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Facebook's Ex Security Boss: Asking Big Tech To Police Hate Speech is 'a Dangerous Path' (technologyreview.com) 223

Like many people, Alex Stamos, former Facebook chief security officer, thinks tech platforms like Facebook and Google have too much power. But he doesn't agree with the calls to break them up. And he argues that the very people who say Facebook and Google are too powerful are giving them more power by insisting they do more to control hate speech and propaganda. From a report: "That's a dangerous path," he warns. If democratic countries make tech firms impose limits on free speech, so will autocratic ones. Before long, the technology will enable "machine-speed, real-time moderation of everything we say online." In attempting to rein in Big Tech, we risk creating Big Brother. So what's the solution? I spoke to Stamos at his Stanford office to find out.

Technology Review: So is the disinformation/propaganda problem mostly solved?
Stamos: In a free society, you will never eliminate that problem. I think the most important thing [in the US] is the advertising transparency. With or without any foreign interference, the parties, the campaigns, the PACs [political action committees] here in the US are divvying up the electorate into tiny little buckets, and that is a bad thing. Transparency is a good start. The next step we need is federal legislation to put a limit on ad targeting. There are thousands of companies in the internet advertising ecosystem. Facebook, Google, and Twitter are the only ones that have done anything, because they have gotten the most press coverage and the most pressure from politicians. So without legislation we're just going to push all of the attackers into the long tail of advertising, to companies that don't have dedicated teams looking for Russian disinformation groups.

Technology Review: Facebook has been criticized over Russian political interference both in the US and in other countries, the genocide in Myanmar, and a lot of other things. Do you feel Facebook has fully grasped the extent of its influence and its responsibility?
Stamos: I think the company certainly understands its impact. The hard part is solving it. Ninety percent of Facebook users live outside the United States. Well over half live in either non-free countries or democracies without protection for speech. One of the problems is coming up with solutions in these countries that don't immediately go to a very dark place [i.e., censorship]. Another is figuring out what issues to put engineering resources behind. No matter how big a company is, there are only a certain number of problems you [can tackle]. One of the problems that companies have had is that they're in a firefighting mode where they jump from emergency to emergency. So as they staff up that gets better, but we also need a more informed external discussion about the things we want the companies to focus on -- what are the problems that absolutely have to be solved, and what aren't. You mentioned a bunch of a problems that are actually very different, but people blur them all together.

Technology Review: How do you regulate in a world in which tech is advancing so fast while regulation moves so slowly? How should a society set sensible limits on what tech companies do?
Stamos: But right now, society is not asking for limits on what they do. It's asking that tech companies do more. And I think that's a dangerous path. In all of the problems you mentioned -- Russian disinformation, Myanmar -- what you're telling these companies is, "We want you to have more power to control what other people say and do." That's very dangerous, especially with the rise of machine learning. Five or ten years from now, there could be machine-learning systems that understand human languages as well as humans. We could end up with machine-speed, real-time moderation of everything we say online. So the powers we grant the tech companies right now are the powers those machines are going to have in five years.

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Facebook's Ex Security Boss: Asking Big Tech To Police Hate Speech is 'a Dangerous Path'

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  • Isn't this a path we have already been going down for a while anyway? I know tech companies were outraged over that too, but I find this 'sure we are already doing this to protect money, but protecting PEOPLE is going too far! think about what shadowy non-us governments might do with this!' a little disingenuous.
    • Re:DMCA? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Mr D from 63 ( 3395377 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:43PM (#57525577)
      The dangerous path is the one where people form their opinions and ideals based almost entirely on Facebook or other social media.
    • It's a path they've been going down anyway for lots of reasons - revenue protection, corporate culture, the ideology(ies) of the majority of their moderators, engineers, etc. ... They'd just prefer to not have (the US) government pitch in and help tell them what to handle or reject.

      Overall, the tech companies are correct in one regard, that being government not having a place in determining what should and should not be said on privately-owned platforms (no matter *what* is allowed within the bounds of curr

      • considering their caving-in to demands of governments in China, India, various other EMEA nations, etc... each with their differing ideas of what free speech is or is not.

        So you are saying that since China, and Saudi Arabia force companies to censor content, then it is okay for America's government to do the same? If not, then what are you trying to say?

        Companies are obligated to obey the law. This is not a debate about what companies should do, but about what governments should do. Governments have an extremely poor track record of benignly controlling what people hear and read.

