Twitter Admits 'Coordinated and Malicious' Activity Weaponizing Its New Privacy Policy (cnn.com) 169
CNN reports:
Twitter acknowledged on Friday that a new policy it unveiled this week to protect users from harassment is being abused by malicious actors — days after journalists, left-wing activists and self-described "sedition hunters" reported their accounts had been locked for sharing publicly available images of anti-maskers, anti-vaccine protesters and suspected Capitol insurrectionists.
The acknowledgment highlights how Twitter has been caught flat-footed by what it described in a statement as "a significant amount of coordinated and malicious" activity that led to "several errors" in Twitter's enforcement. "We've corrected those errors and are undergoing an internal review to make certain that this policy is used as intended — to curb the misuse of media to harass or intimidate private individuals," Twitter said.
Unveiled on Tuesday, Twitter's new policy prohibits the sharing of images of private individuals without those people's consent. The rule was created, Twitter initially said, in a bid to prevent its platform from being abused to harass and intimidate people, particularly women, activists and minorities. But right-wing groups and anti-mask activists have quickly determined that the new Twitter policy offers an opportunity to strike back at those who might draw attention to their real-world identities. And in a matter of days, they established a coordinated campaign to flood Twitter with complaints that left-wing activists, Jan. 6 investigators and journalists covering rallies have published their faces without consent in violation of the new rule....
"Due to the new privacy policy at Twitter, things now unexpectedly work more in our favor as we can take down Antifa f****t doxxing pages more easily," read one recent message on the encrypted messaging app Telegram that was reviewed by CNN. The message, which has been viewed more than 19,000 times, lists dozens of Twitter accounts for supporters to target with claims of violations under the new privacy policy... After filing such reports, some individuals have publicly celebrated "weaponizing" Twitter's new rule. A pair of posts reviewed by CNN on the alternative social media site Gab boasted of making dozens of Twitter reports and urged allies to "stay on the offensive" against "antifa" and "their doxxing riot videos."
The rapidly unfolding campaign highlights how a tool intended to help protect vulnerable individuals has quickly evolved to help shield others from the scrutiny that might stem from their public actions.
Twitter's policy is generally not supposed to apply to large-scale protests or newsworthy events, the company had said on Tuesday.
Yet CNN points out now that "those aspects of Twitter's own policy appear not to have been followed in at least several cases."
The acknowledgment highlights how Twitter has been caught flat-footed by what it described in a statement as "a significant amount of coordinated and malicious" activity that led to "several errors" in Twitter's enforcement. "We've corrected those errors and are undergoing an internal review to make certain that this policy is used as intended — to curb the misuse of media to harass or intimidate private individuals," Twitter said.
Unveiled on Tuesday, Twitter's new policy prohibits the sharing of images of private individuals without those people's consent. The rule was created, Twitter initially said, in a bid to prevent its platform from being abused to harass and intimidate people, particularly women, activists and minorities. But right-wing groups and anti-mask activists have quickly determined that the new Twitter policy offers an opportunity to strike back at those who might draw attention to their real-world identities. And in a matter of days, they established a coordinated campaign to flood Twitter with complaints that left-wing activists, Jan. 6 investigators and journalists covering rallies have published their faces without consent in violation of the new rule....
"Due to the new privacy policy at Twitter, things now unexpectedly work more in our favor as we can take down Antifa f****t doxxing pages more easily," read one recent message on the encrypted messaging app Telegram that was reviewed by CNN. The message, which has been viewed more than 19,000 times, lists dozens of Twitter accounts for supporters to target with claims of violations under the new privacy policy... After filing such reports, some individuals have publicly celebrated "weaponizing" Twitter's new rule. A pair of posts reviewed by CNN on the alternative social media site Gab boasted of making dozens of Twitter reports and urged allies to "stay on the offensive" against "antifa" and "their doxxing riot videos."
The rapidly unfolding campaign highlights how a tool intended to help protect vulnerable individuals has quickly evolved to help shield others from the scrutiny that might stem from their public actions.
Twitter's policy is generally not supposed to apply to large-scale protests or newsworthy events, the company had said on Tuesday.
Yet CNN points out now that "those aspects of Twitter's own policy appear not to have been followed in at least several cases."
