of academic freedom to parse here, but in principle, if you aren't happy with the work someone is doing, it's not entirely unreasonable that you'd let them go and have someone else pick up the work.

cortesoft
2 replies
21h53m

It would seem they didn't necessarily have a problem with the research, but rather with the lead researcher

This is the entire crux of the issue; do they have a problem with the lead researcher because she isn't good at her job or because she is finding things that their large donor doesn't like?

cbsmith
1 replies
21h36m

Exactly. It's easy to presume one interpretation, but it's far from clear.

ImPostingOnHN
0 replies
21h28m

Exactly. The evidence* points to the act being corrupt, but the university is free to attempt to convince people otherwise.

* - The researcher being removed without any good cause evident

gcr
0 replies
13h18m

Universities don't work that way. There's generally very little oversight over the PI of projects. The university generally wants more projects leading to more publications and grants, not less. Administrators understand that removing a PI generally means abandoning their lab's projects, so it usually doesn't happen.

boringg
3 replies
20h13m

FWIW that's definitely not gutting a team. Swapping out leaders makes a big impact but it isn't gutting a team. It could lead to the same outcome.

zbyte64
0 replies
19h0m

Imagine swapping out leaders and expecting the same outcomes. Why even bother?

omginternets
0 replies
14h36m

In academia, it very much is the same thing.

ajb
0 replies
18h20m

An academic team isn't the same as a team in a company though, right? My understanding (which could be incorrect) is that a PI is almost like the CEO of a startup which happens to have the goal of doing research, and operates in the context of a university. A PI is not like a team lead in a company . Each PI-led team is doing research independently of the rest of the department. I have the impression it's not even expected to outlive the PI's employment there.

cporios
1 replies
22h58m

Noting that the project and all its documents are publicly accessible to anyone at https://fbarchive.org/.

mjhay
0 replies
22h44m

But further work from the same leadership has been discontinued...

doctorpangloss
1 replies
22h4m

Going out and getting Washington Post, New York Times articles about your issues through "Whistleblower Aid" - it brings to mind Barack Obama's great line:

    When some activists at that meeting said they felt that their voices were not being heard, Mr. Obama replied, "You are sitting in the Oval Office, talking to the president of the United States."
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/24/us/obama-says-movements-l...

I don't work in PR, the issues I am politically active over are very local. This researcher paints a big target on her back, in an issue as amply documented as an academic firing, it isn't surprising that things are not cut and dried.

didibus
0 replies
12h42m

To be honest, there's a difference between having your issues entertained, versus taken seriously. The former is often done as political theater.

ImPostingOnHN
1 replies
23h27m

> Dr. Donovan and the TASC get sidelined along the way

this is described dismissively and in the passive voice, but it's an active action, and quite damning.

who sidelined them, and why?

it seems the answers are: the school, because the researchers upset facebook, who was giving the school money

> if he allows the Facebook project to move forward under other groups that are also within the Kennedy school, then the title of this post is pretty misleading

this is misleading: if the research is allowed to continue, it should continue under the researchers who did the research, unless there's a good reason otherwise

klyrs
0 replies
20h58m

"The school" is not a person with motive. Dr. Donovan's report strongly implicates the Dean, who maintains a personal friendship with Sheryl Sandberg, as the driver behind these actions. The remaining actors appear to be interest in saving their own necks.

Beldin
1 replies
22h34m

but if he allows the Facebook project to move forward under other groups that are also within the Kennedy school,

Move forward in the direction the dean and Facebook want, or in the direction the original team wanted to explore?

Because it doesn't seem - at all - that the two are equivalent. And it is not misleading to call out replacing a non-bribe-able PI with a susceptible or even already bribed one.

jcheng
0 replies
20h45m

I was not nearly clear or explicit enough in my comment, apologies for that. In sections 25 and 26 (page 14), the whistleblower report talks about the origins of the project. Dr. Donovan acquired the entire archive of the Facebook Files, and reached out to Dr. Latanya Sweeney, who she calls her "most trusted colleague":

I chose to work with Dr. Sweeney because she was the shoulder I leaned on when I needed to decode the politics of HKS. I regard Dr. Sweeney to be brilliant at computer science, the foremost authority on privacy in technology, and had a vision to build the FB Archive on the base of a data sharing platform that she had designed previously.

Donovan's vision was to build "a searchable archive of these documents for the public interest" and hold training workshops for other researchers. So Dr. Sweeney's lab built it, as was the plan; and held training workshops, which was a little hurtful to Donovan as she was not invited into that process.

After the fact, Sweeney summed up her view of their respective contributions in a private email to Donovan:

The technological IP (design, architecture, and implementation) in FBarchive belongs to the Lab [i.e. Sweeney] alone. No one can claim IP over the original content of course, but the Lab also has IP in the redaction strategy used. Your team contributed the citation reference used to identify each image and document, and of course, you were part of the original concept. This is the kind of details that we will document on the history page.

And implies, like it's not even worth asserting directly, that TASC's contributions are historical, not current. A couple of responses later, Donovan says:

TASC made many contributions including getting the documents and categorizing them, as well as promoting the archive in public forums, and having my team write testimonies and 1pagers, reviewing abstracts and holding office hours with students and so many meetings.

Dr. Donovan's complaints with the project as delivered seem to mostly NOT be that she wanted it to be different than it was, but rather, that the history page contains blatant lies that minimize Dr. Donovan and TASC's contributions. And also that it is incredibly unjust that she brought this highly valuable asset to the table, and without cause was not only shut out, but basically fired, and her historical contributions scrubbed. (Section 42.)

(To be clear, this is a sad and frustrating tale and if I was Donovan I'd be pissed too.)

juujian
0 replies
18h49m

The picture becomes much more clear later on. The Dean sidelined and reallocated the very generous funding which donors provided specifically for her, while also lying to the donors about this. And then winds down her research even though there is obviously demand for and interest in it. All while stringing her along. She should have been able to take her funding elsewhere if the dean didn't want her around, there is ample precedent for that. The degree of manipulation is unprecedented and amounts to the dean stealing her funding from her/her donors.

LewisVerstappen
0 replies
1d

If you're familiar with this woman's past research, you'd realize she is quite.... biased politically.

She strongly believes in increased content moderation by "fact checkers".

She's spread misinformation herself like

- Suggesting Russian disinformation on Facebook shifted the 2016 election (anyone who's run a facebook ad in their life knows how absurdly ridiculous this is)

- Advocating for increased censorship of information during COVID on lab leak hypothesis

This is just off a few minutes of reading her past work.

I'm not a fan of Facebook (in the slightest) but also am really not a fan of the type of censorship this person wants.

1vuio0pswjnm7
0 replies
18h2m
SamoyedFurFluff
23 replies
1d

This isn’t unusual in academia btw. It’s an open secret that economics departments are bought the same way— a generous donation to the department in exchange for the donor hand-picking the department chair.

nerpderp82
22 replies
23h58m

Invisible Hand indeed.

Arson9416
17 replies
23h14m

What does this have to do with the free market?

ajkjk
16 replies
23h11m

Fairly obvious, right?

Arson9416
15 replies
23h10m

No, which is why I'm asking.

fmbb
12 replies
22h48m

The current economic system where (in the US) bribes are “speech” and corporations are people unavoidably leads to things like this project getting neutered.

“The invisible hand” Adam Smith refers to are the unintended consequences from merchants’ want to keep their capital: increasing the domestic capital stock and enhancing military power for the state, i.e. protectionism etc.

More broadly and lately it refers to any unintended societal consequences from the free market.

Consequently it never means “finding a good price” which 99% of everyone using the term seems to believe.

Arson9416
11 replies
22h35m

Bribery exists in every economic system, even before economic systems existed, and is not uniquely connected to the free market. Nor are they connected to "unintended societal consequences", since bribes very clearly have a specific goal. So it doesn't make any sense.

karaterobot
4 replies
21h50m

Just wanted to say that you're completely correct and making a very reasonable statement which is not controversial. I would love to hear about an economic system in which bribery did not exist or have influence, but I have not seen any examples of that yet, in the present day or in history.

I don't agree that bribes can't have unintended social consequences. They do have specific goals, yes. But some unintended consequences of bribery would be things like discouraging honest participants, or encouraging the most corrupt people (rather than the best, on merit) to place themselves in positions of authority, so as to get bribes. All of these are unintended in the sense that neither the person giving the bribe nor the person taking the bribe are trying to bring them about per se, they're only thinking about the immediate consequences (I get what I want).

Der_Einzige
2 replies
18h41m

Uhh, Singapore? Not everywhere is corrupt you know!

karaterobot
1 replies
18h23m

Singapore's not an economic system, but rather a country. In any case, it's still got corruption. Bribery is one form of corruption, and I have no doubt whatsoever that you can bribe someone in Singapore.

https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2022/index/sgp

staunton
0 replies
13h27m

Illegally bribing someone is different from legally and secretly using money to influence the actions of institutions

Arson9416
0 replies
21h27m

I agree that they can have unintended consequences, but I wouldn't say any more or less than anything else. This is why I'm struggling with the "invisible hand" analogy, which focuses on a connection to unintended (positive) consequences.

shuntress
3 replies
18h57m

The point is that this type of corruption is inevitable when the "invisible hand" is completely unrestrained.

