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Ukraine And The Limits Of Russia’s Social Media PowerThe Kremlin is pulling its usual tricks. Here's why they're falling flat.
Welcome to Big Technology, and warm greetings to those who attended my Q&A with Professor Sherman at Columbia Business School. Programming note: On Friday 3/4 at 1 p.m. eastern, Square co-founder (and this week’s podcast guest) Jim McKelvey will take questions in a Clubhouse-style discussion I’m hosting on LinkedIn. You can find it here. As European powers rallied behind Ukraine this week, Russia’s supposedly formidable social media operation seemed quiet. Russia’s troll farms once appeared capable of shaking a U.S. presidential election. But now, Ukraine’s cause was so popular — with assists from Twitter and TikTok — that even neutral Switzerland was coming to its aid. You’d think Russia, given the hype, would deliver a strong counterpunch. But so far nothing’s landed. That Russia is losing the information war so badly — despite its best efforts — indicates that social media’s power to influence world affairs may not be what many imagined. To convince people to follow a cause, you must tap into some reality they’re experiencing on the ground. And no matter how skilled the Kremlin’s social media operatives are, they can’t convince people to see something that’s not there. Ukraine is winning support in this war because Russia is violating its sovereignty. There’s nothing the trolls can do to convince people otherwise. “People click and engage and respond to content they see for a reason,” said Katie Harbath, Facebook’s former head of elections. “It usually taps into something that they're feeling in real life.” In recent years, many of us have developed a form of social media determinism, believing that what happens online is responsible for society’s good and evil. While social media does influence our lives, sometimes in horrible ways (see: Myanmar), the problems that emerge on these platforms are almost always manifestations of the physical world’s ills. It’s easier for us to talk about ways to fix Facebook than our root problems, so we hear a lot about Facebook. But society’s core issues will always be more important. Faith in institutions, for instance, continues to drop, and people are seeking alternatives. As health, news, financial, government, and religious pillars struggle to regain credibility after faltering during Covid, many are finding new sources of information, investment, and care. Focusing on social media content moderation may help limit the consequence — the spread of bad information — but it will only paper over the problems until we look deeper. War, of course, is different than elections, where small numbers of votes can change an outcome. In democracies, social media manipulation can be damaging, and the platforms must watch for it vigilantly. But political parties that obsess over social media policy as a substitute for introspection miss the plot. Only 8% of Russians wanted the country to invade Ukraine, despite state control of their media. That’s interesting considering how quickly the U.S. and Europe moved to boot the Kremlin-sponsored RT from their airwaves. The move will likely have less impact than its advocates imagine — though it’s good RT is gone — because RT or not, no propaganda campaign can conceal what’s happening in Ukraine right now. Together with LEXLEX has created a new way to invest in real estate. LEX turns individual buildings into public stocks via IPO. Now you can invest, trade, and manage your own portfolio of high-quality commercial real estate. Any US investor can open a LEX account, browse assets, and buy shares of individual buildings. LEX opens up direct and tax advantaged ownership in an asset class that has previously been inaccessible to most investors. Explore LEX’s live assets in New York City and upcoming IPO in Seattle. Sign up for free and get a $50 bonus when you deposit at least $500. What Else I’m ReadingFiona Hill on Putin. Anne Applebaum on the war. Matt Levine on the sanctions. Julia Ioffe on Europe’s 9/11. Where the conflict goes from here. Melinda Gates speaks. Instagram is shutting down IGTV. Amazon Go was just the start. TikTok is under investigation. Mike Isaac speaks about Super Pumped. It’s back to the office at the Googleplex. More on LinkedIn’s podcast network. What’s next for independent journalists. Baseball’s self-inflicted wound. Number Of The Week+7%Bitcoin’s price increase this week, amid sanctions in Russia Quote Of The Week“If the bubble pops, are we going to find value in those bored apes?”— Tim O'Reilly, who coined the term “Web 2.0,” in an interview with me this week about Web3 Advertise with Big Technology? Advertising with Big Technology gets your product, service, or cause in front of the tech world’s top decision-makers. To reach this group of 12,000+ plugged-in tech insiders, please reply to this email. This Week On Big Technology Podcast: What's Next For Our Crazy Economy — With Square Co-Founder Jim McKelveyJim McKelvey is the co-founder of Square, chair of the St. Louis Fed, and founder of Invisibly. He joins Big Technology Podcast to discuss whether the Fed should still hike interest rates given the markets' slowdown and the conflict in Ukraine. Stay tuned for a discussion of how Jim tolerates risk, why he's not building his new startup on the blockchain (aka: Web3), and a preview of our SXSW featured session: The Future of The Data Economy: Putting People First, taking place March 11 in Austin. You can listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Thanks again for reading. Please share Big Technology if you like it! Also, click the heart on this thing if you like feeling fresh and happy :) Questions? Email me by responding to this email, or by writing alex.kantrowitz@gmail.com News tips? Find me on Signal at 516-695-8680 See you next Thursday!
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