Is this the onion? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you have any idea how retarded that sounds?
If there was ever any question that Twitter is left leaning this should put it to bed, they're literally saying that their policy is flawed because it can be used against lefties
Re:Is this the onion? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you misunderstand. Twitter created this deliberately flawed and obtuse policy to be weaponized by the left extremists (including their own staff), and now it was evidently weaponized by the right extremists. Now they are whining that it's unfair, even though anyone with a brain could have predicted that the policy would be abused by just reading the text of it.
That's how I read it. How about we just end Twitter and make life better for everyone.
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Why? It sounds to me like the rules were good and working, I don't like anti-vaxxers or anti-maskers but I do recognise that they have as much of a right to be free from abuse and privacy invasion as the next person.
I don't support vigilantism because it invariably becomes a witch-hunt and innocent people get harassed or worse.
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I think you misunderstand. Twitter created this deliberately flawed and obtuse policy to be weaponized by the left extremists (including their own staff), and now it was evidently weaponized by the right extremists. Now they are whining that it's unfair, even though anyone with a brain could have predicted that the policy would be abused by just reading the text of it.
That's how I read it. How about we just end Twitter and make life better for everyone.
Also incorrect:
The problem they were trying to solve was doxxing and harassment. Ie, person X expressing an opinion that person Y doesn't agree with so person Y figures out who X is in real life and starts harassing them for expressing that opinion.
A critical factor in this is that person X isn't doing anything illegal nor are they even trying to hide their opinions or actions in real life, they're just trying to avoid harassment by strangers on the Internet.
For instance, I could be pro-life or pro-choice,
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So what you area saying is that Twitter just banned its own core competency?
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If you witness a crime, you should call the police, not post about it on twitter. If you are posting about something on twitter that "triggered" you, then likely no crime but hurting your feels was committed. Hence you run to twitter to try and get someone publicly shamed because your feelings were hurt.
The fact that left-leaning twitter(that swears it's neutral, like NYT) tried to add a new policy that completely backfired on them is just hilarious.
Re: Is this the onion? (Score:3)
What's worse is she later, while attempting to justify her actions, said she thought the guy may have been armed. This only made it worse.
Without even informing them of the risk, she cajoled students into imitating violence against a man she thought may be armed. I hope the parents of students at her new college are comfortable leaving them in this maniac's care.
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Hanlond's Razor still applies: "never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity".
Hanlon's Razor is a useful guideline, not an absolute. But is there any reason to think that Twitter's leadership is clever enough to do this effectively?
Re:Is this the onion? (Score:5, Insightful)
“A sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice.”
Some people are just so naturally bad at their jobs it looks like they are actively trying to do harm, but they are just stupid.
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THIS!!! Wish I had mod points but THIS!!!
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I call that Clarke's Corollary to Hanlon's Razor.
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Except that's not what happened. Twitter created a policy to prevent revenge porn, cyberstalking, etc. It was supposed to be non-political and not apply to public activities. Then a bunch of people realized they could hijack the enforcement mechanism and use it to censor the speech of people they didn't like.
Blame Twitter for not anticipating how their policy could be abused and not being ready to deal with it. But don't distort what happened. These are people trying to censor discussion of important p
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Yes, that's Twitter.
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Twitter believes in abusing free speech for profit, but in order to have that you've gotta have free speech.
If you cancel too many people's messages then people will get fed up and use some other service. The people who have been cancelled from twitter are very loud so it seems like they are more numerous than they actually are, and when you dig into what their tweets actually were you can see nothing of value was lost in virtually all cases. Go on, prove me wrong.
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Taking pictures of people with no masks on so you can publicly shame them on Twitter is not an important public event.
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These are people trying to censor discussion of important public events. They don't believe in free speech.
It's called cancel culture, it's been "A Thing" for years, and while not exclusively practiced by either political party, one party has been cancelling people more aggressively than the other.
Turnabout is fair play.
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There's extremists on everything, probably even extremist poodle owners.
It's a way of thinking, not something linked to a specific opinion.
