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8 votes
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‘Freedom’ means something different to liberals and conservatives
12 votes -
A newsroom at the edge of autocracy; The South China Morning Post is arguably the world’s most important newspaper for what it tells us about media freedoms as China’s power grows
7 votes -
Lawyers demand US Military stop violating free speech on Twitch
10 votes -
Cancel culture is the marketplace of ideas at work
16 votes -
Letterheads: Social media and the end of discourse
7 votes -
Trump, Twitter, Facebook, and the future of online speech - The debate over censorship and Section 230 is thorny, contentious, and, above all, outdated
8 votes -
YouTube bans Stefan Molyneux, David Duke, Richard Spencer, and more for hate speech
18 votes -
Terrible, dangerous EARN IT act set to move forward in the senate; attack on both encryption and free speech online
27 votes -
My Little Pony fans are ready to admit they have a Nazi problem
16 votes -
The obscure US Supreme Court case that could be used by the Republican Party to gut the First Amendment
8 votes -
Google has banned ZeroHedge from its ad platform for content policy violations related to misinformation about the Black Lives Matter protests
19 votes -
'Facebook doesn't care': Activists say accounts removed despite Mark Zuckerberg's free-speech stance
8 votes -
Platforms, publishers, and presidents | Real Law Review
4 votes -
US President Donald Trump has accused Twitter of "completely stifling free speech" after the social media company flagged some of his tweets with a fact-check warning
42 votes -
Philip Manshaus's trial raises important questions about the role of freedom of speech in enabling far-right extremism
5 votes -
If Trump kicks out Twitter, there's always Germany
7 votes -
In the debate over freedom versus control of the global network, China was largely correct, and the US was wrong
6 votes -
Professor loses landmark legal battle after claiming it’s ‘free speech’ to deliberately misgender trans students
23 votes -
I’ve fought for a free internet for thirty years. Here’s where I think we went wrong, and right
15 votes -
How could we regulate biased/lying media outlets and aggregators without encroaching on good ones?
I find this to be a pretty important question when news organizations like Fox News are literally aiming to help the Republican Party to stay on power, CNN and MSNBC promote centrist candidates...
I find this to be a pretty important question when news organizations like Fox News are literally aiming to help the Republican Party to stay on power, CNN and MSNBC promote centrist candidates and media aggregators ranging from r/the_donald to r/chapotraphouse banning anyone who opposes them. Thing is, these are the most well known examples. How could we tell faulty media sources and aggregators apart from good ones in mass? Do you think that's possible?
15 votes -
Switzerland votes to ban homophobic discrimination
10 votes -
Trapped in Iran
7 votes -
Biden wants to get rid of law that shields companies like Facebook from liability for what their users post
17 votes -
JK Rowling's Maya Forstater tweets support hostile work environments, not free speech
27 votes -
The law that helped the internet flourish now undermines democracy
8 votes -
Dogolachan and the ghost of massacres past
5 votes -
Do Nazis deserve electricity?
I'm reading about the latest Gitlab shakeup, about (not?) filtering customers on moral grounds. Yesterday, it was Github's decision to continue to support ICE. There's Twitter's decision to allow...
I'm reading about the latest Gitlab shakeup, about (not?) filtering customers on moral grounds. Yesterday, it was Github's decision to continue to support ICE. There's Twitter's decision to allow politicians to (somewhat?) violate its own rules about threats and harrassment. Blizzard banned a star video game player for speaking out about the Hong Kong protests.
I'm on Mastodon, and while it's faded from the headlines a bit, the Gab-war still rages there, with the Tusky-v-Fediverse debate over apps blocking domains, and instances blocking other instances over their support for yet other instances.
Yada.
I'm thinking a lot these days about the "slippery slope". Mastodon, Twitter, Facebook, Github/lab, etc ... these are all business(-like) entities, privately controlled, which are nonetheless approaching the status of public infrastructure ... at least, sort of.
PG&E intentionally shut off power to millions of Californians last week, to prevent hypothetical fires. You see where I'm going with this.