Arson9416
2 replies
11h11m

Bribery is a corruption that happens in every single economic system, so it has nothing to do with the "invisible hand" of capitalism. In fact, arguments could be made as to why it happens less in free markets (where an economy flows more freely) than in non-free markets (where there are artificial barriers, making bribery more effective/needed).

shuntress
1 replies
1h33m

In fact, arguments could be made as to why it happens less in free markets

Arguments "can be made" for anything. That is the worst possible justification for any position.

Corruption cannot be stopped without effort. The rules and institutions that regulate and control the market are that "effort".

Arson9416
0 replies
1h26m

Bribery is not connected to capitalism any more than it is connected to any other economic system, that's the point that you seem to be missing. People seem to want to dunk on capitalism, but it doesn't make any sense here.

ajkjk
1 replies
14h56m

"Bribery exists in every economic system" is not an argument for being okay with bribery in this system.

Arson9416
0 replies
11h15m

Good thing I didn't make that argument anywhere. My point with that statement is that bribery is in no way connected to capitalism or free markets because it exists independent of the market type.

When bribery happens in a country with a command economy, do you still say "there's that invisible hand of capitalism again"?

ajkjk
1 replies
14h58m

Well if you need it spelled out: the "invisible hand" refers to indirect social impacts of free markets which are typically meant to be good things. So any example of market-ish behavior causing things that seem incontrovertibly bad, like buying a department chair under the guise of targeted donations to influence policy to (presumably) protect a certain class of actors, is an example of the "invisible hand" doing a bad thing, hence an example of how this "feature" of free markets, often used to defend them, is actually a bad quality.

This is totally unsurprising to most people who aren't directly benefitting from an unchallenged free market and it usually seems like the "invisible hand" is brought up as a bullshit argument by those already in power to justify accumulating more power, so it's a point of bitterness, hence the OP's sarcasm.

Arson9416
0 replies
11h13m

Bribery is not "market-ish" behavior in the sense that it is connected to capitalism and free markets. But you also mention bitterness, which explains the reactions to my question. I think that means people want to be bitter at the idea of capitalism and free markets, whether or not it actually makes sense in this instance of bribery.

miohtama
2 replies
23h47m

The invisible hand has its thumb up.

ryeights
0 replies
23h41m

More like a middle finger…

kbenson
0 replies
23h21m

The invisible hand has its thumb on the scale.

isk517
0 replies
22h12m

Please pay no attention to the hand behind the curtain.

intrasight
19 replies
1d

I just read that this morning. I'm interested enough in the outcome that I put a calendar reminder 6 months out to check what happened. Doing so made me wonder if there's a service that would email me updates about legal cases like this that I would like to follow.

sertbdfgbnfgsd
7 replies
1d

Who would pay for this?

Random people like you and me wouldn't pay for something they're gonna use twice in their lifetime, and lawyers surely have something like this, possibly integrate with all the other tools they use.

gessha
4 replies
23h41m

lawyers surely have something like this

Not a lawyer and not familiar with their systems but based on my knowledge of other industries I’d say it’s not guaranteed they have a solution.

Could be good ol sticky notes and manual calendar events.

sertbdfgbnfgsd
2 replies
23h19m

This is really really naive.

TaylorAlexander
1 replies
16h58m

I do love it when people say "I am not familiar with this situation at all but" and then proceed to speculate about it having made clear they have no basis for their speculation.

gessha
0 replies
15h42m

they have no basis for their speculation

based on my knowledge of other industries

:)

freejazz
0 replies
19h34m

Yeah, check out docketbird. Also, noticed attorneys already automatically get all ECF filings.

graphe
0 replies
22h21m

Why does it need to be paid?

23B1
0 replies
16h53m

I would pay for a comprehensive AI-driven service that delivers alerting on any topic. Google alerts SUCKS for so many reasons.

I might not be aware of other services though so if anyone is – please enlighten me!

WaffleIronMaker
4 replies
1d

It's possible that a Google Alert[1] might be enough for your use case, depending on how well the legal cases are covered by Google.

[1] https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/4815696?hl=en

turminal
1 replies
23h18m

Unless Google Alert gets shut down by then.

doublerabbit
0 replies
22h52m

Or bought to silence any alarms with the terms "Facebook"

beretguy
1 replies
1d

Any non Google alternatives out there?

alwayseasy
0 replies
1d

This social listening company does one: https://alerts.talkwalker.com/alerts/

They might try to call and email you though.

johnchristopher
2 replies
1d

There are services that monitors changes on webpages so you could plug the "official" page where legal/official information about that case lives and wait for a change, maybe it would even work with a search engine results page.

natrys
0 replies
23h50m

I set up cron to run urlwatch[1] once a day on a vps, and it emails me updates to pages. It supports CSS selectors, various filters (like html2text) and so on. Combined with a little elisp to diff highlight emails in Emacs, this has one of the highest usefulness/maintenance ratio of things I self-host.

[1] https://urlwatch.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

Cthulhu_
0 replies
1d

Might be a good addition to archive.org, since they will index and re-index pages from time to time anyway and detect changes.

kbenson
0 replies
23h18m

Anything that provides a calendar and/or timed TODO/list items. Just set calendar item or the TODO item's due date 6 months out. Any OS you're using whether mobile or desktop probably has an app for this shipped with it.

bowmessage
0 replies
23h43m

You might be interested in https://www.courtlistener.com/

AlbertCory
0 replies
23h53m

"Follow up on stories we reported six months ago"

Sounds like something that anyone claiming to practice Journalism should be doing already.

TeeMassive
19 replies
23h41m

"prestigious team of online disinformation experts"

Not being the devil's advocate here, but "online disinformation" is not a credentialed field. That's like calling yourself a "truth expert".

Also the prestigious part is bogus at best. If they are then they sure don't make the headlines often.

tuwtuwtuwtuw
14 replies
23h23m

I'm not following your reasoning here. There are people working with the topic that is online disinformation. I know Swedish government have some teams who analyze disinformation campaigns, as an example. Are you saying that people who work with this area cannot be experts on the area?

graphe
7 replies
22h14m

What makes information disinformation or fake news? Who decided it?

tuwtuwtuwtuw
6 replies
21h44m

I don't understand how that is relevant to the question I asked. Are you suggesting that no one can be experts on disinformation because different people have different view on what is true? Sounds a bit silly to me. Is the earth flat or more shaped like a globe?

graphe
3 replies
21h7m

What is "the truth" about animal fats or plant oils? What is the disinformation for it?

tuwtuwtuwtuw
2 replies
20h55m

I still have no idea what point you are trying to make. I have not claimed to be an expert on the topic, I only asked why no one can be an expert.

It sounds like your view is that no one can be an expert on disinformation because some topics are disputed. That's an "interesting" take. I guess that reasoning would leave pretty few experts in the world.

mrangle
0 replies
17h6m

I only asked why no one can be an expert.

Other than the fact that "disinformation expert" is a fake expertise invented to facilitate fallacious appeal to authority in the void left by a distrusted press:

There are two answers to your question.

First, everyone attempts to derive the truth from imperfect information and therefore is a "disinformation expert".

There's no consistently guaranteed information access that makes any one person consistently an expert above most others, including Joe at his coffee table.

That type of access and divulsion used to be assumed of the MSM. They destroyed their trust, and so now "disinformation experts" demand that trust. Broadley speaking, they won't get it. And they shouldn't.

The second reason is that comprehensive presentation of any truthful information requires a presentation of all facts regarding it. Aside from the most mundane fact checking tasks, I've broadley observed "fact checkers" disseminating disinformation as much as the MSM does. Whether the method is lying by ommission or another.

graphe
0 replies
20h21m

Saying they are experts are like telling you who is sexy or not. It's subjective. Some people really consider Marx or Friedman as the truth for instance. Digging deeper in the weeds we can make claims either way.

Experts are often self appointed as well. If I was to declare myself an expert in an obscure area you don't understand by making wild claims that sound plausible it would be hard to say I wasn't and if some peers accepted it it would be even harder to deny it.

An expert shouldn't be self appointed and if nobody trustworthy calls someone an expert they shouldn't be considered one too. If you consider someone an expert on your own by their knowledge it's different.

mrangle
0 replies
17h24m

The scientific consensus is that the earth is shaped like a globe. Though, not really a globe. More like a mishapen sphere-like object. All science is never-ending discussion and consensus. Really poorly supported hypothesese can be infintely marginalized, but they can never be off-limits for discussion. If you are dealing in actual science. To insert "disinformation experts" into science to police hypothesese is, in fact, obviously anti-science. Unless one is merely speaking about misquoted quantitative data that can be corrected by referencing the actual source of the data. In actual science world, "disinformation police" is, in fact, research critique. No specific "disinformation experts" required.

TeeMassive
0 replies
19h29m

Because it implies of knowing the truth as a matter of expertise, which is just arrogance even for experts. Expertise is about knowledge, not truth.

There was also experts on lobotomy who won Nobel Prices. All of whom were assumed to be truthful and knowledgeable and yet was disinformation in its own right.

CodeWriter23
4 replies
22h40m

I can't speak for the OP but take into the current Media Matters "outing" of X over the ad placement next to anti-semitic content.