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"oh no, I had sex and now I am pregnant. How could this possibly be happening to me? ;("
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"oh no, I took a shower, slipped and broke my arm. How could this possibly be happening to me? ;("
Everything we do carries risk. Nobody goes through their entire life without any accidents at all. Contraception isn't perfect, it can fail and people can make mistakes when using it.
None of which is particularly relevant here, the issue is if women have bodily autonomy or not.
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Because you want my tax dollars paying for your fuck ups.
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So you're willing to pay for the kid? Thanks!
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Who do you think pays for the actual costs of social programs that aid single mothers?
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Bye Bye, 4th Amendment (Score:5, Insightful)
Hypothetical: you go out drinking with coworkers at a new job. One of those coworkers declines to drink. You say, "Oh c'mon. Just one drink."
You don't pay attention much beyond that. A couple of days later you hear they're in the hospital. Liver failure. Turns out they were a recovering alcoholic, and your prompting led to the straw that broke the camel's back. But as it turns out, you're a genetic match despite not being related. What luck!
No other known matches in the area. You only just met them. Not even sure you like them. But I f you don't submit to a liver donation, they die.
Doesn't matter if you don't like them. Doesn't matter your only involvement with them was under pleasurable circumstances for only a few minutes. Doesn't matter if you yourself were drunk. Doesn't matter if all the hospitals are full of Covid patients.
You go under the knife by choice or folks will take it forcefully.
Except they can't force you. Whether you played a material part in the situation is not relevant. Doesn't matter they are 100% dependent upon you for survival. It's a legal principle called "bodily autonomy". Morally it may be questionable to others, but you are under no legal obligation to get a section of your liver removed even though it is highly likely you would suffer no long term consequences. (Though any surgery has its risks, and you have a non-zero chance of dying on the table.)
The difference here is that pregnancy and childbirth is *riskier* and more straining than donating a section of liver.
But according to you bodily autonomy shouldn't apply in you were born female and are between the approximate ages of 12 and 50.
Her circumstances, her wishes, her health status, etc. don't matter. Because it upsets your feels. Bodily autonomy doesn't apply to them for...reasons. This old book says so, and even though we have this thing called "freedom of religion," your book trumps all (even though the book doesn't even mention abortion being a sin or an unborn child being a person).
So which is it? Should everyone be forced to donate blood, bone marrow, some liver, or a kidney because lives are dependent upon them doing so? Or does bodily autonomy apply to every equally?
Choose carefully.
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Abortion is close to 100% fatal.
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Only if you consider the foetus to be a separate being, and not part of the woman's body.
Drawing the line at conception is arbitrary. You could argue that an egg or some jizz is not a viable human before then, but a fertilized human egg cannot grow into a person without many months of life-support from the mother.
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Without human identity there can be no human autonomy. A fetus has no human identity. It is indistinguishable from any other fetus, save for its genetic material.
Put another way: there is nothing you can say about a fetus that you couldn't also say about the cockroach you swatted when you saw it going for your cereal this morning. Even your own holy book recognizes this truth, which is why it explicitly does not treat abortion as 'killing.'
You're just a sheep, albeit one with a gun.
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The adoption waiting list for newborns is something like 36 applicants to 1 baby IIRC. So giving the kids up for adoption will not be an issue.
Yup https://www.americanadoptions.... [americanadoptions.com]
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The adoption waiting list for newborns is something like 36 applicants to 1 healthy white baby IIRC.
FIFY
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People of color don't adopt?
White people don't adopt babies of color?
What are you trying to claim with your made-up statistic?
Re: Is this the onion? (Score:2)
Ah yes. The magical birth canal that after nine months transforms a clump of cells into a human being with moral and legal rights.
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I'd mod as funny if I weren't slightly worried that that some comrade will in the future propose this ideas to a the excited jazz hands of their fellow weirdos, maybe even managing to complete their sentence with only three interruptions for points of personal privilege.
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Muslims are even better at this. Soul doesn't enter the baby until quite a few weeks after birth (depending on which hadith you recognize as true). Which is likely a mourning assistance tool for grieving parents, as newborn were dying in massive numbers back in the days when those hadiths were developed.
So this Abrahamic religion would allow for the thing that the activists on the extreme of abortion movement advocate for, post birth "abortion".
