Reflections on Online Trust =========================== Mon Mar 22 02:48:52 UTC 2021 Earlier this week, I saw an article about a popular Japanese woman biker who turned out to be a 50 year old man posting photos using a face transformation app to appear as a young woman. Ever since, I've been thinking a lot about online trust. It used to be that the more detailed the media form (text vs picture vs video) the more trustworthy the source was. Entire memes were based on this fact ("pics or it didn't happen"). Yet somewhere in the last decade, this no longer seems to be the case--celebrities use photoshop, AI can make deepfakes, and influencers can change their faces convincingly enough to dupe thousands with just a smartphone! How can we trust anything we see, hear, or read online? I think the answer is to browse with a healthy dose of skeptcism, an awareness that things may be fake, and a willingness to cross-check sources. In practice, this often involves asking oneself "what would the poster have to gain from lying (or distorting the truth)"? This relates interestingly with my experience using Gopher. Despite it being trivial to lie or pretend over a pure-text format, I frequently find the content I read here to be more genuine and trustworthy than things on the world wide web. I chalk this up to there largely being no motive to tell anything other than the truth. There's no money to gain here. There's no influence or fame. Just humans being their truest selves. And that's magical. (NOTE: I'm not saying to blindly trust any content read on gopher... but rather, appreciating the beauty in a non-commercial network)