  • Look, they already do it in Germany, it's required.

    They make money in Germany, too.

    They just don't make as much.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:59PM (#57525685)

      Freedom is tolerating people (and groups of people) you don't like. If you don't believe in freedom for your most hated, ultimately you don't believe in freedom for yourself.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      That sounds like hate speech to me.. congratulations, by your logic you must now be censored.
  • by jargonburn ( 1950578 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:10PM (#57525379)

    the technology will enable "machine-speed, real-time moderation of everything we say online."

    XKCD #2015 [xkcd.com]

    • this one [xkcd.com].

      I don't think anyone is asking for the government to step in and police hate speech. Certainly nobody who has any pull. But for the same reason you don't see Alex Jones on Fox News you're not seeing him on Twitter and Facebook anymore: Advertisers.

      Heck, guys doing silly videos about big chested anime girls are getting banned on Youtube left and right (eh hem... or so I've heard) because they're not advertiser friendly. Bloody Call of Duty streamers are having a tough time. A guy like Alex J
      • Re:I prefer #1357 (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:48PM (#57525611)

        I don't think anyone is asking for the government to step in and police hate speech.

        Plenty of people are asking for this. In fact, this is exactly what TFA is talking about.

        If YouTube or any other private entity wants to set their own standards, or ban people at the request of advertisers, that is their right. But when the government steps in and sets the standards, that is dangerous, and is the direction we are headed.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          If YouTube or any other private entity wants to set their own standards, or ban people at the request of advertisers, that is their right.

          I agree that that is their right. It is also our right to criticize YouTube and every other private entity for their actions.

          Remember, free speech goes all ways. It is not a unidirectional I-can-say-things-but-if-you-say-things-back-you-are-violating-my-rights thing.

        • specifically who is asking the US Government to regulate speech on Facebook?

          Now, there are Senators who want to regulate Disclosure, but that's not speech. If the Russians want to run pro-Trump adverts let them. But they need to register as foreign agents.

          So by all means, show me somebody more credible than a /. poster who is asking the government to regulate speech on Facebook.
          • Re:Who? (Score:5, Informative)

            by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @04:52PM (#57526063)

            specifically who is asking the US Government to regulate speech on Facebook?

            40% of Americans [theatlantic.com] want more government regulation of speech.

            But they need to register as foreign agents.

            Here is the first amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

            Please note that it says "no law". It doesn't say "no law except for unregistered foreigners".

            show me somebody more credible than a /. poster who is asking the government to regulate speech on Facebook.

            You are moving the goalposts. Why does someone have to be "credible" to favor restrictions on speech? The vote of a non-credible person counts the same as yours.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              What was the justification used for laws regulating speech on radio and TV? Clearly they found some way around the 1st Amendment rule.

              • What was the justification used for laws regulating speech on radio and TV? Clearly they found some way around the 1st Amendment rule.

                The justification was that the airwaves are a limited resource, owned by the government, and licensed to operators based on them providing a "public service". Since obscenity is not a public service, it was banned by regulation.

                Many people believe that these regulations are unconstitutional, and the courts have repeatedly trimmed them back.

                • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

                  Interesting. So how about regulations on the use of the phone network? It's privately owned by heavily regulated, e.g. universal service requirements and the Do Not Call list. That would seem to be more relevant to regulating platforms like Facebook.

            • Please note that it says "no law". It doesn't say "no law except for unregistered foreigners".

              And yet one cannot make death threats to others. The reason is that it infringes upon my rights. The same can be said for unregistered foreign agents.

              • The same can be said for unregistered foreign agents.

                How do the words of an unregistered foreigner infringe on your rights?

                How would your rights be infringed differently if they were "registered"?

                Why would the same words not infringe your rights if they were spoken by an American citizen?

                • How do the words of an unregistered foreigner infringe on your rights?

                  I have the right to be protected from the subversive force of foreign governments. One of the central roles of government is to protect it's people.

                  How would your rights be infringed differently if they were "registered"?

                  There are multiple ways but just knowing someone is working on behalf of a foreign government is enough to make it worthwhile.

                  Why would the same words not infringe your rights if they were spoken by an American citizen?

