Mass Manipulation A Popular Tactic

hi

my name is olivia montraperla and today

i’m going to be talking about something

that

i’m calling mass manipulation

particularly perpetrated by large

corporations

by my definition mass manipulation

occurs when one higher power

in this case large corporations exploits

an entire population

us the youth through a particular medium

now

now this may seem extremely broad

but i’m going to attempt to explain it

from a smaller perspective

my perspective quarantined we were all

there

months upon months of staying inside

without seeing anyone outside of our

immediate family

for months and months on end except for

outside the cracked screens of our

various devices

now before quarantine i was an extremely

busy person

doing what the normal newark academy

student does so

i rarely had more than an hour to spend

every day on my phone

but quarantine had other plans and soon

enough

everything i did was cancelled so i was

for

lack of better terms stuck in limbo

so i did what anyone my age did would do

and i turned to something i knew my

phone

and soon that little bar graph that

showed me how long i was spending on my

phone every day

was reaching three four five hours a day

it turns out i wasn’t alone according to

fox news

at the end of 2019 the average american

spent three and a half hours looking at

their cell phone every day

and an average of 10 hours looking at

screens and that includes things like

tvs

computer screens ipods if you still look

at that sort of thing

now let’s look at march 2020 just two

months later

that’s four and a half hours spent on

the phone every day

and an average of 13 hours looking at

screens every day

so what does me being on my phone a

whole ton have to do with businesses

like i previously mentioned

and to that i posed another question

what was everyone doing

during quarantine were you seeing any

flyers

were you looking at billboards were you

looking at real estate agents faces on

big benches

the answer is no because you weren’t

leaving your house

so businesses did what business do best

and

they adapted according to tech.com

businesses on average increase their

social media budgets

by 10 and 76 of small business owners

surveyed by tech dot co

say that they have upskilled in areas

regarding social media advertising

and nearly half of marketers have

invested in new marketing technology

additionally seven out of every 10 of

the cmos surveyed

have said that they have started

encouraging their employees

to become active on social media in

promoting their product

and so what does this have to do with us

why do we care

so next i bring up a popular example

instagram 95 million photos

are posted on instagram daily so this

can’t come to a surprise to many of us

as we experience it every day

however we don’t fully comprehend what

we’re seeing

of those 95 million photos posted

25 million accounts on instagram

are considered businesses as opposed to

the 15 million just three years ago

additionally of those 25 million

2 million are monthly advertisers

meaning that they pay instagram

huge sums of money to appear in our feed

once or twice a day a week a month

etc some ads that i’ve been seeing

recently i’ve seen the personalized

shampoo ad

i’ve gotten the inkbox ads the fake

tattoos if you’re into that sort of

thing

i’ve also gotten the fordham university

ads

but the point is these ads are

impossible to avoid

in fact 70.7 of us

businesses have admitted to using

instagram as a marketing platform

which has brought instagram’s net income

in 2019

from advertising to a whopping

10 billion dollars why does it matter

to that i pose another question what did

businesses do before

things like instagram well

they would choose particular tv channels

or radio channels

that had typically been consumed by

their target market

or the people that they were trying to

sell their product to

and they would advertise on those

particular mediums because

that was the most efficient way of

advertising those were the people that

were going to buy their product

so they could manipulate sure but not

nearly on the same scale

instagram takes it to a whole other

level as much as we would like to think

instagram was created simply for the

purpose of us being able to send funny

photos to our friends back and forth

a business can’t run that way it just

can’t

so how is instagram making

10 billion dollars in advertising what

are they selling

they’re selling you essentially i mean

but you probably already knew that

after mark zuckerberg exploited 87

million

facebook users and try to sell their

data

so why don’t we just delete instagram

why don’t we delete facebook why don’t

we delete snapchat

it’s because the opportunity cost of

deleting

set app is too high what we get from

deleting the app isn’t the same as what

we get from what we have when we have it

business is really similar to a game

that you might play

with your family on friday night friday

night game night say monopoly

someone buys something you react someone

sells something

you react someone makes a move of any

kind you react accordingly

businesses do the same however

there’s a small difference when you’re

playing that game of monopoly

your goal is to win that game as fast as

you can

that game is called a finite game

because there’s an obvious ending in

business

business is called an infinite game in

an infinite game

your goal is not to win your goal is to

stay in the game as long as possible

your goal is longevity your goal is to

not have to drop out

declare bankruptcy sell your business

etc

so businesses adapt

businesses have to become more efficient

in order to survive in today’s current

competitive market so essentially

in order to keep up businesses are using

platforms like instagram

to manipulate our thoughts actions and

ways of life

by knowing exactly what to show us based

on the data that they’ve been sold

so now i’m gonna tell you my story

i’m sure you guys have all heard of

makeup mogul and

reality tv star kylie jenner when i was

in eighth grade i had decided i hated

makeup and i was never gonna wear it

however after downloading instagram for

the first time

i was launched into this world of

beautification where

kylie jenner held the crown and all of a

sudden once i was seeing these videos

these ads for sephora and huda beauty

popped up on my feed

and soon enough i taken my first trip to

sephora and scoured the depths of

kylie’s website