Basically Media Matters juiced the X algorithm to give them less than 10 impressions of big ad spend clients ads next to anti-semitic comments they entered on their own sock puppet accounts (with few or little followers), then passed that contrivance off as truth, stating brand-destroying anti-semitic content is rampant on X. Where are the disinformation experts now decrying MM's bullshit? Where will they be in 30-36 months after X sues MM into oblivion? Hint: likely silent at their desks. Just as they have been over numerous lies targeting non-liberal narrative-busting realities.

tuwtuwtuwtuw
1 replies
21h41m

I am not sure what point you are trying to make. It seems quite US-Politics-centric and really doesn't answer the question I asked. If you're upset about things then that's fine but please try to stay on topic.

nvm0n2
0 replies
9h27m

His point is that academic self proclaimed "misinformation experts" don't care about misinformation, only ideological warfare. They are basically just academically sponsored left wing political activists pretending to be neutral scientific researchers.

This problem is not US centric. Every western country has developed these people like a rash. Universities are overflowing with left wing radicals who spend their time on activism instead of research, the only thing that's new is the tactic of claiming to be fact checkers. It's really hard to feel sorry for the firing of someone who should never have had a job in the first place.

Vicinity9635
1 replies
22h22m

Every time I come across a "disinformation expert" they seem to be the ones spreading disinformation.

mrangle
0 replies
17h32m

Boom

mrangle
0 replies
17h37m

They can't be publicly trusted experts unless they can demonstrate that they correct disinformation at a better rate than it is delivered by the MSM. I haven't seen that. Apart from mundane fact checking chores, my observation is that referenced fact checkers lie by ommision, and other means, as much as anyone else.

And it really is late stage civ stuff. Journalists are supposed to be the "disinformation experts". This has always been a false narrative, but in recent years the public percieves enough deception from he Press that trust in their proclamations has fallen through the floor. Enter "disinformation experts" as a cheap last-ditch attempt at an appeal to authority fallacy by the same distrusted media. It will and is failing as well. As it should.

u32480932048
1 replies
22h49m

She discovered the link between support for Trump and attendance at the J6 riots.

She's basically the Francis Crick of declaring Facebook memes not entirely true.

TeeMassive
0 replies
19h42m

Sorry but what you said doesn't mean anything.

Links can be "discovered" ad infinitum.

terminous
0 replies
17h1m

Software engineering is also not a credentialed field, at least in the way other engineering fields are.

mrangle
0 replies
17h42m

They do call themselves truth experts. Nothing prestigious about being a sad, untrusted, and failed backstop for failing trust in journalism. See the fact that media calls them "prestigious" after being forced to concede their supposed fact checking role to them.

Democratic election politics being a public trust game, at their core.

scj
13 replies
1d

What I'm hearing is that universities coast-to-coast should start "researching" Facebook.

kbenson
10 replies
23h4m

You jest, but that is how a well functioning free market would handle this problem, I think. As long as the information about the payments is public (and information being available is an integral part of any free market, which some people seem to miss), then paying would be a losing proposition for Facebook in the long run since there's always another person ready to step and and start looking you'd need to pay off. At best they could hope to buy some time.

Draiken
9 replies
21h43m

There's no such thing as a "well functioning free market". It's an utopia.

What we have today is how a free market works. The invisible hand always tipping the scales. They would simply find a better way to get the outcome they want, avoiding the issue altogether (something at the federal level, make an example out of a researcher or institution, etc).

The word utopia is used a lot when anything other than capitalism is being talked about, but the free market, which is an integral part of it, definitely takes the win. We have so many "free economies" around demonstrating how much of an utopia this concept is.

golergka
4 replies
21h28m

Modern world is a utopia by any reasonable historical standard, yes.

Draiken
3 replies
17h6m

I cannot see how that could be true.

I don't know what world you live in if you deem our current society as a perfect place. Maybe you're a billionaire?

golergka
1 replies
16h30m

How many people you personally know have died of hunger? Have been killed in a robbery? How many of your brothers and sisters died before reaching the age of 10? How many of your own teeth did you have (or expect to have) at the age of 30? Have you been able to afford sugar more than 10 times in your life? How many times per year do you afford to wash yourself in hot water? How many people sleep in the same room in you? In your bed? How many fleas, ticks, mites and other insects to you usually scratch out of yourself? How many times have you been physically assaulted by someone in the last year?

Just coming from an assumption that you're an average HN reader, your answers to this question are radically different from what most of humanity would have answered before 20th century (first world) or the second half of 20th century.

Draiken
0 replies
1h40m

I agree, but that's in no way, shape or form, an utopia.

It's better than before, sure. But an utopia? Not even close.

mrangle
0 replies
16h53m

It could be true in the sense that you don't live in a cave, weren't murdered because of ever-marginally losing your physical edge at age 35, haven't died of a tooth infection, defecate indoors in a climate controlled structure, and can summon light as if by magic at any time of the day. Ignoring the rest, and acknowledging that this sounds like an aggressive answer. I don't mean it in that way. But there should be some POV on this incredibly rare era, even if it is imperfect strictly speaking. Maybe perfect is also the enemy of happy.

kbenson
3 replies
21h15m

There's no such thing as a "well functioning free market". It's an utopia.

It's relative. You seem to be confusing "well" with "perfect". Depending on your point of view, no economic system is well functioning, because there will always be ebbs and flows where people clash with the system and it works better or worse at time. I'm not sure if our version of a free market in the U.S. is closer to well functioning or not, but I don't see a problem with pointing out how it can be better, and I'm not sure why you would respond with something I interpret as "don't bother, it can't be perfect", especially when you haven't presented a better alternative.

What we have today is how a free market works. The invisible hand always tipping the scales. They would simply find a better way to get the outcome they want, avoiding the issue altogether (something at the federal level, make an example out of a researcher or institution, etc).

The counter to the invisible hand working against society instead of in tandem or for it is freely available information. In a free market economy, the answer is almost always more information because it allows individuals to act correctly, either through individual actions, or as a group through pressure on the government to regulate.

So yes, what we have today is how a free market operates (although I would argue not very efficiently, due to lots of blocks on information that exist), and this information we're discussing in this post coming out and people being able to respond to it is the first step in being able to act on it to curtail it in the future.

The word utopia is used a lot when anything other than capitalism is being talked about, but the free market, which is an integral part of it, definitely takes the win. We have so many "free economies" around demonstrating how much of an utopia this concept is.

The only person here who said that is you, so I'm not sure what you're on about. I certainly don't think it's some utopia, just a system built on emergent behavior that like any other, needs special bounds and constant attention to both keep it functioning as well as possible as well as keep it from going completely off the rails.

Draiken
2 replies
17h12m

respond with something I interpret as "don't bother, it can't be perfect"

That was not my intention. I simply had to point this out because your comment implied that a well functioning free market could somehow solve the issue. My take is that it can't, because there's no such thing.

Whether or not we should bother with improving it, is a matter for another debate. My take is that we've tried it for long enough, and small improvements simply don't work anymore. Millions of people need/want something and a small handful of powerful rich folks can deny that with no real recourse.

The counter to the invisible hand working against society instead of in tandem or for it is freely available information.

I mostly agree! But that's, once again, an utopia. Key information is still kept from the public eyes and the trend is to get more restricted to the rich and powerful as time goes on.

As an example, a few key players like Google and Meta have information on virtually every single citizen in the world, while the public has absolutely no control over it or oversight on how that's used.

I don't fully agree because of another problem that we can see almost every day: even with information, the system is unable to make any meaningful change.

We have backroom deals exposed, corruption, quid-pro-quo everywhere, and yet the majority of the responsible people/companies remain free to keep doing those. At best we get a few scapegoats or slaps on the wrist. Information alone is useless if you either have nobody that can act on it (think unregulated markets, industries, etc), or the ones that are able to, can't or won't because of the existing power structures, like the example in the article.

The only person here who said that is you

I was obviously alluding to the ever-present "communism/socialism is an utopia" argument. I never implied you said that specifically. It's just such a common argument that I assumed could be raised since I mentioned the word and I expanded on it.

kbenson
1 replies
15h45m

Whether or not we should bother with improving it, is a matter for another debate. My take is that we've tried it for long enough, and small improvements simply don't work anymore. Millions of people need/want something and a small handful of powerful rich folks can deny that with no real recourse.

I'm not sure that's true, or if that's just a prevailing emotion. Being true and feeling that way aren't the same thing. Presumably, if it's true, we can point towards examples of it, and try to quantify it.

If the answer is "no, we can't quantify it because the same people that cause it prevent us from knowing about it", well, that's an untestable assertion and very close to conspiracy theory territory, so I would push back on that, as I think anyone should. So hopefully there are some examples we can discuss.

I mostly agree! But that's, once again, an utopia. Key information is still kept from the public eyes and the trend is to get more restricted to the rich and powerful as time goes on.

Except we're seeing the counter case right here, right now? Here we have what appears to be a case of Meta with their thumb on the scale, and then with their thumb on the scale again when they're investigated. Either soemthing comes about from this, or from similar stuff later on, or I'd be tempted to say most people just don't care.

To be clear, just because you and I care doesn't mean the average person does, and if the average person doesn't and that means nothing happens, that's not a failure of the system, that's it working as expected, as our minority opinion shouldn't necessarily override theirs, no matter how much we think we're right.

As an example, a few key players like Google and Meta have information on virtually every single citizen in the world, while the public has absolutely no control over it or oversight on how that's used.

No, the public has absolute control, through petitioning for legislature and holding their representatives to account for acting, or not. Failure to exercise power is not the same as lack of power, even if it appears the same.

even with information, the system is unable to make any meaningful change.

