By John Gruber
Manage GRC Faster with Drata’s Agentic Trust Management Platform
My thanks to Campaign Monitor for sponsoring this week’s DF RSS feed to promote Canvas. Canvas is a brand-new design tool that makes it drop dead easy for anyone to create a beautiful — and completely responsive — email that looks great on any device. Responsive design for the web can be tricky; responsive design for email is really hard. Canvas makes it simple.
Gorgeous typography, retina images, and a flexible layout system all wrapped in a simple, drag-and-drop interface. Take one minute and watch their video to see for yourself.
The emoji standard has been extended with over 200 new characters. One of them is: “Reversed Hand With Middle Finger Extended”. On this week’s episode of The Talk Show, Paul Kafasis raised an interesting question: Will Apple support this character?
I’ve been thinking about it all week, and I’m going to say yes, they will. But it’s a damn good question.
William Hughes, writing for the AV Club:
Scientists at Facebook have published a paper showing that they manipulated the content seen by more than 600,000 users in an attempt to determine whether this would affect their emotional state. The paper, “Experimental evidence of massive-scale emotional contagion through social networks,” was published in The Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences. It shows how Facebook data scientists tweaked the algorithm that determines which posts appear on users’ news feeds — specifically, researchers skewed the number of positive or negative terms seen by randomly selected users. Facebook then analyzed the future postings of those users over the course of a week to see if people responded with increased positivity or negativity of their own, thus answering the question of whether emotional states can be transmitted across a social network. Result: They can! Which is great news for Facebook data scientists hoping to prove a point about modern psychology. It’s less great for the people having their emotions secretly manipulated.
This is hugely controversial, but I’m only surprised that anyone is surprised. Yes, this is creepy as hell, and indicates a complete and utter lack of respect for their users’ privacy or the integrity of their feed content. Guess what: that’s Facebook.
“Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me,” the saying goes. Fool me two dozen times — there’s no adage for that.