The link above is for the petition
Here is the letter:
Our Letter To WhatsApp:
WhatsApp needs to implement these product changes during polling days and in the month before and the month after elections:
- Add friction to forwarding messages: Reduce the ease with which messages can be forwarded on the platform by adding one additional step which nudges users to pause and reflect before they forward content.
- Add disinformation warning labels to viral content: Automatically add clear “Highly forwarded: please verify” warning labels to viral messages, in addition to the “forwarded many times” label currently in use.
- Reduce WhatsApp’s broadcast capabilities: Disable the Communities feature and also limit the size of broadcast lists to 50 people and cap their usage to twice a day.
Without decisive action from WhatsApp, disinformation attacks will likely scale up in 2024, aimed at manipulating and undermining elections affecting half of the world’s population. WhatsApp must act to change its product to protect election integrity.
Let’s see…who owns WhatsApp?
Mark Zuckerberg.
Yeah don’t get your hopes up.
WhatsApp is a huge vector for misinformation across the world. This is exactly the kind of specific demand people should be making of them to force some level of responsible behaviour
“Please verify” is not enough of a red flag to overcome confirmation bias. People have to be reminded to seek disconfirming evidence. “Highly forwarded link is likely propaganda, consider the writers motivations and other views on the subject.”
Whatsapp link previews are rendered at meta servers. They could display any propaganda or fake news warnings they wanted on those previews.
The fact that we’re having to ask Meta nicely to not screw up our elections after everything they’ve done is pretty dire straits. It’s a nice gesture from Mozilla, anyway.
A downside to a statement like this would be the ‘crying wolf’ effect. If that message pops up on information they know to be true, where it’s being shared because it is important or relevant, then people are less likely to care.
A neutral message would help prevent that
Tough one to get right, isn’t it? I take your point, but I fear the power of confirmation bias might be too great.
In general, I don’t like rules about who’s allowed to talk about elections, because they can just as easily be turned against the people, but these seem fairly balanced. They’re not controlling the content of the messages.
Meta: Yeah, nah…
I thought Mozilla was a FOSS organization whose goal it was to defend an open Internet with free communication?
Here they are putting out a blog post that says “WhatsApp should use the power it has over its users to implement antifeatures that their users might not want and could remove if it were FOSS”.
What the hell kind of world are we living in again?
https://www.mozilla.org/en-CA/mission/
Our mission is to ensure the Internet is a global public resource, open and accessible to all. An Internet that truly puts people first, where individuals can shape their own experience and are empowered, safe and independent.
I would say that is a better mission than just promoting “free communication”. There’s more nuance to this situation than that
Are you new to the hypocrisy of FOSS nerds?
It seems like messaging services are particularly prone the misinformation campaigns, since it is much more difficult to audit what is happening on the platform. How is a service like messenger or WhatsApp (both meta)going to monitor the content of messeges in a way that is safe to users? How would researchers identity and track information?
I know that the most outlandish content I see as a highly connected individual tends to come from these platforms. I do my best to educate when I see it, but I doubt it has much of a lasting impact.
It’s depressing and a little frightening to know how easily and cheaply our electorate is manipulated, and to see it happening in real time.