There are many changes that happen all the time, but the system is also slow, which in some ways is a feature and some ways a problem. Being slow to change means that rapidly changing events can take a while to be dealt with, but it also means that usually there's limited damage that a change in a detrimental direction can do before it's recognized and dealt with, because the changes often come in small steps.

At best we get a few scapegoats or slaps on the wrist. Information alone is useless if you either have nobody that can act on it (think unregulated markets, industries, etc), or the ones that are able to, can't or won't because of the existing power structures, like the example in the article.

This article is the response to this problem. Harvard is ultimately responsible to the students that want to go there, the donors that donate, and the state and federal governments in which it resides and operates. Whether this results in a small loss in confidence in Harvard being able to carry out research objectively by those that pay attention, a large loss in confidence for the general public the public that Harvard can carry out research objectively and that affecting other research they do, or the federal government calling people in to investigate, we'll have to see. The latter seems unlikely, but I'm looking forward to there maybe being some increased scrutiny and coverage. It seems it's being covered by major outlets now, so congress getting interested isn't out of the question, given they've been fairly interested in this fairly recently.

I was obviously alluding to the ever-present "communism/socialism is an utopia" argument.

I wouldn't claim a free market to be a utopia, and I wouldn't think someone espousing communism or socialism would in a discussion where they are expected to support their assertions, so I don't think it's particularly useful to introduce it to the conversation here. Without someone actually calling for it, it's just a straw man argument, whether against a person or a position, and whether against me or against the traditional counter to what I presented, I don't think it serves a useful purpose. I was confused enough by it's introduction that I honestly wasn't sure what the point was.

Draiken
0 replies
5h58m

Presumably, if it's true, we can point towards examples of it, and try to quantify it.

I never went after concrete examples because, like I said, that's a matter for another discussion. But we do have very easy to find examples with a very prevalent topic: climate change.

Protests, complaints, endless coverage of it and yet... no real change. Companies now paying "carbon offsets" that have been multiple times proven to be complete bullshit, targets for emission reduction keep getting postponed and so much more that we can absolutely quantify if we want to. But it simply won't happen because it's not profitable.

Except we're seeing the counter case right here, right now?

I suppose you're hopeful this will actually result in something. I'm not so sure, unfortunately. Now it's news, in a week nobody will remember. In the end, let's no forget Meta got what they wanted: the research was stifled and now other researchers know: here lie dragons.

We have another gigantic example: Snowden literally imploded his life to get all that information out. We know so much more thanks to his sacrifice and yet what has changed? Do we now not worry that we're all spied on because this was exposed? Are we convinced the tech giants don't have backdoors to the government anymore?

Information is meaningless if we cannot act on it.

if the average person doesn't and that means nothing happens, that's not a failure of the system, that's it working as expected

If the system is designed to allow corporations and governments to control the average person, ensuring they don't care about anything meaningful, that's a very, very bad system in my book.

Socrates had issues with how democracy was built exactly because it relies on the population being educated to work. If we simply ignore that - like we do today - we end up with our current situation: the majority of people don't care and the rich and powerful get to fuck them over for profit.

You keep everyone poor and dumb, and they'll worry about surviving. Never about climate change, corruption, privacy, etc.

I simply cannot comprehend how we as a society can look at this and say: that's working as expected and I'm fine with it. [insert "this is fine" dog picture]

No, the public has absolute control, through petitioning for legislature and holding their representatives to account for acting, or not. Failure to exercise power is not the same as lack of power, even if it appears the same.

Sorry but I have to call bullshit here. The public cannot purchase lobbyists to legally bribe legislators to do whatever they want (including introducing legislation they provide to them). I can send thousands of emails to my representatives (or whatever other legal way of pressuring them) and it won't change anything. We've seen plenty of cases where even when the public does not agree with legislature, a few companies can still get what they want because they simply have much more power.

You are right in the sense that, if we did rebel, we could actually exercise our only real power. But voting and trying to convince politicians to "do the right thing" simply does not work. The system is not designed to work for the people, it's designed to work for whoever has power. At some point, the imbalance wasn't this great and we did use our power. But it was always through bloodshed and revolt that we got real change.

How many more outrageous bills have to pass despite public outcry to convince us that the system is broken?

There are many changes that happen all the time, but the system is also slow, which in some ways is a feature and some ways a problem.

I can partially agree here. By nature of being slow it does in fact prevent some very bad decisions from happening over night. However we've seen with COVID and other recent events how that slowness can be literally the death of us.

There has to be flexibility when we require drastic changes and there simply isn't. As a result people keep dying - and many more will die - because it's simply not profitable to do what's necessary.

Ultimately it's not really the speed that's the issue though (although it worsens crises), but a complete misalignment on the objective. The system is built to increase profits, not to improve human life. Changes that improve human life are merely coincidences in pursuit of profit. So even if the system is slowly working, it's working towards a goal that's almost always orthogonal to what society needs.

Lastly, even though we clearly have very different views, I appreciate your thoughts and keeping it civil. I've had many of these conversations here where it devolved into personal attacks or worse, so: thank you.

jonahbenton
0 replies
1d

Solid fundraising strategy, to be sure.

Legit ransomware.

graphe
0 replies
23h20m

We should all research Facebook. ;)

r3trohack3r
12 replies
19h34m

I'm hesitant to share this because it's completely unverifiable in any way I'd be comfortable documenting. Not my life, not my secrets to tell.

I had a close friend who did undergraduate research in a fisheries department.

They had been researching plant selection for aquaponics to increase the yield of tilapia. They had a filtration system that pushed tank water through a bed of plant roots. The plants would be harvested, processed into fish food, and fed back to the fish. On top of this platform, they'd experiment with different plant combinations to measure the impact on water quality and protein conversion.

They were seeing very high protein conversion with their plant choices (numbers high enough they gave me pause at what it would mean for society, but if I tried to throw out a number now I'd certainly get it wrong).

Recycling energy like this reduced the amount of food you'd have to put into the system, and the plants handled a good portion of the filtration for the system.

At some point, a large agriculture business with strong ties to the department offered a large grant that was understood to be contingent on this project being discontinued.

The project was abandoned and my buddy dropped out of his degree program.

jongjong
4 replies
16h21m

Well isn't that a similar story behind OpenAI drama? Big money suppressing innovation.

1letterunixname
3 replies
16h10m

Not even closely related. One is big money corrupting academia, another is startup drama.

jongjong
2 replies
16h7m

This is incorrectly assuming that all innovation happens in academia.

omginternets
1 replies
14h33m

Sigh… no.

It’s saying that this is a case of academic innovation, and that that is startup drama.

jongjong
0 replies
8h59m

I know what intentional suppression of innovation looks like. I worked in blockchain sector. I think you're underestimating the scale of it and hence you do not see that it's the same ideology behind both cases and many more cases.

snowflakeandrey
1 replies
11h22m

Forgive me if I'm being dense, but why wouldn't the researchers just go off and sell this to the customers of the large agriculture business?

FoxBJK
0 replies
4h8m

My guess is that the researchers don't "own" the research they're doing since it was being funded by the university. It's property of the university and if you take it and try to sell it now you're stealing IP.

jurynulifcation
1 replies
18h43m

Can you give any further details? This might be worth experimenting with, and I do already have an aquaculture setup.

r3trohack3r
0 replies
43m

Was a long time ago and not my research.

Superficially, focus on driving down net waste in the system.

Take the nutrient profile of tilapia waste. Compare that with the nutrient demands of plants to find candidates. Then look for plants where the majority of the biomass can be converted into food that the tilapia can digest (i.e. edible roots, stalks, leaves; the more the fish can eat the less energy you take out of the system).

IIRC at least one of the plant choices had a tuber.

IIRC there is also something about the efficiency of waste->biomass conversion for the plants at different stages of development; figuring out when the ideal time to harvest is to minimize energy loss.

rdedev
0 replies
12h11m

At that point is it legally okay to just open source whatever findings you have in hand? Do university research come with some form of NDA?

paxys
0 replies
11h49m

On one hand I absolutely believe this does routinely happen. On the other every researcher/inventor out there with a project that went nowhere claims that they were on the cusp of a breakthrough and only silenced because of the government/corporations/illuminati. I'd wager the vast majority are in the second category.

JacobThreeThree
0 replies
14h10m

Par for the course in higher education.

Corporations and wealthy donors don't give money while expecting nothing in return.

legutierr
11 replies
22h56m

Somehow the human brain by default conflates the concepts of "being prestigious" and "having integrity".

It's difficult to fight this cognitive bias that, I think, we all carry—but we must.

CodeWriter23
4 replies
22h55m

That's nurture, not nature.

gmadsen
3 replies
22h45m

im not sure completely. There is probably inherent traits related to leadership/followership , and a cognitive bias to assume integrity of leaders seems plausible. Before society, might literally meant right.

CodeWriter23
1 replies
22h37m

traits related to leadership/followership , and a cognitive bias to assume integrity of leaders seems plausible

Also learned behavior.

gmadsen
0 replies
20h50m

sure, my point still stands. It is a reasonable evolutionary hypothesis that groups that err on the side of trusting a leader succeed more that distrustful groups. Obviously there is a learned behavior component. I'm just not certain its completely that.

thaumasiotes
0 replies
20h34m

Before society, might literally meant right.