The saddest part though is that this really shouldn't be a poli
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Sure, all right wing assholes and mysteriously anonymous Libtards crying that there's one tiny comment thread they haven't managed to corrupt and destroy.
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> they're literally saying that their policy is flawed
They're saying the policy is flawed because it's being used to remove photos taken in public, not photos taken in private.
The 'lefties' have been taking photos of white supremecists to document their violent behaviour. Right wingers have realised how shit the new policy is, and are using it to coordinate removal of their bad behaviour.
Do you have any idea how retarded you sound?
Attacking People Who Document Behavior (Score:4, Interesting)
It is the left who is insanely afraid of journalists showing the world who they are (and what they do), to the point that Antifa/BLM often threaten anyone with a camera at their riots, and leftist outlets run hit pieces on journalists who cover these events:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Well when the right has one major media outlet and the left has at least 3 or 4... None of our media is actually capable of telling you an unbiased report of what happened. None of them.
Re:Attacking People Who Document Behavior (Score:4, Insightful)
You mean like this?
https://www.foxnews.com/us/ant... [foxnews.com]
Or like this?
https://thefederalistpapers.or... [thefederalistpapers.org]
Or like this?
https://dailycaller.com/2019/0... [dailycaller.com]
Pretty much every Antifa event involves them attacking journalists.
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"I can't see evidence of this."
"Here's the evidence."
"I'm not looking at at that!"
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Grosskreutz, the guy with the pistol right? The convicted felon that was already barred by the law from having a gun, that guy? Yeah, he admitted in court to pointing the gun directly at Kyle and right after was shot.
But you probably thought Kyle's mom drove him there and bought him the gun as well.
Re:Is this the onion? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes. It's been pretty funny watching the rules applied equally for once and how much they are freaking out. I was just reading an account crying about their friend being banned for doxing a college student, calling on others to attack him and get him kicked out.
I doubt it will last long.
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The staff will be trained to consider the political tribe of the actors, and we'll return to Twitter as usual.
Re: Is this the onion? (Score:2)
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Don't you understand? Rules are supposed to be used by those in power against people that threaten their position. It's not for ordinary people to enjoy the same expectation of enforcement or leniency as elites.
RTFA, or Christ, TFS. (Score:3)
The policy is specifically targeted to private media. These are journalists and bloggers taking pictures of anti-maskers in public.
It's just another run of the mill false fl
Re:Is this the onion? (Score:5, Insightful)
How wonderful it would be if we could have a debate on Slashdot that dispensed with glib stereotypes of "left" and "right" and "liberals" and "conservatives" and just focused on the facts and the issues.
Has no one noticed yet that none of those political groups are actually what their names suggest? The conservatives aren't, the liberals aren't, and the powers that be are the only winners when they get Slashdotters arguing viciously about imaginary grievances.
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The policy was clear and did not apply to large scale protests. The right wingers did NOT follow the policy, they violated it.
The policy was not supposed to be weaponized by either side.
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The policy was not supposed to be weaponized by either side.
The problem here is not the "weaponize", it's the "side."
Re: Is this the onion? (Score:2)
Bang on !
No doubt Jack Dorsey decided to do what he did, almost all social media is beyond salvage now
Re: Is this the onion? (Score:2)
But this proves Twitter is right wing since they are protecting privacy. They need to be shutdown for putting rights ahead of the Party.
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This stuck out to me:
The rapidly unfolding campaign highlights how a tool intended to help protect vulnerable individuals has quickly evolved to help shield others from the scrutiny that might stem from their public actions.
I am struggling to understand the difference between those two. Apparently the Twitter rule is doing exactly what they wanted.
The rule was created, Twitter initially said, in a bid to prevent its platform from being abused to harass and intimidate people, particularly women, activists and minorities.
To protect activists...
But right-wing groups and anti-mask activists have quickly determined that the new Twitter policy offers an opportunity to strike back at those who might draw attention to their real-world identities.
Aren't "right-wing groups" also activists? Apparently only "left-wing groups" deserve protection...
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Re:It's CNN (Score:4, Insightful)
So it's pretty much like some deranged psychopath on meth with a gun, except he's got a webpage instead of a gun. Other than that it's the same.
