Carsten Agger on Fri, 24 Nov 2017 20:29:22 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Algorithmic and pathological children's videos |
These are some speculations that were started by this article, "Something is wrong on the Internet" (https://medium.com/@jamesbridle/something-is-wrong-on-the-internet-c39c471271d2) about a phenomenon which I wasn't aware of and is apparently also quite new, exploitative clock-bait videos for very small children. These videos' modus operandi is that a parent hands a toddler a tablet or a cell phone and finds them a YouTube video. If youTube is on autoplay, a "similar" video is played after that, and so forth. So, if many parents hand their toddlers an Internet device, videos that are "similar" to other videos that parents would find for their toddlers will receive many views. Like, if the video comes up when searching for "nursery rhymes learning video". If you haven't experienced this before, I suggest you try to enter that search and see what comes up. Click on one of the videos and look at the suggestions. Now click on one of *those* and look at the suggestions. It seems clear that a toddler left alone with a tablet is more or less bound to be sucked in by a feedback loop of eerily similar videos, meticulously crafted to imitate thousands of other videos that happen to have received astronomical numbers of views, often in the millions. This video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7p0nSW0RI8 is typical in many ways - it's simple, strange, creepy in an eerie way, and algorithmically situated to come up as "related videos" when a 2-3-year old is binge-watching YouTube. It has 15 MILLION views. "Wrong heads" and "learn colors" is one of the most popular tropes. Right now, there are three million(!) of them on YouTube. And this video alone has more than six million views. Another trope, which we could call "finger family learning video" yields 7 million hits on YouTube. The top search result (this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivFefy28M10) has 82 MILLION views. So how did 7 MILLION of one kind of video, three MILLION of another, and MILLIONS more of other tropes, e.g. "bad baby learns colors" which has about 8 million, all come into existence the last few years? What the actual fuck is going on here? Who make them and how does it work? Of course, this has been under some discussion since James Bridle's article (linked above), among other things under the topic #elsagate: While many of the videos already discussed are sickeningly repetitive, with titles obviously designed to attract algorithmic matches rather than human eyes ("Wrong Dress Frozen Elsa Sofia Talking Angela Hulk Finger Family Learn Colors For Kids"), others are decidedly inappropriate and not a little creepy, including urination, defecation, pregnancy and strong sexual allusions, all in material very obviously targeted at toddlers without adult supervision. And that is part of Bridle's and other people's angle: Can binge-watching these, surprisingly *very* popular and apparently numbering in the hundreds if millions, of videos be harmful for children - what effect can this algorithmic tour de force have on toddlers left hour after hour to themselves? However, I also have another suggestion - that this video industry and its objective, being watched by toddlers, displays a very strange feedback loop that actually us something about the toddler's minds. In a way, this video industry is a kind of AI investigating the ways of thinking that appeal to very small children, what they feel is funny, what can preoccupy them ... like looking at colors, listening to recognizable nursery rhymes, seeing favorite cartoon characters do funny stuff, watch unboxings of fancy toys, on the innocent side - but also tricking people, not being able to go to the toilet, peeing in inappropriate places, etc. So in a way, this video artist/toddler feedback loop is an AI investigation of the psychology of very small children, where the AI is implemented not just by computers, but by thousands (apparently) of video production houses doing both cartoons and live action all trying to find the exact sweet spot where the toddlers just want to keep watching - by pressing the very buttons that appeal to children that way. As a feedback loop always changes what it reproduces, this also appears to be an example of what the Brazilian pshychologist Fabiane M. Borges (disclaimer, a very good friend of mine) calls "hacking the unconscious" - the videos is hacking the unconscious, to use the psychoanalytical term, of millions of very small children, thus displaying what goes on in them - but, also changing them and being changed by them at the same time, all mediated by YouTube's algorithms (but possibly not for a lot longer, YouTube appears to be cracking down and maybe this phenomenon will soon be history). This may be only a much more blatant and in-your-face version of the feedback loop we have seen with adults and television for many years - but in that case, I find it quite eye-opening. If anyone has the stomach for a further analysis (I'd generally recommend people *not* to spend too much time on these videos, if they value their peace of mind) I'm open to hearing other takes. Best Carsten # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: