Facebook Automates Effort to Flag `Fake News' for Fact-Checking


Facebook is taking a more aggressive step to thwart the spread of fake news on its platform.

The company said it has created a software algorithm to flag stories that may be suspicious and send them to third-party fact checkers. If the fact-checkers review the post and write a story debunking it or giving context, that post may appear below the original content on Facebook’s news feed, according to a company blog post.

Facebook has been taking steps to make sure that new reports spreading on its social network are accurate — without intervening in a biased way. The company has been working closely with fact-checkers like Snopes and Politifact, experimenting earlier this year with tagging stories as “disputed by snopes.com,” for example. The effort hasn’t always worked, with the Guardian newspaper reporting that sometimes an authority figure telling people not to read certain stories has caused them to spread faster.

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Tesla Still Doesn't Need Paid Advertising to Make Sales


Tesla CEO Elon Musk stressed this week that the electric car maker is not spending much to market its Model 3, a sedan that company is counting on to enter the mainstream.

“We’re not promoting the car,” he said on an earnings call Wednesday. “If you go to our stores, we don’t even want to talk about it, really, because we want to talk about the thing that we can supply. If somebody orders a Model 3 now, it’s probably late next-year before they get it.”

But even as the Model 3 goes on sale for anticipated delivery starting in the fourth quarter, word-of-mouth and free media coverage seems to be enough to fuel demand for the foreseeable future. Consumers have put down deposits on nearly 500,000 of the cars so far. That dynamic presents a unique challenge to established automakers, which eclipse Tesla in total sales but advertise massively to maintain market share and, increasingly, to seed demand for their own fledgling electric brands.

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How To Live Together. Part 1: the bad news

How To Live Together, an exhibition currently on view at Kunsthalle Wien, aims to looks that the conditions and prospects of living together in terms of individual and social dimensions.


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Stephan Wyckoff: Goshka Macuga, To the Son of Man Who Ate the Scroll, 2016


Paul Graham, Beyond Caring, 1984/8

This is a brave, laudable and rather ambitious objective at a time characterized by tightening borders, stigmatizing discourses, political debates inside filter bubbles, and other suggestions that the world is not only melting under our feet but also intent on cultivating divisions.

The exhibition is located over two floors. It is huge and it can feel as overwhelming as the theme it purports to explore: Tina Barney’s photos of the European one per cent are hung in uncomfortable proximity of the ones Mohamed Bourouissa made of the deserted youth in the Paris suburbs; Jeroen de Rijke and Willem de Rooij‘s videos of drug addicts trying to stare at the camera in exchange for a beer make for an almost unbearable watch and Paul Graham‘s photos of everyday life at the (un)employment offices in the 1980s are too close to home 30 years later.

Fortunately, the curators of How To Live Together didn’t just summon grim visions, they also searched for glimpses of hope, signs of change, and lessons from other cultures. Wolfgang Tillmans’ poignant Anti-Brexit campaign reminds us why artists need to take an active role in civil society; Ayzit Bostan‘s Imagine Peace written in arabic on t-shirts challenges society’s prejudices; Johan Grimonprez‘s Kiss-o-drome illustrates how humour and love can challenge censorship. Speaking of humour… the main image of the exhibition with its Merkel diamond gesture is an amusing echo to Herlinde Koelbl‘s portraits of Angela Merkel over decades. Those portraits were probably the most scrutinised works in the whole Kunsthalle, by the way.


Herlinde Koelbl, Angela Merkel, 1991–2006, from the cycle: Spuren der Macht (Traces of Power) at Kunsthalle Wien

Because it’s almost 40 degrees this week in Turin and i’m in a murderous mood, i’m going to split my review of the show into two parts. Today, you get the depressing bits and as soon as temperatures have cooled off a little, i’ll be back with the works that speak of solidarity, optimism and compassion.