                  If the words were their own then it would be their own motives at play, not those of a foreign government. It should be needless to say but foreign agents are not looking out for the good of the American people, so they are going to say

                  • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

                    I have the right to be protected from the subversive force of foreign governments.

                    Perhaps you should learn to be a discerning listener. If what they say makes sense, and is supported by evidence, then perhaps you could learn something. If not, then you should learn to discount what they say regardless of their citizenship.

                    Hillary's collusion with the DNC to undermine Bernie's campaign was first disclosed by foreigners. The Iran-Contra scandal was also first disclosed by foreigners. Do you really believe that Americans should have been "protected" from those facts?

                    One of the central roles of government is to protect it's people.

                    One of the central t

                    • Perhaps you should learn to be a discerning listener. If what they say makes sense, and is supported by evidence

                      You misunderstand because it's to protect us all. That means protecting the discerning listeners from the fools who will believe anything. Facts don't worry me, it's the fools who swallow lies whole and then regurgitate them regularly that worry me.

                      One of the central tendencies of government is to concentrate, hoard, and abuse power. You should think carefully about giving them the power to "protect" you from listening to "bad people".

                      Absolutely, which is why we the who is very specific and encoded in law.

                  • Re: Who? (Score:4, Insightful)

                    by c6gunner ( 950153 ) on Wednesday October 24, 2018 @08:29AM (#57528559) Homepage

                    I have the right to be protected from the subversive force of foreign governments. One of the central roles of government is to protect it's people.

                    So you think that, say, Mao's little red book should be banned in the USA?

                    If you honestly believe that it is the role of government to protect you from the thoughts and opinions of people in other nations ... you may as well see if North Korea is accepting immigration applications.

                    • So you think that, say, Mao's little red book should be banned in the USA?

                      No, why would it be?

                      If you honestly believe that it is the role of government to protect you from the thoughts and opinions of people in other nations

                      Not at all. You seem to misunderstand what a foreign agent is.

            • by nasch ( 598556 )

              There are plenty of restrictions on speech though. Incitement to violence, fraud, defamation, false advertising. Free speech has never been absolute in the US, despite the wording of the first amendment. You may disagree with it, but that's how it is.

        • Re:I prefer #1357 (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @06:05PM (#57526431)

          YouTube enjoys protections under the communications decency act, on the basis they are a neutral conveyance for others.

          Well they sure as hell aren't. Same goes Facebook. If they want to keep their privileged status they should actually have to be neutral, only censoring illegal content.

      • I don't think anyone is asking for the government to step in and police hate speech.

        Uhhh, government regulation is exactly that.

        If you want a free and open platform for video discourse there's an easy solution: National Public Access. Make a national Youtube. You'll have to pay for it though, and that means taxes.

        You want a government-censored "open" platform for discourse? You think a taxpayer-funded platform would be exempt from government regulation of content? What planet do you live on? Here on Earth you don't get freedom from government intervention by asking them to run the services.

        Otherwise the price you pay is your watered down, advertiser friendly content.

        Better an advertiser friendly pipeline than a government friendly one. It's easy to build a new pipeline with different advertisers, compared to building a new government.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Just by trying to institutionalize "hate speech" and "hate crimes", it's exactly what people are asking for. By putting such arbitrary concepts in to the legal framework, you're in effect calling for such acts. And it gets worse when anyone that's offended by something someone else says starts labeling it as "hate speech".

      • ...getting banned on Youtube left and right.

        Mostly right, apparently.

      • The German government has already stepped in and compelled facebook to police hate speech, and facebook is complying: https://www.cnet.com/news/facebook-weve-removed-hundreds-of-posts-under-german-hate-speech-law/ [cnet.com]

        But you're probably focused on the USA. Facebook's CEO was recently on capital hill though, so we've got some scary quotes:

        "Feinstein raised that threat explicitly after complaining about the industry's inability to thwart Russia's effort to influence the 2016 election, saying, “You bear this

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:12PM (#57525403)

    Like the internet you have to accept the bad stuff with the good if you want freedom. Yes, personal attacks should be addressed but only if the attacked request it. I don't think we need social networks policing for us because this makes a group of people in charge of deciding what should and should not be published. The Alex Jones example is paramount in silencing people just because we do not like their message. Also many examples of others being given a pass while a Jones gets systematically erased. If your going to create a social podium for people, you have to allow to good and bad to come out. It should be expected and the users should decide whether it has any value, or simply ignore it as noise.