"Before society"? How many times have you seen someone argue that a particular action was morally wrong for no other reason than that it was illegal?

thaumasiotes
2 replies
22h49m

On the other hand, I have a Grimm's Fairy Tales including a story that tells how the hero visits a petty king's court and receives a promise conditional on accomplishing something impossible. Off he goes and does the thing, and the narrator makes an aside saying "Now the king would gladly have blown off the promise, but he was trapped because other people in the court had heard him make it."

anonymouskimmer
1 replies
22h25m

Regicide, and even just murder in general, is highly frowned upon these days. Back then it was de rigueur when the concept of fealty required reciprocity in the keeping of one's word.

thaumasiotes
0 replies
11h5m

I don't see the connection between your comment and mine?

dylan604
0 replies
22h43m

i must be an outlier to this default. there has been enough evidence over the years that the ivy league schools are just as shady as any other school. they just have more money to make hiding things easier. with as many laps around the sun as i have now, i'm just super suspect of pretty much anything at this point.

dang
0 replies
20h0m

We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38519267.

AndrewKemendo
0 replies
22h45m

The fact is that the opposite is usually true

abeppu
11 replies
23h16m

Setting aside the institutional failures within Harvard, shouldn't this also pose legal problems for the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation? I am certainly not a lawyer, but I thought the tax-benefits of a non-profit were supposed to be tied to some governance requirements and operating in pursuit of some mission other than profit. If when the Chan Zuckerberg foundation gives a donation to a school, an exec from Meta is then put on some Dean's council, and if the foundation's donation is used to pressure the school to advantage the corporation, then it seems like the foundation is operating as an arm of Meta, and is compromised as an independent philanthropic org.

scottyah
6 replies
23h5m

They purposely did not make the Chan Zuckerberg Foundation a non-profit so as to not be encumbered by all the laws that affect those organizations.

capableweb
5 replies
18h46m

Isn't "Foundation" a word that is usually for non-profits? I understood the different between "Charity" and "Foundation" just to be about "Public" vs "Private" organization, but both of them being non-profits. Am I misunderstanding what "Foundation" means here?

AlbertCory
4 replies
18h25m

I think I could start the Evil Foundation and as long as I don't file for 501(c)(3) status, I'm still for-profit.

shkkmo
3 replies
16h15m

The foundation here is a 501(c)(3) non profit. However it is not a public charity, which is a sub classification that comes with stricter rules and higher donation tax write-off limits.

People tend to assume all 501(c)(3)/nonproft and "public charity" are synonymous, but they aren't and that can make discussions like this confusing.

nulbyte
2 replies
14h59m

However it is not a public charity, which is a sub classification that comes with stricter rules and higher donation tax write-off limits.

It sounds like you mean public charities have stricter rules. I find the opposite to be true. There are additional rules and reporting requirements that apply only to private foundations because of the limited funding and tight control of such organizations by a close-knit group of people.

shkkmo
1 replies
2h0m

Private foundation is the default status for a 501(c)(3), you have to do extra work to qualify as a public non-profit.

https://www.irs.gov/charities-non-profits/eo-operational-req...

The rules are different, so which you view as more restrictive dependa on your perspective.

In this case, the context is discussion of this claim:

I thought the tax-benefits of a non-profit were supposed to be tied to some governance requirements and operating in pursuit of some mission other than profit

Thr greater tax benefits of public charities are indeed tied to governance requirements (specifically rules that restrict the board makeup of public charities) and mission alignment.

AlbertCory
0 replies
35m

thanks. What are these "greater tax benefits of public charities"? They both qualify for deduction of contributions.

Simon_ORourke
1 replies
22h43m

It's deeply dirty, in a sort of teflon get-away-with-anything way. Of course Harvard needs money to run, and has in the past accepted all manner of dubious donors, but implicitly receiving a payment quid pro quo to kill research is pretty low.

1letterunixname
0 replies
16h1m

What's actually dirty? Silicon Valley Community Foundation (SVCF): a tax breaks now, pay-give later DAF. It ostensibly does some community projects that are token billionaire pet projects, but it exists first and primarily to reduce taxes of the gigarich.

jonchang
0 replies
23h5m

CZI and CZF are structured as a for-profit LLC and a non-profit arm, respectively. Depending on where the money came from, it might not be a problem at all, though it could potentially jeopardize Harvard's nonprofit status. I'll leave it up to you to figure the odds of the IRS revoking that designation.

WendyTheWillow
0 replies
23h3m

Also NAL but there’s a wiiiiide gap between committing what may be a crime, and the federal government charging a crime.

Animats
11 replies
23h3m

Harvard's top management seems to be caving in to donors a lot lately.[1][2] Those were over the Israel/Palestine war. Now it's over Facebook.

[1] https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/06/business/harvard-antisemitism...

[2] https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/02/business/law-firms-antisemiti...

CobrastanJorji
10 replies
22h57m

You know, donating money to Harvard is weird. They've got a $50 billion endowment. They have enough money to do anything they want. What good would donations do in the first place?

And yet, Harvard receives something like $500 million per year in donations. Why?

kevinventullo
4 replies
22h44m

Might make more sense to think of it less as a donation and more as buying fuzzy influence.

wharvle
3 replies
22h38m

This makes more sense when one recalls that a whole lot of powerful people, including and perhaps especially politicians, come from a handful of prestigious schools, and are surrounded by advisors and assistants largely from those same schools.

[edit] and of course the real rabbit hole is private prep schools. Good luck becoming president in this century without attending one. Wonder what their donor lists look like.

anonymouskimmer
2 replies
21h50m

Good luck becoming president in this century without attending one.

Bill Clinton made it last century, and Hillary almost made it this century. I don't think the odds are that stacked against public school attendees even now.

wharvle
1 replies
19h54m

It’s mostly a recent problem, oddly enough. Only one of the last nine big-two party candidates didn’t go to prep school (Hilary, as you mention). Typically more than half the primary candidates “prepped”, over the same period. Most VPs have, too, though it’s been less totally-captured than the big chair (and you’ve got edge cases like Harris who didn’t technically “prep” but had a pretty similar situation) Seems like damn well-stacked odds, considering fancy prep school kids are a small minority of all kids. But maybe this is just a multi-decade weird run of strange fortune, and not a persistent trend.

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
19h35m

I'm sure there are social factors both driving prep school graduates to run, and helping them stand out from the crowd. Outside of just family money.

I do wonder if "prep" schools are recruiting more of the socially outstanding non-rich students than in previous years. Even so this can only have so much of an effect, as non-prep schools will always have valedictorians and social organizers regardless of who's pulled out beforehand.

low_tech_love
1 replies
22h27m

You can always spend more money, especially at an academic institution, where the money spent is not directly tied to a concrete, specific product. The staff can always go to one more conference a year, or take one more sabbatical, or buy newer computers more frequently, hire more people (whether they are needed or not; takes some weight off seniors’ backs), organize more events, spend more with communication, outreach, build something, or improve existing buildings, create a new research group, raise some salaries, etc.

ShamelessC
0 replies
22h6m

I don't think most of the options you listed are really going to put a dent in that figure.

elbear
0 replies
22h48m

Maybe rich people want to feel good that they've donated to a prestigious university.

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
21h54m

A lot of donation and endowment money is legally tied up, due to the original terms of each endowment, for specific purposes. So even though Harvard has $50 billion, it can't just spend that $50 billion on anything it wants.

This is both why people keep donating to Harvard, and how Harvard keeps marketing a 'need' for more donations. Along with, of course, either naming rights, or as an incentive to accept their child into the school (previous research has shown the ability and/or willingness of families to donate does add to the likelihood of admission).

Vegenoid
0 replies
22h41m

One reason (as indicated by these events) is to gain influence with the administration of one of the most influential universities in the world.

micromacrofoot
9 replies
1d

the age old unspoken donation "coincidence"

this is how many rich people get their kids into Harvard too, the only reason parents got caught up in the varsity blues scandal was that they were too explicit... old money donates the new library and "hopes" for the best

apwell23
3 replies
1d

the only reason parents got caught up in the varsity blues scandal was that they were too explicit

they weren't rich enough to use the route that they used.

stronglikedan
2 replies
23h51m

That's what "old money" means. They weren't old money.

lotsofpulp
1 replies
23h44m

Old money means inherited, generational wealth.

New money means wealth that was mostly based on efforts (not due to passive investments) by the current holder.

micromacrofoot1 was trying to distinguish “a lot of money” from “a little bit of money”, but old money is not the correct term for that.

From Wikipedia, the varsity blues scandal was about 33 sets of parents paying ~$25M total. That is chump change compared to donating a whole building, which new or old money can do, because they would have access to tens of millions of dollars.

micromacrofoot
0 replies
19h15m

fair, though I was thinking the context that "old money" is usually old because there's a lot of it... but new/old signaling quantity is probably less true now than ever

there's also some behavior involved, traditionally it would be a major social faux pas to ask for special treatment in a traceable way

KRAKRISMOTT
3 replies
1d

this is how many rich people get their kids into Harvard too

That's the entire point and feature of these elite institutions (more specifically, their undergraduate division and business schools), to connect wealth with brilliant people. They are the traditional social institutions of innovation and entrepreneurship before incubators like YC were a thing. If you remove the wealth aspects, then the Ivies are no different than any other research state school.

