Is that what Parler's CEO said?but when Amazon dumped Parler because it wouldn't stop users from posting illegal things
Is that what Parler's CEO said?but when Amazon dumped Parler because it wouldn't stop users from posting illegal things
It entitles them to protections in exchange for certain things. It's also rights they don't seem to care about others having to greater or lesser degrees. Remove companies rights and the people in said companies still would have their own rights. It would just be now companies wouldn't be treated as thought they are people.I think you're missing an important point here. It's not that private companies can do what they like. It's that entities have rights - including Facebook, Twitter, etc. - which entitle them to be able to do various things with their own stuff. You're talking about taking away their rights.
illegal stuff as oppose to all the other sites on AWS that I'm sure are perfectly good and nice like I dunno twitter which literally only got round to banning pedophile networks in the past year.The funny thing is that Republicans were pushing for social media companies to be held legally responsible for what was posted on them (mostly so Papa Trump could spend the rest of his life suing them for libel) but when Amazon dumped Parler because it wouldn't stop users from posting illegal things (for which Amazon could potentially be held legally responsible), Republicans cried foul.
No no, see, they'd only be held liable for stuff their users post if they have any moderation at all whatsoever. If they gave complete and total free reign to every botnet, terrorist, state actor, scam artist, click farm, porn aggregator, neo-nazi, and bit coin miner, they'd be in the clear.The funny thing is that Republicans were pushing for social media companies to be held legally responsible for what was posted on them (mostly so Papa Trump could spend the rest of his life suing them for libel) but when Amazon dumped Parler because it wouldn't stop users from posting illegal things (for which Amazon could potentially be held legally responsible), Republicans cried foul.
I believe there was several incidents in Indonesia of sectarian violence, and I think there’s an open international legal case related to one in Ethiopia. Of course just dozens in India. Aside from that, there’s been mountains of close calls in Latin America, possibly avoided solely because Spanish is a language some of their administrators know. WhatsApp is partially responsible for Bolsonaro’s election for example (yes I know that’s Portuguese not Spanish). Brazil is one of the places where Silicon Valley execs decided to do “market expansion” by offering free internet but only to access particular social media sites, so people will post links to fake articles alleging blood libels that nobody can actually check. Same thing occurs in the Philippines. Aside from some podcasts on Facebook’s fuckups I don’t know of many sources on this personally though. If you’re interested, I’d recommend the Behind the Bastards episodes on Facebook, though I get if you don’t trust a leftist podcast being recommended by a communist.Other than what happened in Burma, do you have any other examples? Legit wondering. I know it's enabled violence but I hadn't heard of any other genocides
Moralism. Meaningless. Goals matter. Ideals and principles are just new religions. If your goals require or allow you to utilize detestable means, you had shitty goals.You can't have an identifiable ideology without principles. If you're not tied to principles then anyone can claim to be part of any group and purport that whatever actions they take and beliefs they hold are in accordance with that group. Only by marrying ideologies to specific principles that must be held by adherents do we imbue them with meaning. Otherwise there's no point to an ideology since without principles guiding it anyone who believes anything can be part of it, and you can have members with conflicting, mutually exclusive views be parts of the same group and claim to be the real representatives of it.
It's like saying that I stand by your no social media stance too, but as there's no principles I am actually for social media in my way of standing against them. If you don't establish the principle of antagonism towards social media and if you don't uphold that into perpetuity, your stance against them has no meaning beyond optics.
It's like that with other stuff too. You gotta uphold the foundational basis of your purported positions (principles) for your positions to remain tenable.
Thank you for your reply. It was well thought out. I was aware of the instances in India.If you’re interested, I’d recommend the Behind the Bastards episodes on Facebook, though I get if you don’t trust a leftist podcast being recommended by a communist.
Well, that actually makes a whole lotta senseIt's from this interview:
This sounds like another principle to me.If your goals require or allow you to utilize detestable means, you had shitty goals.
It entitles them to protections in exchange for certain things. It's also rights they don't seem to care about others having to greater or lesser degrees. Remove companies rights and the people in said companies still would have their own rights. It would just be now companies wouldn't be treated as thought they are people.
I think you are forgetting that companies are property, owned by shareholders. They have some independent legal status as entities in their own right, but what you mean by taking away companies' rights in this case is taking away rights of their owners to run their own property.Maybe companies shouldn't have those rights, just like they don't have the right to discriminate based on race.
The government already has the power to do that when there is a need with things like search warrants or eminent domain. Protecting the livelihood of people is just as important as catching someone who sells drugs, if not more so.I think you are forgetting that companies are property, owned by shareholders. They have some independent legal status as entities in their own right, but what you mean by taking away companies' rights in this case is taking away rights of their owners to run their own property.