    • by Falos ( 2905315 )

      >So is the disinformation/propaganda problem mostly solved?
      Take the good with the bad. Those are evilbadwords that are bundled into free speech, tech or not. The only difference is the number of flyers.

      Yes, we should continue to impose some restrictions near speech. Like endangering life. Precluding shouts of Fire in a theater.

      Anyway, I think the whole point of the discussion is Do you actually want bigtech doing the solving? in the first place.

    • This is all BS. What facebook and google are doing should be illegal. They kickback ad revenue to content providers that get a lot of clicks -- then claim that their hands are clean when it turns out the provider was being fraudulent. If they are going to take money to place ads alongside the content or use that content to keep users where they can sell ads to them, then they bear responsibility for that content not being outright fraudulent. Is this messy and difficult? sure. I'm not allowed to lie to
    • by farble1670 ( 803356 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @06:17PM (#57526495)

      The Alex Jones example is paramount in silencing people just because we do not like their message.

      Yes, that's exactly what happened. Why would you think that a social media company would be obliged to carry content that hurts their bottom line? When it comes to private companies, there's no free speech.

      AJ hasn't been silenced. He is free to take his idea to any platform that'll have him, or to create his own platform (at his own expense).

      If your going to create a social podium for people

      The podium is for advertisers, not the people.

    • Should ISP spam filters be banned?

      If your complaint is government enforced censorship I don't know of anyone, left or right, advocating for that (maybe a few AC trolls on /.). So far it's the major players policing their own networks, almost completely for the sake of keeping them advertiser friendly (with a side order of "We're afraid one of these guys is going to incite violence and we'll get sued").

      I keep saying this, but if we want a free platform nobody can get banned from the solution is easy:
  • If FaceBook has hate speech on it, then why not raid the offices where the servers are hosted? Kinda how almost everything else gets dealt with. I see no difference between FaceBook hosting data and, say, Kim Dotcom.
    • If FaceBook has hate speech on it, then why not raid the offices where the servers are hosted?

      Or we could keep the Constitution, and people could, you know, grow some thicker skin.

      Your desire to be protected from offense does not trump the right of others to speak.

      As a private entity, Facebook has a right to police hate speech as they see fit. The government has no right to force them to do so, by "raiding offices" or otherwise.

  • banning The Daily Stormer is bad as they are political group. They are extreme but starting there is a nice way to make the 1st amendment go away
    and after the 1st is gone the 2st will be as well.

    • Progressives are after the 1st and the 2nd amendments. They are quite open about it, they do not hide it.
  • by GerryGilmore ( 663905 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:26PM (#57525481)
    ...someone wanting to have it both ways. 1) We just can't regulate what's posted on our platform because "censorship". 2) If you post about n*ggers, kikes, etc. (like too many comments here on /.) you'll be banned. C'mon, guys - you can't have it both ways. FTR, I come down on the side of any commercial company being able to have their own standards of acceptable speech. Don't like it? TFB. Either adhere to the rules going in or use a different platform for stuff you know will get you kicked off.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:29PM (#57525503) Homepage Journal

    We shouldn't break them up no matter how big they get, but we shouldn't ask they do anything about misinformation that spreads through their vast information distribution monopolies.

    Well, I can think of a way of fixing this: make them charge subscription fees.

    Facebook has just over 2 billion users; it's important to realize users are not customers, they're the product being sold to advertisers. The net operating profit generated by selling those users is just under 16 billion. So conservatively, each subscribers is worth about $8/year in profit.

    Suppose we say that social media companies have to charge users $1/month. Then each user is worth 50% more as a customer than he is as a product. Then, if you're not happy with the job Facebook does about keeping fake news down, even fake news delivered to your conspiracy nut uncle or SJW sister-in-law, you can vote with your pocketbook. This would require Facebook to figure out a way of managing information that was broadly acceptable to the majority of its users. No government monitoring of content would be required.

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @03:32PM (#57525519) Journal

    The problem is not that these sites should be policing hate speech. The problem is that they're a mass media platform where the people who use the platform are not the customers. As long as social media focuses on this business model, it will be a conduit for the worst people in society, because the only measure of success is clicks and eyeballs. Nobody is accountable for what is said. Freedom of speech does not mean freedom from responsibility or consequences.