It’s not all bad though because 1. i loved that show so much i visited it twice and 2. i’m going to open the quick gallery tour with one of my favourite artists:


Mohamed Bourouissa, Carré rouge (from the series Périphérique), 2005


Mohamed Bourouissa, La République (from the series Périphérique), 2005


Mohamed Bourouissa, Le miroir (from the series Périphérique), 2005


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Jorit Aust

“I wanted to represent the guys from the banlieues, who are generally only portrayed by news reporters, and to lift this type of imagery into the field of aesthetics,” explained Mohamed Bourouissa in an interview with Elephant.

Made in 2005, in the context of the riots in the French banlieues, the series has as its main protagonists the young Africans and Arabs living in the suburbs of Paris.

Because we are used to seeing them portrayed by news reporters, most of us would probably take our cue from their outfits and surrounding and automatically assume that we are looking at scenes of trouble. But Bourouissa’s photos are carefully staged and lit as if they were tableaux vivants. The subtle aesthetics strategy challenges our own prejudices as well as the over-simplification of photojournalism that often fails to convey more complex socio-political contexts. His photos also seems to invite us to face uncomfortable issues head on.


Mohamed Bourouissa, L’Utopie d’August Sander, 2012–2013


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Jorit Aust. Mohamed Bourouissa, L’Utopie d’August Sander, 2012–2013

L’Utopie d’August Sander, another Bourouissa work in the show, refers to August Sander‘s magnum opus Menschen des 20. Jahrhunderts (People of the 20th Century, also on view at Kunsthalle Wien.) This photographic atlas was intended to be a “contemporary portrait of the German man”.


August Sander, Jobless, 1928/1993

Sander’s portraits were grouped into seven portfolios, each dedicated to a specific social and occupational group. He portrayed craftsmen, industrialists, farmers but also elements of German society that were regarded as less ‘respectable’: traveling people, beggars, the disabled, the unemployed. Their inclusion in the work is probably what raised the ire of the Nazi who, in 1936, confiscated the first published version of the project and destroyed all the printing plates.

Bourouissa’s work limits his portrayal of society to the unemployed but he anchors it into the 21st century by using 3D printing. His studio was located inside a “fab-lab mobile”. He parked his truck outside a Pôle emploi (French national unemployment agency) in Marseille and asked people in search of work if he could 3D scan them and turn them into figurines, which some likened to the santon tradition in the South East of France.

By being at the crossroads of integration and social exclusion, unemployment offices remind us how much we are defined by our social status. The polyester resin statuettes are anti-monuments to this uneasy position. The figurines respect the anonymity of the job-seeker but because they are different from each other, they also mirror the singular identities of the people who aspire to play the role that modern society expects from them.


Mohamed Bourouissa, L’Utopie d’August Sander, 2012. Image via exponaute

As a nod to the economy of precariousness and resourcefulness that surrounds unemployment, Bourouissa sold the statuettes on the street for 1 Euro.

For the artist, the work process was far more important than the statuettes. His documentation of the work includes a ‘livre des refus’ (book of refusals) in which he chronicles the reactions of people who said ‘no’ to his requests and accused him of using his artistic privileges to exploit people.


Paul Graham, Beyond Caring, 1984/8


Paul Graham, Beyond Caring (Waiting room, Highgate DHSS, North London), 1984/8


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Jorit Aust. Paul Graham, Beyond Caring, 1984/8

In 1984, Paul Graham was commissioned to present his view of “Britain in 1984”. He chose to document the inside of English unemployment offices which, at the time, struggled to accommodate 10 million people out of work. Graham wasn’t allowed to take these images, meaning that he had to hide his camera under his coat or put it on the chair beside him. He thus had to shoot instinctively, often unable to look through the viewfinder. Yet, the images seem imbued with empathy.

The images of people sitting dejectedly in run-down waiting rooms under hostile neon lights attest to the breakdown of the welfare benefits system across the country. The series also holds a bitter mirror to contemporary economic systems that cultivate social inequality and political discourses that blame the poor for their own circumstances.

Over time the work acquired “this strange double life: as both a political work of social reportage handed out at lefty political conferences, and as a fine art photography book”.


