Against misinformation and bubbles

PSFK
PSFK
Published in
5 min readMar 22, 2021

To say we’re at a crossroads with the truth right now is a bit of an understatement. Sadly, the media and information we consume often lack context and it’s too easy to go down a rabbit hole of research that only reinforces our current opinion. It’s exciting to see movements actively seeking to reverse these trends.

We spend a lot of time talking about personalization here at PSFK. That personalization comes at the price of having to share data, but the juice is typically worth the squeeze. Within our social media feeds, personalization takes on a more nefarious tone. Monolithic content, groupthink, and a lack of dissenting opinions have taken an obvious toll on our culture. A group of researchers from Denmark and Finland has set out to pop the filter bubble.

Social media platforms have acknowledged this issue as well and are taking various types of action. Twitter has just launched Birdwatch, which allows users to append notes to tweets providing further content (‘this was an April fools joke!). Currently only available to a small group of beta testers, you can sign up here if you want to help set the record straight.

Mind games

Along with climate change, Apple’s Tim Cook has called out privacy as the defining issue of our century. It’s no wonder, when you consider that bit by bit our behaviors and activities are increasingly tracked, analyzed and commoditized both on and offline. At least they haven’t gotten to our thoughts and feelings or have they?

Gaming is now both a sport and a viable career option. With spending on gaming hardware, software and accessories up 27% in 2020, it’s also an incredibly popular and growing pastime. Enter the future of esports training. The NeuroLeet brain-training wearable is designed to fit onto an existing gaming headset and scan a gamer’s brain waves as they play to improve their mental acuity and performance.

While invading our sleep to market their latest frost-brewed technology sounds more like the stuff of nightmares that isn’t stopping Coors from trying to become the brand of our dreams. Despite being locked out of the upcoming Super Bowl, the beverage brand is using a technique called ‘targeted dream incubation’ to subliminally message to any willing participants the night before the big game.

The art of debtedness

With conversations around wealth disparity and economic inequality on blast this week, it’s noteworthy to see recent efforts to expose the debt many people have to incur for basics like healthcare and higher education.

Debt is a hot topic these days, providing both stress and… artistic inspiration. Natty Light, every college freshmen’s favorite beer has commissioned what they are billing as the ‘Most Expensive Piece of Art in the World.’ The installation, which resides in the New York City’s Grand Central Terminal, is made up of 2,600 college diplomas. The cost of the average four-year college tuition multiplied by 2,600 makes the piece worth a whopping $470 million. The piece is part of an awareness campaign tied to the Natural Light College Debt Relief program, which originally launched in 2018 and aims to relieve student debt.

New York art collective, MSCHF has set out to deliver commentary on the problem of medical debt in the United States. A series of 6-foot tall canvases have been painted to resemble the medical bills of real people suffering in the face of insurmountable debt. Shares in the nearly $75K artworks are available through OTIS, a site that allows the public to micro-invest in cultural objects thus offsetting the debt of the 3 individuals.

More innovation, more problems

It’s hard not to be equal parts impressed by all the amazing things that human ingenuity has accomplished and terrified by all the unintended consequences of those same things. We’ve certainly come a long way but we’re not there yet. Here’s to remaining optimistic, everyone.

We know that pandemic life has been none too kind to many a waistline but it appears that we’ve finally tipped the scales, perhaps for good this time. Humans have finally triumphed over nature, at least where our mass is concerned. The weight of all of our stuff is greater than that of all life on Earth. Heavy, indeed.

Metal, transistors, pneumatic tubes, and leaden eyelids with no spark of life lurking behind them, it’s the 100th Anniversary of the term ‘Robot.’ Let’s celebrate! Cue music and dancing.

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PSFK
PSFK
Editor for

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