• Delphia@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Yeah, they used paid models to do some weird shit who took the job and by hashtagging it, retweeting it and sharing it on Lemmy you just put the PaloAlto logo in front of millions more people…

    Its almost like their plan worked perfectly

      • MataVatnik@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Like when people say nationstates and corporations are astroturfing lemmy, I’m sure bruh, manipulating all those thousands of people will have dire geopolitical outcomes.

        • pop@lemmy.ml
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          2 years ago

          This is the same ignorant shit as “I don’t mind surveillance, because i’ve got nothing to hide.”

          Marketing agencies and the likes actually like new platforms as they rarely have strict spam prevention mechanism and analytics to prevent astroturfing, multiple accounts, automation, proxies and everything relating to brigading.

          Do you think automating some shit posting on an online forum costs a million dollar or something?

          An intern could code a bot in an hour and add in to the already operating workflow. There are also ready-made products that just fill in forms and do social shit.

          But sure bruh, no one’s doing anything you don’t know. You got it all figured out.

          • MataVatnik@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            I didn’t qualify my comment because I was just shit talking but seeing you’re passionate about the subject let me further share some of my opinions.

            I actually do believe that a place like lemmy could be used as testing grounds before bigger campaigns. I know this because I saw the first instances of Russian propaganda and Russian trolls in LiveLeak back in 2008. I see now a lot of the same strategies and talking points that they were employing a decade and a half ago. It feels as if liveleak was a sandbox where they honed a lot of their strategies before taking it to a wider audience.

            That being said, I saw people crying about astroturfing on Lemmy because they were salty about something, when their clearly wasn’t anything going on. Also, having dealt with it for decades I think it’s pretty easy to pick up when trolls are present manipulating narratives. It’s like seeing a bad actor in a play, you just knownthey are acting. And also, even as a sandbox I don’t think there are armies of trolls dedicated to Lemmy. I can see maybe a handful of actors maybe coordinating. Hasbarah, who is clearly very active on Reddit, doesn’t seem to have done much here on lemmy which would be fertile grounds for them. Same with the 50 Cent Army and Russian trolls.

    • Thistlewick@lemmynsfw.com
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      2 years ago

      Or we call out this weird shit loudly, don’t treat it like some “companies will be companies” thing, and maybe the people who would have worked with PaloAlto previously will reconsider working with the weird company that tried to present women as objects.

      Not talking about this stuff is what got us here in the first place.

      • Delphia@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        So if one of the models was a man in a suit with a lampshade on their head you would have no problem and this would be perfectly normal?

        • Dentzy@sh.itjust.works
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          2 years ago

          Here, boys, girls and everyone in between, we can see a textbook example of a strawman fallacy; you made up a scenario that is not the one being discussed, then you assigned OP a reaction to that made up scenario that you cannot know if it is true -as that is not what OP is reacting to- and that made up position is what your comment is criticizing.

          We don’t know OP’s reaction to men in lampshades because that is not what we are seeing in the picture, we are seeing two women dressed as lampshades, so, as long as new, different pictures do not show up, OP and me will think that Palo Alto treat women as objects, we might change our position if new information goes out, but for now, that is what we have to judge.

          And -before you try it again-, no I would not think it is OK if those were two men, neither if those were a man and a woman, or a kid and a parent or two grandpa’s or two grannies… Should I keep making up scenarios so you can focus on the one at hand? Or is this enough?

            • Aedis@lemmy.world
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              2 years ago

              It was definitely a loaded or insincere question. The use of “you would” instead of “would you” suggests that the person who is asking this question has already made up their mind about OP’s opinion. And no, I don’t think that was a typo, a Freudian slip maybe, but not a typo.

                • BossDj@lemm.ee
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                  2 years ago

                  A strawman argument is still a strawman even if there was no malicious intent and it was made through ignorance of making a proper argument.

                  The phrasing isn’t just poor, though, it has a connotation/implication that can only be learned through social context. There’s absolutely aggressive intention with the phrasing. At the very least a “gotcha” attempt. Maybe they were raised in that environment and thus are uneducated and generally antagonistic, but then Hanlon’s Razor would extend to any acts of hate.

                  I always like to ask “are you being judgemental or curious?” (Thanks, Ted Lasso)

          • fishos@lemmy.worldBanned from community
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            2 years ago

            Here, boys, girls, and everything in between…

            When calling someone out, it’s best not to be condescending yourself in your opening. You didn’t elevate the discussion with that, you invited them to a slap fight.

            And like the other person said so well, there is sincere reason for the question. But you clearly don’t want to engage honestly and instead be dismissive yourself.

            • Dentzy@sh.itjust.works
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              2 years ago

              The problem is that, by now, asking that question cannot be viewed as sincere, it is the constant tool used by misogynists to take away any conversation about women’s rights/issues.

              Is there a time and a place for that question? Yes. Was this post that time and place? No.

    • Optional@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I had this discussion when Tiger Woods’ affair, et. al., was in the news. My friend argued the classic, “No such thing as bad press.”

      And I disagreed.