    You can fix this a couple of ways: First, you could actually charge the users of the platform instead of the advertisers. Second, you could require a real identity to participate. You'd be surprised how people all of a sudden start behaving like human beings when they know other people will be able to recognize them doing so. Finally, you could absolutely ban bots. All bots. You want to participate in this social media platform? Then prove you're human. This isn't because bots are responsible for hate speech, but because they amplify it, to the gratification of the person (or group) who originally posted.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Freedom of speech does not mean freedom from responsibility or consequences.

      Presumably, that includes a trip to the gulag.

      If freedom of speech doesnâ(TM)t mean freedom from consequences, what the fuck does it mean?

    • You nailed it. Accountability would be a great start.

      It seems rather hysterical when all these folks are screaming about their freedom of thought, yet won't put their name on it. People are not being jailed for their political rants in the U.S. It appears the only thing they fear, is themselves and their words. By putting people's real names on it, one would hope that the conversation is tempered more towards reality instead of the ether of internet discussion boards.

      --
      A friend is someone that gives

      • It seems rather hysterical when all these folks are screaming about their freedom of thought, yet won't put their name on it.

        You cannot have true freedom of speech without anonymous speech. Otherwise you get Pope's "Bear Jew with a baseball bat" policing the speech by killing anyone he doesn't agree with.

        • You cannot have true freedom of speech without anonymous speech.

          As long as you have access to anonymous speech elsewhere, there is no property of freedom that is infringed if you require real identity on a commercial website.

          You can always print pamphlets in the basement and anonymously distribute them, you just don't get to be anonymous in the public square. That's always been the case.

          • As long as you have access to anonymous speech elsewhere, there is no property of freedom that is infringed if you require real identity on a commercial website.

            The comment I replied to was not about a commercial website requiring names, it was insulting the people speaking who don't want to put their names on their speech. Typical nonsequitor.

            • it was insulting the people speaking who don't want to put their names on their speech.

              If you don't want to put your name on your speech, be my guest. There's just no requirement that a commercial social media site has to allow you to do so. Go scrawl your message in chalk on the sidewalk or whatever.

              At the time the First Amendment was written, anonymous speech meant either a) word of mouth, in which case you still knew who was spreading the speech, or b) printing pamphlets. So go print your nazi propag

              • Wasting time arguing with me about something I didn't say. Just like always.
                • Wasting time arguing with me about something I didn't say. Just like always.

                  Now wait a minute. This is what you said, and I quote:

                  "You cannot have true freedom of speech without anonymous speech."

                  And my response is that if a social media site requires real identity, that does not affect your ability to have anonymous speech one bit.

                  This is your move, Obfuscant. You say something and then when someone challenges you, your response is always, "You're putting words in my mouth". The words you put in your ow

                  • And my response is that if a social media site requires real identity,

                    "True freedom of speech" has NOTHING to do with social media sites and their right to control their own hardware. You are arguing with me over something I DID NOT SAY, and your quote proves that. It was a response to the statement: "It seems rather hysterical when all these folks are screaming about their freedom of thought, yet won't put their name on it." That's an insult referring to the AUTHORS not wanting to put their names on what they say, and has nothing to do with what social media sites do or do

    • I don't think that's enough. Outside the online social networks there is the real world with its power struggles which generate torrents of fake news and disinformation. They would push this shit even without ads.
      • I don't think that's enough. Outside the online social networks there is the real world with its power struggles which generate torrents of fake news and disinformation. They would push this shit even without ads.

        So let them. This discussion pertains specifically to these social media sites. Let the dirtbags spread their misinformation and hate speech via mimeographed flyers printed in their basements. Who cares?

  • You have no right to prepare an assault on other people.
  • The fact is there are political movements on both sides the liberal / conservative aisle in American that actively target, and encourage low information voters.

    Few things make me as angry as hearing people say how important it is to exercise your right to vote! No! that is not important and it might not even be desirable. Voter turnout for its own sake is stupid. That you have the right to vote is important; your exercise of it is only important if its important to you.

    If an issue is on that ballot that

  • Not the big tech responsibility to police hate speech. More easy to flag it and display the address/phone numbers of haters, or better yet, just delete facebook source code. Last one probably the best / most humane option.
  • Autocratic regimes have been shaping conversation on the internet according to their whims for years. This guy can't argue that there's some sort of slippery slope here to slide down. The bad actors are already at the bottom. A better argument would be that we simply don't want to go there ourselves.