You just described Twitter in a nutshell. I think its time we came together as a country and agreed to the following, "Nothing that has ever been said on Twitter has ever mattered at all."
Well duh! (Score:2)
How did they not see this coming? One should always consider how badly something can be abused before incorporating it.
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Re:Well duh! (Score:5, Insightful)
How did they not see this coming?
My thought exactly. It’s almost as if these are a bunch of twentysomethings with no real world experience.
Oh wait
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They never think their own rules apply to them.
No, we mean the good activists (Score:5, Insightful)
Is anyone else having a hard time feeling sorry that activist group X is having the rules applied as if they were activist group Y?
Too much fairness going on, we're going to need to "tweak" the algorithm.
"My Hounds Would Never Harm Me" (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm shocked! This was unpredictable. (Score:2)
nt.
Twitter keeps digging a deeper hole (Score:5, Interesting)
I know this might be hard to believe, but it was actually useful and even ground-breaking back in the day. The Arab Spring was the quintessential Twitter crowd-sourced story that scooped the mainstream media by days. There is still a glimmer of that, as the under-reported student takeover at Howard University shows--but that trend only flashed up for a few minutes and I was lucky to see it so I could follow the story later.
Twitter trends took a hard turn towards stupidity when K-pop stans started hash-tag jacking to thwart the Proud Boys. Then others latched on.
The next turn came when Twitter took away the ability to localize trends (at least on PC, does the app still have it?). It was harder to spam when trends were localized, because would-be spammers would have to recruit in all locales.
Now all you get is global trends that are being manipulated by bad actors, bots or "activists". The dominant themes are racism and crypto, with the occasional side-order of B-list celebrities.
They could do a lot to fix this just by bringing back trend localization, but I don't think they care. I've limited my interaction with it to one day a week (Twitter Tuesday) and found that I don't miss it too much; but it's sad. It had potential. It still does. They just can't see it, and they're doing too well to disrupt the status quo.
Positive change is going to have to come from someplace else, and not Trump social media to which conservatives defected--that's just the dual of the problem.
There's an opportunity here for the Next Big Thing (TM). An opportunity for somebody to make Twitter the next MySpace.
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I know this might be hard to believe, but it was actually useful and even ground-breaking back in the day. The Arab Spring was the quintessential Twitter crowd-sourced story that scooped the mainstream media by days. There is still a glimmer of that, as the under-reported student takeover at Howard University shows--but that trend only flashed up for a few minutes and I was lucky to see it so I could follow the story later.
The Arab Spring was started due to high food prices caused by a change in US bio-fuels policy. The US ag industry feeds about 1 billion people worldwide. When you take 50% of that off the international market, prices rise a lot. When poor folks can'f afford food, they riot. Twitter just capitalized on this to tell you that they mattered when they did not. You are just trying to justify your support of Twitter over the years and all the time you clearly have spent there. It has always been a cesspool.
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I've seen a lot of people looking down their noses at Twitter over the years. I've even seen people say "I'm on FaceBook, but not Twitter because it's stupid", which is strange to me because I found it to be the opposite. It sometimes makes me wonder if it's dumb luck that causes people to have different 1st impressions of various sites and/or a different approach to how people filter content.
Backfiring (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe it's swift and significant enough here to get that point across, but I doubt it.
Not that the right seems to understand this any better with their demands companies be free to do whatever they want, then act all upset when that's not allowing conservatives to spew death threats and misinformation, or being "woke".
Re: Backfiring (Score:2)
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I've tried numerous times to get my liberal friend to see this about taxes on gasoline and sales taxes. They hurt the people on the bottom significantly more then those on the top.
The lower your income, the harder these kinds of taxes hit because they take up a large portion of your income compared to someone making twice as much. Someone that makes twice as much does not remotely use up twice the amount of resources either.
They refuse to see how California tax happy Democrats are hurting the very same peop
Re: Backfiring (Score:2)
Same with migration. Elites and trendy middle class types cheer it on, yet it's the poorest who pay the price. The poorest will be competing with migrants for resources. Jobs, healthcare, welfare, and housing. It's the poorest who see their neighbourhoods become unfamiliar places as culture changes and crime rises.