Aslan Gaisumov, stills from the video People of No Consequence, Chechnya, 2016


Aslan Gaisumov, stills from the video People of No Consequence, Chechnya, 2016


Aslan Gaisumov, Production photo for People of No Consequence, 2016

From 23 February to 9 March 1944 the entire Chechen and Ingush nations, about half a million people, were deported to Central Asia by the Soviet authorities. They had been declared guilty of cooperation with Nazi occupants. Almost half of all Chechens died or were killed during the round-ups and transportation, and during their early years in exile.

The expulsion was part of a forced settlement program and population transfer that affected several million members of non-Russian Soviet ethnic minorities between the 1930s and the 1950s.

Survivors were allowed to return to their native land only in 1957. Many in Chechnya and Ingushetia classify it as an act of genocide, as did the European Parliament in 2004.

Aslan Gaisumov traveled across Chechnya searching for survivors of the deportation. He managed to gather 119 of them in Grozny. 60 years after they had lost their home. People of No Consequence is a quiet, hypnotizing single shot of these people entering an official looking room and sitting down facing the camera. First, the men. Then the women who go and sit at the back. On the wall at the back of the room, a poster depicts Grozny as a city that has erased all traces of recent wars in favour of pompous, alienating architecture. People of No Consequence is an incredibly moving work. The frail people in the film are the last witnesses of an injustice that hasn’t been given a place in official historical accounts.

Aslan Gaisumov had two video pieces in the shows. Both amazing in strength and simplicity. He approaches the darkest and understudied pages in the history of his country without sensationalism, bitterness nor unnecessary pathos.


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Jorit Aust. Sven Augustijnen, Le Réduit, 2016


Sven Augustijnen, Le Réduit, 2016


Sven Augustijnen, Le Réduit (Aerial views of Kamina Base), 2016


Sven Augustijnen, Le Réduit, 2016


Sven Augustijnen, Le Réduit, 2016

Now for a bit of that famous Belgian surrealism:

While doing some research about Belgium’s colonial history in the Congo (now DRC), Sven Augustijnen found out that, during the 1950s, his country had planned to build a huge refuge for the Belgian elite in Kamina, located in the rich mining region of Katanga in what was then the Belgian Congo.

Augustijnen analysed the thousands of photos, negatives, carbon copies, maps and architectural plans he had discovered at Belgium’s Centre de Documentation historique des Forces armées. They had never been studied before.

The documents show that the Belgian government had planned to create a huge military base and a haven for the royal family and their entourage. The exclusive hideaway would have served as a second Belgian capital and refuge in case of a communist invasion in Europe. Which is pretty ironic when you think that many of these people were happy to exploit the African territory from a distance but had probably never set a foot on it.

Using the archival materials as well as a short trip he made to Kamina last year, the artist wrote a story that balances historical facts and fiction to explain the Belgian government’s absurd and ambitious secret plan.


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Jorit Aust. Jeremy Shaw, Quickeners, 2014

That’s it for today! I’ll see you at the other end of the heat wave!


Installation view: How To Live Together, Kunsthalle Wien 2017, Photo: Jorit Aust

If you want to know more about the show, have a look at HTLT’s playlist or download the PDF of the exhibition booklet.

How To Live Together is at Kunsthalle Wien until 15 October 2017. The show was curated by Nicolaus Schafhausen, with curatorial assistant Juliane Bischoff

Also on view at Kunsthalle Wien (Karlsplatz location): Work it, Feel it! New mechanisms of body discipline.

Source

How Moat Mastered the Art of the Ad Tech Pivot

Category: Beyond Madison Avenue
Summary: Fresh off an $850 million acquisition by Yahoo, Right Media CEO Michael Walrath and board members Noah and Jonah Goodhart thought their next big ad tech venture was a crowdsourced marketplace meant to connect ad creators with brands. Despite their respect in the ad industry and connections to the largest investors in Silicon Valley and some of media’s biggest…

Opinion: Vote No on the SAG/AFTRA Deal. Here's Why


Considering that we’re living in the “Platinum Age of Video Production,” the tentative new SAG/AFTRA contract is an insultingly bad deal for rank-and-file Guild members. Before I get into specifics, I want to make it clear that I do not have a dog in this hunt. I have no SAG/AFTRA political aspirations of any kind (SAG/AFTRA elections come not long after the contract ratification vote this month). And, most importantly, I am not endorsing any candidate for any position. I simply see this as an opportunity to remind my Guild-member friends and colleagues that if you ask the wrong questions, you’re going to get the wrong answers.