AlbertCory
1 replies
23h51m

brilliant people

I think you meant "people who'd like to join the wealthy ones, or maybe already have."

graphe
0 replies
23h14m

If you wanted to make money, you would choose business over academia. I know one brilliant math/physics researcher who wanted to go to China because they have better scientific research equipment.

kelipso
0 replies
1d

It's a great way to further entrench the influence of the rich into public life.

hinkley
0 replies
1d

Yeah. My sarcasm meter broke itself as I proclaimed:

Harvard, breaking rules for people donating new buildings?! Surely not Harvard.

bko
9 replies
23h59m

Maybe as an aside, but why should this research be done at university level? Is it expensive or require their resources?

Obviously institutions are at risk of capture by special interests. We can call them non profit but doesn't stop the economics and human nature. Same is true for politicians so oversight could make things even worse as it would be even more centralized and easier to capture .

So we should look for smaller individuals and groups to conduct research. Being public also creates a financial incentive. If your research indicates something is a fraud or very harmful you can short the stock to fund your research

_aavaa_
4 replies
23h47m

why should this research be done at university level?

I think this questions is backwards. This seems very much in line with other research already done at universities.

So we should look for smaller individuals and groups to conduct research.

Smaller individual and groups can be much more easily sued. It's much easier to spin a story about suing some rogue partisan non-profit than it is for suing academic researchers.

Being public also creates a financial incentive. If your research indicates something is a fraud or very harmful you can short the stock to fund your research

These sorts of financial incentives provide the easiest and simplest way of discrediting these groups (aside from simply ignoring them). All Meta has to say is "Don't believe a thing they say, they're simply doing it since they're shorting us".

bko
3 replies
22h43m

You didn't answer my question. Why should it be done at universities? I get that stuff like it is already done there, but why?

Short selling has a long history. Obv people don't like them but don't know any successful lawsuits. Prob a lot easier and cheaper to capture a uni than sue some short seller.

_aavaa_
2 replies
22h32m

You didn't answer my question. Why should it be done at universities?

Let me try again. One of the reasons research is supposed to be done at universities is specifically to remove financial incentives. Tenure is meant to insulate academia from having to worry about financial incentives and what is popular so they can focus on what is true.

Prob a lot easier and cheaper to capture a uni than sue some short seller.

Meta doesn't have to sue a short seller. All Meta has to do is point to the now extremely clear conflict of interest. Having such a strong conflict of interest makes it easy to cause doubt about the validity of the research. And that's good enough. Compare two following two headlines:

1. Prestigious research group at Harvard shows wrongdoing on Meta's part.

2. Opportunistic short sellers put out yet another hit piece against Meta for their own financial gain.

It's like going to get your nutritional advice from the small sample size and suspect studies put out by supplement companies. Obviously they won't publish findings that go against their financial interests, or even run the experiments in the first place.

bko
1 replies
21h54m

Let me try again. One of the reasons research is supposed to be done at universities is specifically to remove financial incentives.

Wasn't this whole thing preempted by financial incentives playing a role in Harvard dropping the case. My point is financial incentives exist either way. The difference is that FB can point and say "Harvard says we're great and they have no financial incentives to lie *wink*" or we can say "sure I have a lot to gain if I'm right but that doesn't mean I'm wrong".

So you kind of made my point for me. It's the high minded veneer of objectivity I am most against

_aavaa_
0 replies
18h25m

The deifference for me is that this is, allegedly, Harvard acting unethically and against how we expect them, as a research university, to act.

There exists no such expectations on other private companies.

This is a failure of the model, not business as usual.

godelski
0 replies
23h43m

but why should this research be done at university level?

Where else should it be done?

Supposedly academia is supposed to be the place that is free from economic incentives. Think about how we use the word "academically." As well as being a third party that is independent of the government. Even non-profits have to worry about economic value, just not about shareholders.[0]

I say supposedly because lots of academia is already captured by industry (or other entities). Computer science is a good example considering how common it is to work with industry partners. Sciences are mixed and there's good reason to work with industry that is highly rational and can provide huge benefits. But it does come with risk of capture. It should also be worrying if academic research becomes essentially an extension of a company's research arm because it does reduce innovation and exploration of ideas as research is pushed towards profit motivations but that's a very different kind of risk than the one discussed.

[0] In the last few decades we've adopted a mindset that everything should be a business model. This is true for academia. Maybe everything shouldn't be a business model. That doesn't mean things have to run at a loss but schools definitely are profit seeking in their current forms. The priority is not placed on education and research and thus presents an existential risk to these institutions. One could claim the death has already come but I'm not convinced.

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
22h3m

Is it expensive or require their resources?

You have a major knowledge gap here. Other than for literal lab start up funds for brand-new professors universities typically don't grant much money, if any at all, to their professors for research. The professors are expected to seek outside funds, of which a good chunk then goes to the university for the university's costs.

This may not be the same at Harvard, I genuinely don't know. But it's typical at most research universities.

ajmurmann
0 replies
23h53m

why should this research be done at university level?

If it's important research it's good if it's done by a renowned university that brings oversight and credibility for the research. Much better than the same researcher doing it in their basement, unless they are already famous and have their own following. Of course incidents like this and cases where research gets influenced into any direction hurt that benefit of research being done at a university.

Beldin
0 replies
23h46m

Maybe as an aside, but why should this research be done at university level?

Why not? Universities perform research - typically free from outside interference (academic freedom). And there are good reasons for academic freedom (which I'm not getting into here). As a consequence, academic freedom limits the reasons to stop this research from happening at a university.

So what is it in the contents of this research that makes you think it is not at an academic level or a violation of ethical standards?

1970-01-01
7 replies
23h51m

Laws capping these massive donations need to pass or nothing will change. $500M is more than enough money to operate any school, and Harvard simply does not need more money in its pockets. https://www.statista.com/statistics/221147/the-20-richest-co...

Der_Einzige
3 replies
18h38m

I’d support the full destruction of Harvard and MIT taking all of its assists and land. I want our universities to accept based on merit, not fat donations. The traditional ivys are simply bad for society and our elite schools should be elite because the majority of students their are truly gifted (i.e Stanford, caltech, MIT) not because their from the ultra rich

shuntress
0 replies
1h45m

This seems much too extreme.

asylteltine
0 replies
17h15m

I agree. Harvard Yale and the rest of them are for rich elitist assholes who give each other jobs. It’s bad for society much like discriminating based on race like Harvard did

1970-01-01
0 replies
18h31m

Comparing MIT and Harvard is apples and oranges. Or perhaps Ivy and Apples.

shuntress
2 replies
18h51m

$500M is more than enough money to operate any school

I'm not saying I disagree with regulation related to massive donations but you need to check your numbers.

https://finance.harvard.edu/financial-overview

"Total operating expenses increased by $482 million or 9% to $5.9 billion."

1970-01-01
1 replies
18h35m

Same PDF states "The University generated an operating surplus of $186 million"

shuntress
0 replies
1h52m

I'm not sure what you mean by this.

Are you trying to say a school should always lose money? Or that they should always spend exactly as much as they earn?

Either way, it cost Harvard way more than $500 million to operate for a year.

forward1
6 replies
1d

500MM to avoid Harvard scrutiny - not a bad deal on 40MMM quarterly profit. It probably doubles as a tax deduction as well. Free market capitalism at its finest.

lainga
3 replies
1d

wouldn't 40MMM be 40 trillion (40M-million)...?

klyrs
2 replies
23h57m

I believe that the M stands for "mille," or thousand.

astrobe_
1 replies
22h54m

If it's thousand, it should be a K with the metric system... But I guess 40KKK would raise some eyebrows. Yet another reason to keep imperial units.

klyrs
0 replies
20h49m

If it's metric, k is not capitalized, M means million and G means billion. No need to get Godwin involved.

But it isn't metric, it appears to be a perversion of roman numerals.

wahnfrieden
0 replies
1d

Free market means businesses decide the regulations placed on the public, for private gain

trompetenaccoun
0 replies
22h55m

Of course this is tax exempt, corporations can deduce up to 25% of their tax bill in the US afaik. Long live charitable giving!

joshspankit
4 replies
23h38m

I’m inspired to propose a new term alongside Big Tobacco, Big Energy, Big Pharma, and Big Tech:

Big Social.

xss2f
3 replies
23h19m

There is 'Big Tech' already available. Plus America has raised interest rates, which means market capture/empire defense is getting more and more expensive, so expect all of them to become small soon.

joshspankit
2 replies
20h45m

Big Tech as a term doesn’t feel like it encompasses the specifically social influence of some of the social media companies (Meta could almost be called Big Social just by itself, but that’s a different conversation).

The reason it made sense to me is that when the article said “Big Tech” it didn’t feel right.

anonymouskimmer
1 replies
19h44m

I agree with you, but the use of "tech" to mean "computer-centric technology" has already poisoned the term a bit anyway.

joshspankit
0 replies
17h53m

Yeah fair point

amir734jj
4 replies
1d

People forget that private universities are for profit businesses.

rsynnott
1 replies
18h3m

So, coming from a country where universities are either non-profit or owned by the state… how does this work? Like, surely Harvard isn’t paying anyone dividends? It’s not actually a literal for-profit entity, is it?

terminous
0 replies
17h3m

Basically the only thing a US nonprofit can't do is give dividends to investors. The nonprofit has to funnel any unspent profit to itself as an endowment, but can also have obscenely high salaries for administrative staff.

orangesite
0 replies
23h16m

People also forget how recent that shift was and just how brittle the reasoning behind it is.