    I'm a firm believer that there's a solution here. We can design something that allows individual free speech but shuts down the nation-state-sponsored tech-based misinformation campaigns eg Russia. Myanmar-
  • >And he argues that the very people who say Facebook and Google are too powerful are giving them more power by insisting they do more to control hate speech and propaganda

    Great! There's a simple solution:
    Facebook can stop *selling their user data to hate and propaganda groups*, and "stop accepting ads* from hate speech and propaganda groups.
    This way:
    1. Facebook is being a vector for less bullshit
    2. Facebook is *lessening* it's power
    3. Hate groups and propagandists can still spread their vile bu
  • Facebook isn't concerned about the "danger". They'll do whatever their advertisers want. They're an advertising platform.

    What they're worried about is having to employ actual humans to read all of the shit that gets dumped onto their network. They can only make money if the whole thing is relatively automated. To accurately and effectively police the platform, they're going to need a LOT of humans to do the work, since AI can't and won't be able to do it for a very long time, more than likely. Paying
  • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @06:33PM (#57526577)

    The nature of this debate misses the point.

    Firstly, there is always going to be some level of censorship on social networks. Otherwise there are just too many trolls who would think it utterly hilarious to find pages for children's party entertainers and flood with with niche-fetish pornography, plus there are a few types of material which anger people so greatly that there is no option but to ban it - the exact list depending upon country, and usually enforced by law. So the debate is not about if censorship should be permitted, but about the extent and about who gets to decide.

    Nor is all censorship equivalent. There are many parties, many ways and many reasons. In the case of social networks, commercial concerns are a big factor - they exist to make money, and some sorts of material are just not profitable. If your posts offend a group of people, insult a religion, contain too much profanity, contain anything relating to sex or advocate criminal acts then advertisers are not going to want their adverts appearing next to it, which means the network is going to want to discourage the production of this material. They may not ban it, but they have other means - they can rank it lower in searches, or demonetise as youtube does.

    On the political side, there is what could be seen as a tidy symmetry - left and right both call for censorship, but of different material, and both then accuse the other of supporting censorship. The left might get horrified at hate speech, but they can't beat the right when it comes to sensitivity to 'indecency' - a category that goes far beyond just pornography.

    Personally, if I were drafting legislation, I'd focus on accountability. Allow social network operators to censor as they see fit - but every time they decide to pull a post, make sure they have a duty to notify the poster specifying the reason for the action, and a reference number allowing them to review the audit records for the decision. If you have to have censorship, do it right.

  • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Tuesday October 23, 2018 @06:39PM (#57526591) Journal
    Would US big tech please return to US 1st Amendment freedoms and stop trying to curate the internet to conform with the internal politics of EU and Communist China.

    Return to allowing the US freedom to have an open press able to report and publish.
    For people to be able to comment and link.
    Let people online comment on political news as part of using their own social media account.
    They are posting links they found interesting. Adding comments, art, cartoons. Its their own creativity and content. Something social media invited users to do as an open platform to connect users and sell ads.
    The freedom to assembly online and petition government policy.
    The freedom to speak and not be banned after speech due to political comments.
    Its the users who are doing the publishing, its their own words, thoughts and political content. Users who spent years posting their ideas, creative art and comments.
    Their comments on politics, bad movie scripts, history, art, culture, news, international events. Something people in the USA have the freedom to do.

    When social media becomes a full time "publisher" then it can set its own domestic party political and internal publishing standards for its own staff.

    Your users are not your workers, they not your staff. They do not have to follow the bands set domestic party political agenda.
    They have a right to comment, link, create, post, question, be political on any topic they want. Users got invited onto open social media for their content.
  • The big tech companies want to offer a place free of horrible stuff, while at the same time not developing a reputation for censorship.

    I don't know if they can do both. Worse (and this is the problem with governmenr regulation) they have to try to avoid "regulation by raised eyebrow" where a regulator (driven by some in Congress) might look the other way, "too big corporation-wise", as long as they crush wild, nasty viewpoints.

    This is a regular concern for radio and TV stations as they approach licensing r

  • ... and in the desktop version it does not even show up under "Most discussed".
    And in the mobile version the whole discussion is invisible.
    Looks like two major bugs in the webpage, or is just my account messed up?

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