Anonymous ID: c0d903 Oct. 31, 2018, 3:47 p.m. No.3679698   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0005 >>0225 >>0289

=THE ADL'S ONLINE HATE INDEX

MOAR CAPS HEADLINE MOAR CAPS MOAR MOAR MOAR CAPS

 

CTS (Center for Technology & Society)

The (((Online Hate Index))) (OHI) is a joint initiative of ADL’s Center for Technology and Society and the University of California at Berkeley’s D-Lab. ←

 

>We would also like to thank >>>/plebbit/ for their unwavering toadying and overabundant handjobs while we made up these important issues on their platform.

 

definition of (((hate speech)))

“Comments containing speech aimed to terrorize, express prejudice AND contempt be smug, my friend toward, humiliate ←humility: anti-Christian dogwhistle, degrade, abuse, threaten, ridicule, demean,' and discriminate based on race, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, or gender. Also including pejoratives and group-based insults, that sometime comprise brief group epithets consisting of short, usually negative labels or lengthy narratives about an out group’s alleged negative behavior.”

 

The Grammar and Structure of Hate Speech

To go into more depth, researchers looked at

>the number of words in a hateful comment versus a non-hateful comment.

It found that the average number of words in a hateful comment was typically longer than a non-hateful one.

>Likewise, the average number of words in ALL-CAPS FONT IN HATEFUL COMMENTS was slightly LARGER than those in a non-hateful one.

>Finally, the researchers found that the sentence length in hateful comments was slightly longer than in non-hateful comments.

Overall, on a very basic level, hateful comments were

>wordier,

>more lengthy,

>and included more vehement “yelling” in all-caps.

<muh word clouds

the absolute state of left-sponsored stylometry

 

Apart from the hateful words in the initial results, the team observed that among the words that the model identified as most related to hate speech (over words related to non-hate speech) are words that do not clearly relate to the targeting of groups.

This includes terms like:

>“need”

>and “know.”

>“Like” is third in the dataset of raw words associated with hate speech, and is grammatically used to introduce similes hate is like a parasite, ~~which are comparisons between two unalike things~~.

<and other common words everyone uses

<the

<is

What this may show is that, beyond the targeting of groups in hateful comments,

THERE MAY BE AN ATTEMPT AT LOGICAL FUCKING REASONING BEING MADE BY THOSE HATFUL SPEWERS OF VILE TRUTHS

 

I'M LITERALLY CHOKING ON MY OWN RAGE HERE

but you all see how this insultingly simplistic "style profiling" can be circumvented, aye?

>don't use caps

>use short sentences/fewer words

>don't use "like"(???)