I’ve been a card-carrying member of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA), which have now merged into a combined entity called SAG/AFTRA, and of the Association of Federated Musicians (AFM) for more than 47 years. I’ve been a producer for 38 of them, so I’ve spent most of my career on both sides (union member and producer) of the negotiating table. This has given me a unique vantage point from which to evaluate union contracts.

In all the years I’ve been in business, I have never seen a deal that demonstrated greater ignorance of the present (and the near-term future) than the deal recently presented to the SAG/AFTRA rank-and-file membership for ratification. While the negotiated concessions and givebacks are costly and unfortunate, they pale in comparison to the near-term future conditions the document fails to address.

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Taco Bell's Star Begins to Fade at Yum as Sales Underwhelm


Yum Brands’ Taco Bell division, a key source of growth for the fast-food giant, is showing signs of fading.

Same-store sales at the Mexican-inspired chain increased 4% last quarter, missing the 5.9% estimate of analysts. While that growth was still stronger than at Yum’s other divisions — KFC and Pizza Hut — those chains both came in ahead of projections.

The results raise concern for a company that’s been relying heavily on Taco Bell since the spinoff of its Chinese operations last year. The taco seller has had success in the U.S. with buzzy food items and a mobile-ordering application that has resonated with younger diners. Yum also is expanding the brand internationally, adding hundreds of restaurants in markets such as India, China and Brazil.

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Anchor Steam Beer Snapped Up by Japan's Sapporo as Craft Wars Intensify


Anchor Brewing, a century-old San Francisco brewer that helped pioneer the craft-beer movement, will be acquired by Sapporo Holdings, part of a push by Japanese beverage companies to seek growth on U.S. soil.

The business, best known for Anchor Steam beer, fetched about $85 million in the transaction, which is slated to close by the end of the month.

The deal reflects mounting pressure by craft brewers to find deep-pocketed partners as they face an increasingly crowded market. For Sapporo, the challenge is coping with a slowdown in its home country. Beer consumption in Japan has been on a steady decline in the last decade as the number of young people reaching drinking age shrinks.

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Rebranding America: 'Give Me Your English-Speaking, Your Rich …'


Ad Age “Media Guy” columnist Simon Dumenco’s media roundup for the morning of Thursday, August 3:

Today are we still talking about Trump-Russia stuff? Maybe a tiny bit less because of the latest distracting stink bomb strategically lobbed by the White House (see Nos. 1, 2 and 7, below). And the latest astonishing/embarrassing leak (No. 4). But also still, yes, of course, Trump-Russia stuff (No. 3). Always and forever Trump-Russia stuff. Because this is our life now. Anyway, let’s get started …

1. Per Jason Silverstein and Leonard Greene of the Daily News:

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P&G'S $140 Million Lesson on Transparency


The industry had a seismic reaction to the news that Procter & Gamble slashed digital ad spend by $140 million last quarter, and did so without any negative impact on their business results. P&G cited brand safety and “largely ineffective” ads as the reasons behind the massive cut.

Many in the industry reacted with trepidation and anxiety — likely because of what it portends to their own business model — but P&G’S move shouldn’t have come as a surprise. The company started making waves in 2016 when it put the industry on notice (first privately to its partners; then publicly at an IAB event) about their new standards for digital advertising transparency. After examining all of its agency partner contracts, as well as taking a broader look into its media supply chain, P&G didn’t like what it saw. (Or, rather, what it didn’t see, due to the lack of transparency throughout the supply chain.) In April, P&G announced it would cut spending by $2 billion over the next five years. So the news of a $140 million cut follows what P&G has been promising for about a year now.

