Archive for Racism

Kanye West’s antisemitic ‘Death Con 3’ tweet nearly doubled follower count growth rate new research shows

Posted in Commentary with tags on November 22, 2022 by itnerd

The rate of growth of U.S. rapper Kanye West’s follower count on Twitter nearly doubled after his threat last month to go “death con 3” on Jews, according to a new analysis conducted by the National Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) in partnership with the Combat Antisemitism Movement (CAM).

The study looked at what it called the “Antisemitism Attention Economy” and found that recent controversial social media posts by West, also known as “Ye,” and NBA basketball star Kyrie Irving metastasized populist Jew-hatred across the ideological spectrum, from white supremacists to Black Hebrew Israelites.

The NCRI/CAM put up a very insightful Twitter thread on this which I have reprinted below:

This is horrifying. And this should serve as a massive wake up call for people on social media as well as social media platforms to silence people like Kanye West and Kyrie Irving. But as we’ve seen lately from Twitter and its leader Elon Musk, there’s zero desire from Musk to get rid of these people to stop them from amplifying racist and anti-semitic messages. Thus I am very concerned that we will see an increase in this sort of thing which is good for nobody.

Website Named “Ghetto Tracker” Causes Fury

Posted in Commentary with tags , , on September 9, 2013 by itnerd

Well, let’s see how you can get press for all the wrong reasons.

Let’s start with a idea to crowd source information about areas with high crime rates that people might want to avoid. Build a website around it and launch it with the name “Ghetto Tracker.”

What could possibly go wrong?

Predictably it blew up. Take the coverage from Gawker as an example. The site was then taken down, brought back up after some changes to the graphics and the name for good measure (it was re-branded “Good Part Of Town”), and then taken down again. Sort of.

Well, the name is offensive because of what it implies, which is that this site helps people avoid parts of a given city that has visible minorities. It also didn’t help that the graphics were all of smiling white people, who were then replaced by smiling black people when the controversy exploded. But what really doesn’t help is the fact that the data is crowd sourced. That means that people are giving opinions and not facts when it comes to parts of town that one might want to avoid. That’s a #fail if I ever saw one.

I admit that I might get lit up like a bonfire by saying this. But I think that this idea has some merit. I can’t count the number of times where I’ve gone to a US city on business and unknowingly driven through a neighborhood where I felt less than safe, and I later found out it was absolutely not safe and I should not have been anywhere near that area. However, I would only go for this If, and only if, the data that determines what a bad part of town is comes from actual crime statistics rather than human beings. Take items like murder, petty crime, carjacking, etc. Use all of those to come up with a score, sort of along the lines of the passer rating in the NFL and use that to make the call. If the score passes a certain threshold, it is to be avoided. Doing it this way means that It’s empirical and without biases. If you wanted to get creative, add it to Google Maps or your GPS system along with the checkboxes that say things like “avoid tolls” and “avoid highways.”

Am I out to lunch here or am I making more sense than the authors of this website? Post a comment and share your thoughts. Please be kind.