Sedition Hunters (Score:2)
Sounds like a History Channel show -- which I would definitely watch.
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If it's starring Tia Carrere, count me in.
Who would've guessed it? (Score:3)
This is what happens when you live in Pointland and every piece of outside information is either blasphemous or superfluous.
Twitter is run my inept idiots (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Twitter is run my inept idiots (Score:4, Insightful)
The entire point was that the policy would be abused. They just planned on being the abusers.
Why social media sucks (Score:3)
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It's one of several scandals that all but killed Digg. The surge of advertising and clearly paid-for stories probably finished it off, but trust was already undermined by the 'Digg Patriots' group - someone leaked their internal chat records, revealing that the group had been organising mass-digg or -bury campaigns to push stories sympathetic to their politics to the front page, and suppress stories critical of those political views.
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Facebook is so essential and firmly entrenched that people keep using it even when they know about the scandals. I never got in to facebook myself, but I've seen how other people use it - once you've built up social connections there, you can't leave.
Image rights have been refined over 15 decades (Score:3)
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Journalists sure, as they are granted freedom by law under most circumstances - but not everyone else.
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Journalists sure, as they are granted freedom by law under most circumstances - but not everyone else.
On the Internet, everyone is a journalist. And a dog. And still nobody knows.
Are you sure? (Score:3)
Since they have special common carrier protections which normal people dont, shouldnt they have a few common carrier responsibilities, also?
Does the phone comapny monitor your calls and cut you off and block you if you talk about the wrong things? Should they?
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What does the law say about publishing photos of people online without their consent? We are all arguing about Twitter's new policy but maybe there are just aligning themselves with existing laws and regulations?
Abuse? (Score:2)
The anti-maskers, anti-vaccine protesters and suspected Capitol insurrectionists aren't doing anything to 'abuse' policies. Agree or disagree with them, they were just there. And they were photographed. And now Twitter has amended it's TOU making posting photographs without prior consent is a violation. Like them or hate them, they didn't 'do' anything to create the violation. In fact, they were photographed well in advance of this policy change. And even then, I'd like to see the convoluted logic that says
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I don't know about the law in the US but in Europe you are not supposed to publish photos of other people online without their consent, even if such photos were taken in public space. I think Twitter is just aligning itself with stronger privacy standards, which is not a bad thing.
Man, founder Jack Dorsey's in trouble on this one (Score:2)
Um (Score:2)
Who could have predicted (Score:2)
Do social medias talk to each other? (Score:3)
If not, could they? This is basically the Reddit Game, and it's been going on for years.
Re: Do social medias talk to each other? (Score:2)
Tech is dominated by a singular worldview. It's not that they're talking - they simply believe the same things thus they behave similarly. The corporate world is disturbingly politically homogenous.
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"Tech" is just yet another corporate entity, run by sociopaths. A corporation is technically intelligence without conscience.
Play stupid games (Score:2)
The death of Twitter is not imminent, but this certainly hastens the demise. No company of any size can suffer mismanagement forever without serious consequences or death.
Correct application (Score:2)
It appears to be a correct application of the policy, but it turns out it hurt people on the left, not on the right as intended.
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Privacy rights refer to that which a person keeps secret. Absent someone intruding into your computer, or into your home, to acquire information, any information published by you to the internet is by definition no longer private, absent a contract between you and the party you're uploading with.
Copyright is not supposed to be a tool of censorship, but rather "To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective wr
Re:Publicly available doesn't mean legal. (Score:5, Insightful)
Verified journalists like the MSNBC producer who hired a freelancer to track the Rittenhouse jurors to their homes?
Verified journalists - at least in the US - are the heart of the problem.
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Exactly. They just banned every picture of every public event. Do you have the written consent of everyone potentially identifiable in your photo? No? Can't post it to Twitter.
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To be fair, this is the norm here in Europe. If you take pictures of a concert or another public event and put it online, and someone gets into hot water because they are in the photo, they are allowed to sue you - and they will win.
Twitter is just aligning with standard privacy practices really. I don't mind. I don't go around posting random photos of people all over the internet. Neither should anybody. People have the right to privacy, even in public space.