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8 votes
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Yahoo Groups will prevent new content from being uploaded on October 28, and all previous content will be deleted on December 14
12 votes -
Your options for saving Yahoo Groups content
9 votes -
The case for fiber to the home, today: Why fiber is a superior medium for 21st century broadband
11 votes -
'South Park' scrubbed from Chinese internet after critical episode
12 votes -
The court allowed the FCC to kill net neutrality because washing machines can’t make phone calls
8 votes -
Iraq blocks Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and Instagram, then shuts down internet amid civil unrest
27 votes -
The internet is overrun with images of child sexual abuse. What went wrong?
18 votes -
Centralised DNS-over-HTTPS is bad for privacy, in 2019 and beyond
7 votes -
Communicating science online increases interest, engagement and access to funds
7 votes -
Colorado town offers 1 gbps for $60 after years of battling Comcast
11 votes -
New Wi-Fi 6 certification is officially released, up to 3x faster than 802.11ac
11 votes -
Coil, Mozilla, and Creative Commons have launched Grant for the Web, a $100 million fund to invest in reshaping the economics of the web
19 votes -
Would the internet be healthier without 'like' counts?
10 votes -
Search advertising and information discovery: Are consumers averse to sponsored messages?
6 votes -
Web scraping doesn’t violate anti-hacking law, appeals court rules
12 votes -
Tildenet (Not related to tildes.net)
5 votes -
Our past on the internet is disappearing before we can make it history
12 votes -
Sally Floyd, who helped things run smoothly online, dies at 69
7 votes -
Communications and internet have been blacked out in Kashmir since August 4 - five people explain what it's like to live through
8 votes -
Urgent statement of Hong Kong Internet Service Providers Association on selective blocking of internet services
11 votes -
Standard for light-based wireless internet connectivity (LiFi) provides emerging alternative to cramped radio bands employed by WiFi and cellular
8 votes -
I'm not a robot
7 votes -
How to find old instruction manuals for free online | No Sweat Tech
9 votes -
The world's oldest webcam is shutting down after a quarter of a century
21 votes -
Absolute scale corrupts absolutely
5 votes -
When limiting online speech to curb violence, we should be careful
14 votes -
The weaponisation of information is mutating at alarming speed
11 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 -
India shut down Kashmir’s internet access. Now, ‘we cannot do anything.’
14 votes -
Extended Validation Certificates are (Really, Really) Dead
8 votes -
Some thoughts on freedom on the Web, explained through a simple analogy
I'm writing this in an attempt to explain more clearly some ideas about the dangers of having an oligopoly in control of the Web, and the current difficulties of discussing that without being...
I'm writing this in an attempt to explain more clearly some ideas about the dangers of having an oligopoly in control of the Web, and the current difficulties of discussing that without being taken as some kind of "free speech absolutist". It's an analogy and, as in any analogy, it's only valid to a certain extent. The important thing is for it to be valid enough to explain a point.
There was a city in which four companies had ended up owning every bar, except for a handful of them in the outskirts. Upon one moment, they started to regulate which kind of conversations could be held in their bars and which couldn't, something they had a legal right to do and felt was their responsibility. So they prohibited any racist, homophobic or sexually explicit conversation, as well as conversations which they thought could carry any risk for society as a whole. Almost no one could really object to that, after all who would defend that kind of behavior? Some far right gangs said it was against their right to free speech, but they were correctly answered that they didn't have any right to determine the conversation policy of bars that weren't theirs.
Others tried to point that, while that policy wasn't inherently wrong and those companies were in their right to implement it, in the past this was dealt with on a bar-per-bar basis, and although the immense majority of bars didn't allow that kind of behaviors, they had different degrees of flexibility about different topics so bars were more varied and diverse, and you were free to choose a bar which conformed to your interests.
But they were quickly accused of defending some supposed right of that people to be given a place to discuss and organize, and sometimes even accused of defending those ideas. "If you don't like how the Four Companies manage their bars, go elsewhere".
