In
discussions about the ethics of technology, every now and then you hear
something like the following argument:
"Technology is neutral—it's just people who are good or
bad." Or take the bumper
sticker favored by some members of the National Rifle Association: "Guns don't kill people—people
do." While there is a measure
of truth in this idea, it applies better to some technologies than to
others. It doesn't make much sense
to apply it to the gas chambers used by the Nazis to kill Jews at Auschwitz,
for instance. So those who use
this argument as a blanket excuse for opposing the regulation or curtailment of
a certain technology should know that their case is not airtight, and needs to
be considered with regard to the circumstances in which the technology is
typically used. This is especially
true of the new smart-phone app called Yik Yak.
It
sounds harmless enough at first. You can buy it at the Apple iTunes store and other places,
and it runs on iOS or Android phones.
It's sort of like Twitter with a 200-character limit. But there are two main differences. One, it is limited to communicating
within a 1.5-mile radius (by a tie-in with your phone's GPS system). Two, all posts are anonymous—no
passwords, no usernames, and no way to tell who posted what. Yik Yak is the digital equivalent of a
wall waiting to be covered with graffiti.
And as you might expect, the average level of messages on Yik Yak
appears to be pretty much what you'd find scribbled on a bathroom wall.
The
way I found out about Yik Yak wasn't by buying it and trying it out. (My clamshell phone is so old it barely
manages texts.) I happened to pick
up a copy of the University Star, the
student paper at Texas State University, and read an editorial by a journalism
major urging students not to do drugs.
And by the way, he said, it's so easy now—all you have to do is get on
Yik Yak and start asking around, and presto—here comes the pusher, or dealer,
or whatever they call the scumbag these days who sells illegal drugs.
Normally
I don't read editorials in the student paper, because I typically disagree with
95% of whatever they say. But here
was a man-bites-dog story—a student
saying that Yik Yak was leading fellow students astray.
That's
not all. Although Yik Yak is
supposed to be limited to those 17 and older, the app simply asks you to
certify your age. Anybody old
enough to spell and use a smart phone can register, and nowadays that means grade-schoolers. The anonymity of the app is an open
invitation to bullying, sexual-themed texts, and bomb threats. One Long Island teen found out the hard
way that the purported anonymity of Yik Yak has a limit. He posted a bomb threat, the cops
presumably got a warrant and went to Yik Yak, and the company fingered their
unhappy customer, who is now facing a possible jail sentence. So much for truth in advertising. The firm does have some legal
boilerplate on their website to the effect that the only way they will break
anonymity is if a duly authorized government entity asks them to. But that can certainly happen.
Nevertheless,
a lot of bad stuff can and does go on before the police have to get
involved. A Google search turns up
numerous cases of cyber-bullying aided by Yik Yak. If five or more people within your range vote your posts
down, you disappear—but how often is that likely to happen? Mob psychology dictates against
it. Asking a mob to transform
itself into a deliberative democracy and vote bad actors off the air is like
putting a pound of hamburger in front of a pack of hungry dogs and asking them
to vote about fasting for Lent.
I
don't often unequivocally condemn a particular technology, but Yik Yak is
getting my Bonehead-App-Of-The-Year award, which I just came up with. Putting a way of posting anonymous
comments in the hands of teenagers is simply asking for trouble. There are places for anonymity—the
ballot box, for instance. But
voting is something we want to encourage.
Buying drugs, making sexual and other kinds of insults, and threatening
mass destruction are things that we want to discourage—I hope there is still
enough left of the tatters of Judeo-Christian civilization in U. S. culture to
form a consensus on that. And ever
since the app came out last year, the firm has evidently been engaged in
various types of damage control—posting warnings about misuse on their website
and discouraging users from the very types of behavior that drive the app's
popularity.
I've
run across this kind of insidious fraud before—websites that sell ready-made
essays and homework solutions to students and warn that "these documents
are for reference only."
Corporations are increasingly immune to moral arguments and tend to
respond only to threats of legal action, either by civil lawsuits or by
criminal-law regulation. With the
heightened sensitivity we have these days to the problem of bullying, it would
not surprise me if a clever lawyer filed a class-action lawsuit on behalf of
parents whose children have been abused by means of Yik Yak. Failing that, I would hope that some
regulatory agency—the FCC comes to mind—would step in to tell Yik Yak either to
change their rules radically or get lost.
In today's deregulated political atmosphere, the latter is unlikely, and
the lawsuit route requires the prospect of a large financial settlement to get
enough high-dollar lawyers motivated.
Unfortunately, Yik Yak is a small startup with only a few million dollars
of funding, and so the lawsuit might have to wait till a big company like
Google swallows it up.
But
Google's code of ethics—"Don't be evil"—would presumably make them
hesitate before getting mixed up in a technology that panders so easily to the
worse angels—in other words, devils—of our nature. So let's hope that Yik Yak either gets buried under a pile
of lawsuits and is never heard from again, or even better, the people in charge
of it realize that they've created a monster, and drive a digital stake through
its heart.
Sources: The editorial about drug use and Yik
Yak I read was written by Rivers Wright and posted on the University Star website at http://star.txstate.edu/node/2817. I referred to articles on Yik Yak from
several news sources. The story of
the Long Island teenager was carried by WPIX-TV, New York City, on their
website at
http://pix11.com/2014/09/16/li-teen-now-behind-bars-learns-that-yik-yak-is-not-anonymous-after-all/. Internet security expert Tim Woda warns
parents about Yik Yak at the website http://resources.uknowkids.com/blog/why-yik-yak-is-the-most-dangerous-app-you-have-never-heard-of. I also referred to the Wikipedia
articles on Yik Yak and Auschwitz.
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