and from my exploits i learned two

things the first being that my lips were

really small

and the second being that the only way i

could fix it was through buying all

these lip products

essentially what instagram did was they

took what they knew of my insecurities

from knowing what i was watching

and they knew exactly what to advertise

to me to know that i would buy it

however businesses can only depend on

that to get their products sold

there’s another reason why that they pay

instagram big bucks to appear in our

feed

the second reason is referred to as the

beta meinhof phenomenon

according to the beta meinhof phenomenon

the more you look at something through

one medium

the more you’re going to see it

everywhere else so the more you’re

seeing that lip gloss on your phone

in ads the more you’re going to start

seeing it outside of your phone

you’re going to start seeing seeing it

in coffee shops malls

hanging out with your friends hair

salons it’s going to be everywhere

and everyone’s going to have that

product except for you

and this combination of exploiting your

insecurities

by using your data and constantly

bombarding you with the same product

gets you to the counter that’s what gets

you to buy the product

another app that a lot of my peers use

is snapchat snapchat’s a primarily

interpersonal app

so i send you a snapchat you send one

back to me

however if you have a decent snapchat

following

you spend way too much time every day

tapping through snapchat stories

and sometimes in between those snapchat

stories are little ads

right because like instagram snapchat

is a free app and the only way that they

can garner revenue

is through essentially renting out

theoretical space

to various businesses to advertise

and so here comes tick tock

i think in 2018 was the first time i

ever saw an ad for tick tock

i was tapping through snapchat stories

as i usually did

and i saw this ad for this obscure

new app this new video sharing app and i

thought it was intriguing sure

but i had no idea that it was going to

all of a sudden permeate my everyday

existence

in fact in october 2019

tick tock was downloaded 614 million

times

and by february 2020 reached 1 billion

users

and is currently the ninth most used

social media app

only following long-standing apps like

instagram

snapchat and twitter and on top of that

the company has received allegations of

using your information for their own

purposes

and we just keep downloading it in

chunks of millions

so why is that

that’s because tick tock has found the

perfect solution to the infinite game

advertise at the most impressionable

level the youth

and exploit their impressionability by

constantly bombarding their daily lives

with advertisements

that biter mind-haul phenomenon that i

was talking about before

cenin iran is a student or was

a student at mit based in cambridge

and he decided to test how easily public

opinion is

actually swayed so he

put together a group of his peers and

decided to partner with a popular news

source in england

for roughly five months and what he did

was he gave

subscribers the ability to leave

comments

on various news posts and he also gave

other people the ability to give it a

thumb give those comments a thumbs up or

a thumbs down

essentially giving positive or negative

reviews on various comments

however there’s a catch synon and his

team

would leave fake positive reviews

and see how that affected how other

people gave their positive reviews

those comments that had gotten those

fake positive reviews

were 32 percent more likely to receive

positive votes

so essentially one fake person

said something was good said something

was correct said something was

innovative

said something was smart and all of a

sudden everyone else thought that too

all it took was one random person one

random positive vote

for everyone else to start positive

voting it as well

this is called the danning kruger effect

according to the danny kruger effect

when someone tells you something is good

you’re going into that something

believing that it’s good believing that

it’s smart believing that it’s

innovative

believing whatever that person told you

so even if the product itself

is not that great you’ve gone into it

with that notion

so you may be going into this product

without an open mind so that brings me

back to tiktok

i don’t know if you all remember the app

find

um maybe i’m old but i’m sure everyone

remembers the vine compilations on

youtube

just a bunch of funny videos put

together but

essentially vine was a video sharing app

where you could post videos of yourself

singing

dancing doing funny various stupid

things

and gain a following however vine

tragically died in 2016.

however fear not another app came to

take its place

we have musically musically is yet

another video sharing app

where you could post funny videos of

yourself singing and dancing

or doing stupid things and gain a

following however

this app went as quickly as it came and

i never downloaded it

but again fear not we have yet

another replacement here comes tick tock

tick tock is yet another video sharing

app

where you can post funny videos of

yourself dancing singing

and gain a following so

the question is why do people keep

recreating the same app

it’s because in the infinite game each

of these apps were playing as a finite

player

and they played to the heart of every

social media user

and they made everyone believe that

everyone was using their app

once you saw one person using the app

you assumed everyone was using the app

and because everyone is using the app it

must be good it must be innovative it

must be new

it must be something that i need in my

life

when in fact it’s actually a carbon copy

of the thing that came before it

the theme for this year’s ted talk is

this for that

what are you willing to give to get

something in return

are you willing to pay big bucks for

clearer skin

are you willing to essentially give up

your free will so that businesses can

manipulate you

i’m not going to stand here and try and

tell you to delete all your apps

because i would be an incredible

hypocrite if i did that

however in order to be shrewd internet

users

you have to know what businesses are out

there trying to do

because as you can see they’re pretty

successful at it

just keep in mind that nine out of those

10 ads

that are given to you on instagram won’t

end up actually changing your life

thank you

you