When/As smart capabilities for power grid, ISP, etc emerge, do racists, white supremacists, get Internet? Electricity? Hospital/Ambulance service? Where is that line?
Is reverse discrimination appropriate? "We don't rent to racists..."?
Not sure what I'm expecting here. Just starting the thread, see where it goes.
ETA: A really interesting, thoughtful 2-minute excerpt from a Rogan podcast
Edit #2: The Hacker News thread that prompted me to start this thread.
16 votes -
Free speech tropes - Common misstatements, misconceptions, and bad arguments about the First Amendment in American media
9 votes -
When limiting online speech to curb violence, we should be careful
14 votes -
The global gag on free speech is tightening
21 votes -
'Where's the line of free speech – are you removing voices that should be heard?': As YouTube struggles with extreme content, Susan Wojcicki talks about her role as the internet’s gatekeeper
11 votes -
Twitter unlocks Mitch McConnell’s campaign account after pressure
12 votes -
Former public servant Michaela Banerji loses High Court free speech case
7 votes -
8chan is a megaphone for shooters. ‘Shut the site down,’ says its creator.
32 votes -
Men who ate raw, dead, squirrels outside vegan food stall are convicted in England
16 votes -
Public statement on neutrality of free software
25 votes -
How the biggest decentralized social network is dealing with its Nazi problem
31 votes -
Let me speak freely: Our freedom of speech 'crisis' is culture warriors' codswallop
9 votes -
Blind reverence for the US Constitution—on the left and right—is tearing us apart
8 votes -
Jordan Peterson announces free speech platform Thinkspot
34 votes -
Who has your back? Censorship edition 2019 - Report by the EFF that assesses major tech companies' content moderation policies
8 votes -
US judge tosses all charges in white nationalist rioting plot
15 votes -
In my opinion, censorship is a bad way to combat hate speech.
(Let me make this clear before you continue reading, I don't know any good solutions) Recently, all over the internet, I feel like I am seeing more and more companies filtering out content that...
(Let me make this clear before you continue reading, I don't know any good solutions)
Recently, all over the internet, I feel like I am seeing more and more companies filtering out content that are considered hate speech. I personally do not like this for two reasons.
- I think it is a band-aid solution. People who have their voice taken away from themselves are not suddenly going to change their mind.
- In a way, it is a form of removing freedom of speech. Now, I understand that a lot of the companies that are censoring hate speech are doing it primarily for the sake of sponsors, but I mean this in a more broad scope.
- It is effectively hiding societal problems.
I think one argument for the increased censorship is: even if it doesn't combat hate speech, it stops the spreading of hate speech. By spreading, I mean more people believing that hate speech. Though at first this could be a good idea, I think it is the wrong way to go about it. I really don't know what exactly is the right way to deal with this issue. Maybe more inclusion of different communities? Maybe education? Learn how to think critically?
Here are a couple other things I have been thinking about, but I am not too sure about. I do not know if they are true or not, but if any of you could provide more insight, I would like to know more:
- Hate speech is actually lower than ever. The reason why some people feel like it is higher is because the hate speech is entering to people's bubbles through the internet. Before the internet, there was still that kind of talk, it was just in a different medium.
- Though not hate speech, but in a way related, with Anti-vax, the people who are most susceptible to converting to an anti-vaxxer, are parents. A lot of times these are the people who didn't grow up with the internet, the way they view the internet is not exactly how younger people view the internet. There is more doubt in what we see online between younger people than older.
And I have had people say I must be a white upper class person to have these kinds of opinions. No. I am not white. Not upper class. I have dealt with racism in one way or another for all of my childhood, less so as an adult.
28 votes -
An abhorrent post, but proverbial Folau death penalty a step too far
4 votes -
Study finds Reddit’s ban of its most toxic subreddits worked
17 votes -
We will not be shoved back into the closet: A statement from trans protesters in Kansas City
7 votes -
A regulatory framework for the internet
5 votes -
With Facebook ban on white extremism, international norms apply to US
10 votes -
The illusion of a “marketplace of ideas” and the right to truth
8 votes