93po
0 replies
1d

while technically non-profits, they are absolutely profit focused, as are the people in control of them

karaterobot
3 replies
21h56m

[Harvard] also denies that she was fired, saying she “was offered the chance to continue as a part-time adjunct lecturer, and she chose not to do so.”

I have not read her filing, or followed her specific research, so I have no opinion about the possible merits or conspiracy theories regarding winding down her project. But, that statement by Harvard is suspicious. You take someone who is high profile, doing their own research, and offer them basically an insulting part time job (sorry to my adjunct lecturer friends, you know what I mean) and say "well, we didn't fire her, it was her choice." It would be like having a Director level position at a company, and being told your department was shutting down, but you could stay on as a part time contractor if you want. You just soft-fired her and tried to give yourself cover.

thomastjeffery
1 replies
21h35m

I don't know how it would be at a Harvard school, but all the adjunct professors I have ever known (working for large, but not ivy-league universities) were making significantly less than the part-time software contractors I have known.

teachrdan
0 replies
21h13m

I went from being an adjunct instructor at a California community college to a software engineer. Now I earn more in a month than I used to make in a year. And the more prestigious a school, the worse the pay in a lot of cases. Like I made more at my CC than I would have made teaching at UC Berkeley, which is by some measures the #15 university in the US!

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
21h46m

Yeah, this is called "constructive dismissal" in the real world.

byyoung3
3 replies
23h25m

next post: Y combinator removes Hardvard/Meta post after 1B investment from Meta

skilled
0 replies
22h17m

The comments were moved from another thread to here since the original submission didn’t have a lot of substance and some people were complaining.

A bit of a dilemma in the karma sharing department as that feature is not yet implemented.

But seeing as how this story got 1,000 points in 2 hours in the original submission, it should probably be back on top.

——

E: More context here,

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38521109

maxwell
0 replies
22h22m
kjkjadksj
0 replies
23h14m

There have been some comments that were deleted as soon as I hit reply…

blindriver
3 replies
22h37m

Is this a surprise? All of these universities are known to bow down to the biggest wallets, so why on earth would anyone expect that they wouldn't can any investigations to someone who donated $500 million? I'm shocked that anyone else is shocked.

harry8
0 replies
15h0m

Whether you are surprised or not is barely relevant. It is newsworthy and worth discussing particularly when there is concrete evidence on which to make or fail to make a case.

"This surprises you?!" Is a statement that contributes nothing. The occurrence of people doing wrong is not surprising, it is frequently shocking. The fallout when such people are caught out is worth noting.

ben0x539
0 replies
19h17m

I assume people are less shocked and more upset in, you know, that weary and disappointed way. Sometimes it's good to loudly complain about bad things happening even if you're not surprised about them happening!

LightHugger
0 replies
19h20m

I suppose each one of these posts is a lesson to at least somebody about how widespread institutional corruption is.

kogus
2 replies
1d

The surprise to me is that anyone would ever expect companies like X or Facebook to pay more than lip service to the idea of being an open public platform. These are private companies who want to

  1) Attract a lot of eyeballs
  2) Sell ad space in front of those eyeballs
That's all. To bastardize a Lincoln quote[1]:

  My paramount object in this struggle is to make a profit
  and is not either to save or to destroy free speech.
  If I could make a profit without promoting any free speech I would do it,
  and if I could save it by promoting all free speech I would do it;
  and if I could save it by promoting some free speech and forbidding other
  free speech, I would also do that.
My point being, if you want to say something controversial, host it yourself. It's childish to expect businesses to host your content when it attracts the ire of regulators who can threaten their business, or when the content directly threatens their business by causing people to leave.

[1]http://www.abrahamlincolnonline.org/lincoln/speeches/greeley...

afavour
1 replies
1d

I don’t really see how your comment is at all relevant to the topic at hand. The accusation is that Facebook used a donation to Harvard to silence a critic, it has absolutely nothing to do with whether that criticism is published on Facebook or not.

kogus
0 replies
20h15m

I guess you are right; I kind of fly off the handle when I see this kind of topic come up. But the underlying premise of the research in question is that Facebook should be an unbiased, moderated forum for open public discourse. I just don't see how anyone could reasonably expect that to happen.

joshe
2 replies
21h17m

Harvard's actions are also consistent with her not doing good research. Note that she was not snapped up by another institution to be faculty, just a "tenure track position". One red flag is that the reporter cites all the times she talked to media and congress. A good indicator that it was superficial and headline driven work.

I'm sure she was a valuable source for reporters needing dramatic quotes on a slow news day, but really there should be more heft than that.

krick
0 replies
21h6m

More than that, the reporter mentions "donors who contributed millions of dollars to her work", implying how valuable her "research" was. But given the nature of that "research" you could also ask yourself, if this isn't basically the same kind of "donation" as Facebook being accused of here, just different beneficiary.

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
19h40m

Donovan was recently hired for a tenure-track professorship at Boston University.

A tenure-track professorship is faculty. So probably an assistant professorship.

gsmo
2 replies
23h34m

Not excusing what Harvard and Zuckerberg did. Joan Donovan is not an advocate for transparency and open discourse, either. Google her name and you will find she is quite alright with censoring.

johnmaguire
1 replies
23h30m

This comment would be more interesting if you provided specifics.

hash9
0 replies
21h16m

Had a quick look and Donovan is a board member of Check My Ads [1], "an organization that pushes advertisers to ditch right-leaning media" and they've wrote articles in favour of social media bans [2]. They're probably referring to that.

1. https://checkmyads.org/about/

2. https://www.wired.com/story/you-purged-racists-from-your-web...

chernevik
2 replies
23h43m

Doesn't matter even if true.

Anyone wanting to be taken seriously on "disinformation" would get as far away as possible from a place like Harvard in the first place.

akaij
1 replies
23h25m

I don't even understand what you mean. Care to elaborate?

u32480932048
0 replies
22h41m

The epitome of hegemony and privilege can't credibly act as an arbiter of truth, particularly in the current milieu, where it's simultaneously a bastion of The Oppressors™ and The Colonists™ as well as one of those liberal colleges indoctrinating The Children with Communism™ and/or Socialism™.

In short, few people actually care what Harvard has to say because it's popularly perceived as a mouthpiece for The Establishment.

cced
2 replies
21h21m

was the title changed to say that the person is a propagandist? seems like this is trying to discredit them

skilled
0 replies
20h43m

Not at all. Propaganda as in disinformation, as in that is the title of the Washington Post article.

ben0x539
0 replies
19h15m

Uh, I'm reading it to mean a scholar researching propaganda committed by other people, not a scholar engaging in propaganda or developing new propaganda tech.

wolverine876
1 replies
23h57m

It fits a larger, apparently organized campaign to suppress any counter-disinformation efforts, in government, academia, and private organizations.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2023/09/23/online-...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2023/11/30/biden-f...

The U.S. government has stopped warning some social networks about foreign disinformation campaigns ...

...

University academics and disinformation research groups are also in limbo. Many are seeking affordable legal representation to defend themselves against mounting cases and reevaluating their communication with industry and the public.

“The trust and safety workers are gone. The relationships with external researchers is now gone,” said Anika Collier Navaroli, senior fellow at the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University and a former senior Twitter policy official. “And now this third piece of the actual information from the government is gone. … So we’re basically unprotected.”

----------

Think how crazy that is - who is in favor of disinformation? How can universities - even Harvard - set precedents of not protecting open inquiry or their faculty, which will not stop here, and even indirectly support disinformation, the main threat to their mission of creating and disseminating knowledge. And as usual, there is no leadership; the Biden administration's answer to all problems is to avoid confrontation at all costs.

wolverine876
0 replies
23h52m

@dang, if you see this comment: Is there a bug in the ranking algorithm? A substantial comment, with an almost immediate upvote, drops 3/4 of the way down the page beneath many one-liner comments (not criticizing them, just observing).

(I don't need a fix here, just pointing out some apparent bug.)

u32480932048
1 replies
22h55m

Donovan co-wrote a widely-read study that discovered that a significant number of participants in the January 6 attack on the Capitol were driven by their support for President Trump. [1]

It's outrageous that Harvard won't fund such an insightful, groundbreaking researcher.

Hopefully, another university will step up and help us discover if there is any possible link between Zuck and Meta.

  [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Donovan

anonymouskimmer
0 replies
19h45m

It's outrageous that Harvard won't fund such an insightful, groundbreaking researcher.

TFA flatly tells that she brought in her own funding from outside grants. Like the vasy majority of academic researchers do. She claims that Harvard is keeping this money even though it was dedicated to her research agenda.

Though Donovan’s contract was supposed to keep her on the job through the end of 2024, her superiors took away her ability to start new projects, raise money or organize large events, she alleges. They kept the money she had brought in, including more than $1 million from Craigslist founder Craig Newmark that he wanted specifically to go to her research project, according to documents quoted in the declaration. Newmark declined to comment.

It's right there in the article.