It looks like P&G had some fat to trim from its media plans, mostly due to inefficient ad campaigns. That shouldn’t be news to anyone, since not all digital media spend is accretive, especially when advertisers don’t have viewability benchmarks for their channels. Given that reality, advertisers of all sizes need to move away from black-box technology providers, publishers and agency partners that rely on opacity as an advantage. Additionally, sophisticated marketers need to develop their own marketing-mix model, powered by data-driven, multi-touch attribution, so that they can accurately evaluate how each channel impacts the overall mix.

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Woodsy Tented Houses – Chris Tate's Tent House is a Personal Retreat in the New Zealand Forests (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Camping has a certain charm, to be sure, but Chris Tate’s newly built studio in the woods of New Zealand doesn’t provide a standard wilderness experience. Named ‘Tent House,’…

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Virtual-Reality ‘Star Wars’ Attractions Coming to Disney Malls

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Gender Equality in Advertising

Image: 
Collection Items: 
Woman Interrupted: An app that detects Manterruption
Woman Interrupted: Portrait of silence
No Gender Profiles: Professional equality
Paul Bakery: Bitter Sweet Cakes
UBS: Driving change through diversity
Western Union: The race is on
5th Sense / i-D / Chanel: Jelly Wolf
Audi: The doll that chose to drive
Adidas: Original is never finished
UN Women: Dignity kits
Social: Equality through dignity
Always: The extra mile
Telenor: See Myself
ANZ: Pocket money
Focus Features: Daughters
United Nations: HeForShe
Young Minds for Gender Equality Foundation: Business Bulge
Disque Denúncia: Mixed Gender Fight
The South Face: Equality
The South Face: Women
Proximity Madrid: Cucumbers and Melons, 3
Proximity Madrid: Cucumbers and Melons, 2
Proximity Madrid: Cucumbers and Melons, 1
Levi’s: Nobel Women
Audi: Daughter
Woman Interrupted: Portrait of silence, 9
Woman Interrupted: Portrait of silence, 8
Woman Interrupted: Portrait of silence, 7
International Women’s Day: Anywhere but there
International Women’s Day: Fearless Girl
AAUW: Lady Dollars
Description: 

Gender equality is becoming a very popular topic, especially in today’s society. Gender equality focuses on people’s rights and encourages the same opportunity, no matter what gender one may be. Many agencies around the world are ‘jumping on the bandwagon’ and creating ads drawing attention to the importance of women and girls, while also informing the public to let their voices be heard. The collection focus on International Women’s Day, the inequality of women across the globe and the overall importance of gender equality, just to name a few.

Captivating Global Communities

Collection Items: 
The silhouette in the sunshine
New artwork
Cyclist and light trails of cars
Skateboarding man reflected in water
Portrait of Muslim woman in Hijab
Elevated roads encroaching farmhouses, Chongqing
Friends taking a selfie together
Children playing in fountain in front of arched gate
Egyptian boys playing with electronic toys
Businesswoman on rooftop holding cell phone
Two male friends ride a motorcycle
Woman walking along a clay wall
Commuters
Foggy business bay
Density of public housing in Hong Kong
Sponsor: 
Presented by Getty Images
Description: 

Whether you’re trying to expand your global consumer base or communicate effectively to a local audience,
use images that depict global city life both accurately and authentically, from Djenné to Dubai.

Descriptor: 
Images

History of advertising: No 195: Canter and Siegel's Green Card spam

Internet marketing changed for ever on 12 April 1994. It was on that day that two Arizona-based lawyers, Laurence Canter and his wife, Martha Siegel, initiated the world’s first mass commercial spam campaign.

It's a strange but great time to be a creative

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Mindshare promotes Fowler to worldwide central CEO

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Campaign Diary: feminist admen and dead cinema icons

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Rajar Q2 2017: London radio buoyancy given boost by LBC

Talk radio LBC 97.3 has grown its audience by almost a third amid a healthy picture of the capital’s commercial radio stations this quarter, according to the latest Rajar listening figures.