"People use Facebook and social media to take their brains because people are not thinking about their own.We have a nickname for these people.Technological innovation brings us to the social network Brought to the era when the revolution is most prominent in everyone's life Social network revolution is a technical breakthrough that allows a simple way for many people to keep up with simple communication and contact It is a phenomenon that I think there is.
Facebook is a worldwide social media network that also uses artificial intelligence. Thanks to artificial intelligence, Facebook has improved customer service as well as Google. Artificial intelligence learns user's personal information, likes and dislikes, and small changes in user settings. Therefore, anyone can get the most interesting and relevant posts in the news feed, and related recommended friends, groups, and many other posts. This is how it works. Facebook is also watching you. Are you scared now?
What is artificial intelligence? Artificial intelligence is a simulation of the information processing process of the human mind. These algorithmic techniques based on social networks and click-through rates, especially the hourly mechanisms of these machines and the intense push of their content, caused great problems for users. Algorithms may have a positive impact on news production. On the one hand we can motivate content creators to focus more on what the audience is interested in and view content creation from the reader's point of view. On the other hand, they help consumers reduce the time investment they need, improve reading efficiency, and enrich information and knowledge.
First of all, intelligence is not easy to be deceived. After all, university scientists believe in Batman of the moon of the sun. Tens of millions of Facebook readers have seen Russian publicity on social networks. Facebook's current solution to many fake news is to use the background to fight erroneous information. For example, I am trying a flagged suspicious article to warn the reader. However, this may be insufficient. Having false news in the information ecosystem will inevitably convince some people whatever the label is. This is the conclusion of a new paper by Yale University researchers Gordon Pennycook, Tyrone D. Cannon and David G. Rand. They showed participants an incorrect title that could be displayed on Facebook. Several articles are marked as "factual examiner asked." But it is almost no difference