The problem is that the far right gangs and other kind of undesirable people, when forced to leave the Four Companies' bars, went straight to the bars in the outskirts, overflowing them. Some of those bars were already owned by far right people, others though the answer to the Four Companies was to keep a more tolerant policy, and were overtook by neo-nazis. The few independent bars that didn't accept to become far right havens were forced to implement policies not that far from those of the Four Companies, or else face a far right invasion. Their clients spent a lot of time discussing wether something was off-limits or not instead of just enjoying a good time like they did before, and those bars were also very small and far away. They were interesting places, to be sure, but they were cut apart from most of the night life of the city, which took place on the hundreds of Four Companies' bars.
But now, there was a growing problem. The Four Companies had started to prohibit other subjects, for several reasons that aren't really important. Some were distasteful subjects, other were against their political interests or the city council's. But, as the far right gangs kept stabbing people and trying to reclaim their "right" to be accepted into the Four Companies' bars, most people thought that the risk they posed weighed more than anything else.
But they were missing the point. In another nearby city, there were never a handful of companies owning most bars. Still most bars didn't allow far right gangs, and discussion was diverse and fun, and sometimes helpful to combat the excesses of the city council and local police. Still, there were some neo-nazi bars, and most bars had one or two unlikable people. Neo-nazi bars sometimes caused trouble and had to be closed by the police, most were not only under police surveillance but under the neighbors' surveillance too. And, as neo-nazis were a very small minority, if you didn't support the same team as the owner of your closest bar, you could go to another bar which supported your team without it being forcefully full of neo-nazis or otherwise disgusting people.
Both cities had neo-nazis and sometimes problems in their bars, although Four Companies' bars were quite more peaceful on average, as they were heavily policed in a uniform and homogeneous way. But they were lifeless too, and lots of interesting discussions and possibilities of neighbors facing local injustice together were lost forever. Everyone ended up thinking the same, watching the same, liking the same sports and supporting the same teams. Bars weren't a fun and exciting place anymore.
This is just an analogy, so it's limited. But I think it explains well my general view and worries on the subject, which have nothing to do with leaving free way to racists and neo-nazis. It has to do with putting an end to the oligopoly before it's too late.
6 votes -
The creator of the "Upcoming Reactionary Movement Venn Diagram" explains what led to its creation on Tumblr in 2014
7 votes -
Cloudflare is terminating service for 8Chan
69 votes -
Is it possible to stop a mass shooting before it happens?: Somewhere in America, an investigator known as the Savant is infiltrating online hate groups to take down the most violent men in the country
16 votes -
A framework for moderation - Bright lines for internet moderation don't exist, but we can get closer by defining boundaries for the gray areas
7 votes -
In the flesh: Online brands promise an escape from the conventional logic of consumerism — until they open physical stores
8 votes -
8chan goes dark after hardware provider discontinues service
47 votes -
8chan is a megaphone for shooters. ‘Shut the site down,’ says its creator.
32 votes -
Do you know who your ‘friends’ are?: Making digital conversations humane will require defining our online relationships
5 votes -
The endless, invisible persuasion tactics of the internet
8 votes -
The life and death of an Instagram fish - What one funny-looking fish taught us about evolution, the internet, and the monsters we create
7 votes -
Must-have browser extensions?
What are some of your must have browser extensions? I recently made an effort to switch to Firefox, and now I'm looking for some good browser extensions to make my web browsing experience better....
What are some of your must have browser extensions?
I recently made an effort to switch to Firefox, and now I'm looking for some good browser extensions to make my web browsing experience better. Here are the ones I currently use:
19 votes -
How Not to Regulate Social Media: Proposed privacy and bot laws don’t target real problems, and would cause needless harm
4 votes -
When having friends is more alluring than being right
14 votes -
There are still people making rage comics in 2019, despite everything
21 votes -
Hell is Other Internet People: Gretchen McCulloch’s new book unpacks the language of the internet
7 votes -
What’s your favorite status-checking website to check for “Is Site down?”
Any particular reason for the preference?
6 votes -
The internet's old guard
20 votes -
Democracy's Dilemma: Democracies rely on free exchange of ideas and information, but that can also be weaponized. How can democratic societies protect—and protect themselves from—this?
11 votes