People have wrong ideas as to what kinds of funds and resources academic researchers actually have access to from their employing institution.

krick
1 replies
21h19m

Honestly, not sure on which side I am. Facebook being a criminal organization is nothing new. Harvard (and pretty much any other university) being a criminal organization is nothing new as well. But, man, "propaganda scholar"…

jongjong
0 replies
16h12m

I had the same thought. There's no good side. Just the corrupt going against the corrupt and seeing who can spin the most elaborate tangled web of lies to 'prove' their point.

hathym
1 replies
23h36m

It's hard to beleive why such an immense sum of money is being funneled into warping the truth, and to make the extermination of an entire population of innocent people appear justified.

graphe
0 replies
23h18m

Who is exterminating who in the article? It just says harmful to society.

eggy
1 replies
1d

It makes you wonder how much the Zucherbergs influenced the 2020 election with "Zuckerbucks". They were cleared by the Feds, but then even that investigation becomes suspect with these large sums of money and influence. Conservatives claimed it went towards bolstering voting in largely Democratic regions, or in a biased distribution and application of the funds.

oaththrowaway
0 replies
23h34m

I hope you aren't insinuating election fraud!!!

bentt
1 replies
1d

It's fascinating how we've come to this, where we've let our society be influenced so profoundly by social media platforms and the men who run them. It's bad and I hope we can eventually diffuse the power that's been concentrated in their hands.

But they're not the same, these men. Only one of them really scares me. What scares me about Zuck is observable in his public behavior. He knows EXACTLY what he's doing and saying at all times. That's why when stuff like this comes out, you can be assured it was no coincidence, and you have to face the fact that he doesn't care.

droopyEyelids
0 replies
1d

I agree with the sentiment, but don't think "let our society come to this" is the right framing.

This is how the USA has always been run, except in the past the billionaire class created the whole university to shape society. Like JD Rockefeller and the University of Chicago, which continues to have a profound political influence on the entire field of Economics.

It's absolutely pernicious and we normal people do need to fight it every way we can.

balozi
1 replies
1d

A tiny window into how Harvard's $35 billion endowment was built. The story of why the ultrarich give generously to a an ultrawealthy institution.

cjmb
0 replies
23h57m

$35 billion?

I regret to inform you the number has gone up substantially since you last checked it

Metacelsus
1 replies
1d

Harvard isn't about "veritas", it's about $$$.

jayavanth
0 replies
1d

verita$

tempodox
0 replies
1d

No university education would be complete without a practical demonstration of how corruption works. /s

ta988
0 replies
1d2h
stainablesteel
0 replies
1d

the administration taking more money for their hedge fund can force students out of their right to a free investigation

kick out the administrators, schooling would cost less without them

srameshc
0 replies
23h57m

I wonder if some non profit org can take this task forward and what would be the challenges ?

sertbdfgbnfgsd
0 replies
1d

One: Reward and Punishment Superresponse Tendency

I place this tendency first in my discussion because almost everyone thinks he fully recognizes how important incentives and disincentives are in changing cognition and behavior. But this is not often so. For instance, I think I’ve been in the top five percent of my age cohort almost all my adult life in understanding the power of incentives, and yet I’ve always underestimated that power. Never a year passes but I get some surprise that pushes a little further my appreciation of incentive super-power.

https://fs.blog/great-talks/psychology-human-misjudgment/

say_it_as_it_is
0 replies
1d

Why was Harvard dedicating resources to investigate Facebook in the first place? What kind of academic research was it conducting? "Our hypothesis is that Facebook censored right-wing disinformation campaigns" doesn't have academic value.

rf15
0 replies
21h53m

Sadly the current normal, and has been for some time. It's sad to see an educational institution deal so wholeheartedly in intentional and active disinformation.

nazka
0 replies
1d

Wow and she is just 18 yo.

myth_drannon
0 replies
23h25m

$500M is a lot of money for one university, especially as bad as Harvard. Insane. But let's not forget that's a common practice. Qatar and et al. compromised many humanities departments. Oil money helps fund pro-Palestine protests in these universities. Now they need to show the money was well spent.

https://www.calcalistech.com/ctechnews/article/jwhsqhrat

meroes
0 replies
1d

Remember students cheating is against our academic integrity policy!

m3kw9
0 replies
1d

Standard tool of the trade in big cos

jruohonen
0 replies
1d2h

"The filing raises questions about the potential conflict of interest created by Big Tech’s influence at research institutions that are called upon for their expertise on the industry."

jmyeet
0 replies
22h47m

These elite institutions have shown themselves to have absolutely no credibility on independence, freedom of expression or any of the other virtues they continaully extol after their actions of the last 2 months [1][2].

Take a look over the law faculty and you'll find famed Jeffrey Epstein defender and hospitality enjoyer Alan Dershowtiz [3] but it's OK, he kept his underwear on while getting a massage [4].

Epstein himself bought influence at Harvard and even had his own office there [5].

As for the whistleblower claims, they might be true. I wouldn't be surprised. Never forget though that you're only hearing one side. Would Mark Zuckerberg really spend $500 million to silence a study where the researcher could no doubt walk out and find someone to fund it without too much trouble?

[1]: https://www.politico.com/news/2023/11/09/harvard-president-c...

[2]: https://www.forbes.com/sites/mollybohannon/2023/11/09/harvar...

[3]: https://www.vox.com/identities/2019/7/30/20746983/alan-dersh...

[4]: https://www.theroot.com/alan-dershowitz-sure-i-got-a-massage...

[5]: https://apnews.com/article/39cfba1a1ed7304d8aab32d63553eebd

h2odragon
0 replies
1d

The "Facebook Whistleblower" media circus consumed a lot of Oct 2021.

https://www.politico.com/news/2021/10/20/tech-billionaire-ai...

I wonder what the grand total spent was here? "PR expenses"

gigatexal
0 replies
17h58m

All the researcher who fudged data needed to do to save face is to own it and make amends. But lashing out and blaming doesn’t help.

gessha
0 replies
23h34m

The better move for the Harvard team is to pivot to investigating Facebook’s big name adversaries (Apple?) and aim to get them on the board turning the university into a corporate influence battleground. \s

fsckboy
0 replies
20h48m

so much drama, but I was not learning enough about what is actually going on so I did some simple searching.

TL;DR if you believe that there is a (quoting Hillary Clinton) "vast right-wing conspiracy" that the govt, media, social media, and academia should be coordinated and marshalled to contain, you're on her side. She is the one who figured out that Jan 6th was "in favor of" Trump, see below. But the skullduggery may be of a more pure nefarious nature, she had a non faculty staff position and got fired, but she wants to be treated as an "academic" in the sense of the academic freedom that goes with professorships.

Here's her wikipedia page trimmed down to essentials.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_Donovan

Donovan's expertise is in examining internet and technology studies, online extremism, media manipulation, and disinformation campaigns

As Director, she published a number of impactful research papers and books.

Donovan co-wrote a widely-read study that discovered that a significant number of participants in the January 6 attack on the Capitol were driven by their support for President Trump.

In September of the same year, Donovan released a book titled "Meme Wars: The Untold Story of the Online Battles Upending Democracy in America," which explores the spread of right-wing political conspiracy theories through online media.

Donovan earned her PhD in Sociology and Science Studies from UCSD, and was a postdoc at the Institute for Society and Genetics at UCLA where her expertise was social movements, technology, and white supremacist's use of DNA ancestry tests.

She later held the role of Research Lead for the Media Manipulation Initiative at Data and Society, and mapped how interest groups, governments, political operatives, corporations, and others use the internet and media to disrupt social institutions.

Donovan went on to lead the Technology and Social Change Research Project at Harvard Kennedy School and teach the class Media Manipulation and Disinformation Campaigns.

She joined the Boston University College of Communication in September 2023 as a tenure-track assistant professor.

Donovan has authored over 35 articles, paper, and books [10] including:

How news organizations should cover white supremacist shootings, PBS NewsHour

Big Tech Companies Are Struggling With How To Best Police Their Platforms

Unlike Us Reader: Social Media Monopolies and Their Alternatives

Navigating the Tech Stack: When, Where and How Should we Moderate Content?

Toward a Militant Ethnography of Infrastructure: Cybercartographies of Order, Scale, and Scope across the Occupy Movement.

c5karl
0 replies
1d2h

Here's a "gift" link: https://wapo.st/3Nb5tm8

asylteltine
0 replies
1d

Just a coincidence I’m sure!

apstats
0 replies
1d

The linked blog doesn't actually include any details and is instead just a vitriolic series of paragraphs from what sounds like an angry fired employee.

It's hard to actually believe anything about this without having specific examples of what was done.

The title is pretty farcical given this.

anticorporate
0 replies
1d

Mods: I'm not sure how I managed to grab this URL, but I believe the canonical version is actually https://whistlebloweraid.org/joan-donovan-press-release/

TheGuyWhoCodes
0 replies
1d

This shouldn't be surprising at all. Harvard and other American universities have taken "donations" from foreign countries for years to hire the "correct" professors to push agendas (and raise the next generation of leaders), just look at the amount money flowing from Qatar for example.

Why taking bribes from tech giants is any different?

Veritas indeed.

SV_BubbleTime
0 replies
1d

If you know anything about public policy, Michael Bloomberg's association to Harvard, the Joyce Foundation, and largely anything about behind the scenes at Ivy Leagues at all...

You would know this is typical modus operandi for Harvard.

I_am_tiberius
0 replies
1d

It's always good to see how my fellow tech bros act in interviews vs how they truly act.

Dowwie
0 replies
22h9m

What happened here was a massive donation was made. At some random point, someone in a position of power at Harvard noticed that a team was pissing on Mark's leg, and so put an end to it. Mark probably couldn't care less about the research, yet the optics about Harvard's treatment of him were at stake.

1letterunixname
0 replies
16h6m

It's SOP for honest, factual dissidents who speak out in academia to be ground into the dust because institutional reputation and money must flow.