Would you like it if the government declared your house public property, and demanded you let anyone into your front room to say whatever they liked?
You probably wouldn't have complained when laws were passed to say "you can't fire or refuse to hire someone because they're black". You wouldn't have used the "but that's taking away their rights!" argument then, right?They have some independent legal status as entities in their own right, but what you mean by taking away companies' rights in this case is taking away rights of their owners to run their own property.
Robert Evans is a hero, turning libs into anarchists through jokes about machetes and Raytheon.FB relevant sources, updated links, apart from whatever is on the instagram one, as am not wanting to make a profile to check
- https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-n...ions-members-facebook-documents-show-n1236317
- https://archive.is/rCvAy#selection-1323.0-1327.269
- https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/craigsilverman/facebook-ignore-political-manipulation-whistleblower-memo
- https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/facebook-failed-kenosha?bfsource=relatedmanual
- https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanmac/facebook-employee-leaks-show-they-feel-betrayed
- https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/craigsilverman/facebook-zuckerberg-what-if-trump-disputes-election-results?bfsource=relatedmanual
- https://www.businessinsider.com/mark-zuckerberg-haircut-explained-augustus-caesar-2019-10
- https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/...rberg-fix-facebook-before-it-breaks-democracy
- https://www.theguardian.com/comment...tracts-mark-zuckerberg-roman-hardman-augustus
- https://time.com/5880118/myanmar-rohingya-genocide-facebook-gambia/
- https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/xg897a/hate-speech-on-facebook-is-pushing-ethiopia-dangerously-close-to-a-genocide
- (The Boy Kings: A Journey into the Heart of the Social Network book link, not showing on preview, but that's what is meant to be here. It keeps trying to turn it into a media for some reason)
I think it's a very good interview. He not only articulates a point I strongly agree with (supporting the UK in the Falklands war), but answers questions clearly and directly.Well, that actually makes a whole lotta sense
Just so we're clear here, are you saying that they shouldn't have the right to discriminate as to what sort of speech they allow on their website? Or at the very least, are you suggesting that they shouldn't be able to discriminate on the basis of something that's normally a protected class?You probably wouldn't have complained when laws were passed to say "you can't fire or refuse to hire someone because they're black". You wouldn't have used the "but that's taking away their rights!" argument then, right?
It's not a right they should have, just like racial discrimination is not a right they should have. I wouldn't feel bad about taking it away.
Yes. There would probably have to be some exceptions, but that's the gist of it.Just so we're clear here, are you saying that they shouldn't have the right to discriminate as to what sort of speech they allow on their website?
Well if my front room was open letting people in to use it anyway as part of the business I'd say governments would have some say. Same with people who run some home business etc still have to abide by regulations.I think you are forgetting that companies are property, owned by shareholders. They have some independent legal status as entities in their own right, but what you mean by taking away companies' rights in this case is taking away rights of their owners to run their own property.
Would you like it if the government declared your house public property, and demanded you let anyone into your front room to say whatever they liked?
Search warrants require the reasonable suspicion of a crime, and are not a reasonable comparison.The government already has the power to do that when there is a need with things like search warrants or eminent domain. Protecting the livelihood of people is just as important as catching someone who sells drugs, if not more so.
I think it's interesting you don't see a difference between discriminating against someone on the basis of their race and declining to do business with someone who has failed to honour their contract.You probably wouldn't have complained when laws were passed to say "you can't fire or refuse to hire someone because they're black". You wouldn't have used the "but that's taking away their rights!" argument then, right?
I don't even want to see who that's addressed to.I think it's a very good interview. He not only articulates a point I strongly agree with (supporting the UK in the Falklands war), but answers questions clearly and directly.
Just so we're clear here, are you saying that they shouldn't have the right to discriminate as to what sort of speech they allow on their website? Or at the very least, are you suggesting that they shouldn't be able to discriminate on the basis of something that's normally a protected class?
Hey, by the way, I wanted to look up the Fourteenth Amendment to give more context on it. And I saw this beauty herethe right to express information, ideas, and opinions free of government restrictions based on content and subject only to reasonable limitations (as the power of the government to avoid a clear and present danger) especially as guaranteed by the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
So... It seems with all the gerrymandering, voter suppression and purges... It seems that the Republican controlled Southern states might have shot themselves in the foot?In its later sections, the 14th Amendment authorized the federal government to punish states that violated or abridged their citizens’ right to vote by proportionally reducing the states’ representation in Congress, and mandated that anyone who “engaged in insurrection” against the United States could not hold civil, military or elected office (without the approval of two-thirds of the House and Senate).