Amid Twitter buyout, Musk says free speech is simply "that which matches the law."
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Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...It doesn't sound dangerous to me. It might conflict with the goals a private corporation may have, so they should feel free to censor it if they choose to though.
Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...It doesn't sound dangerous to me. It might conflict with the goals a private corporation may have, so they should feel free to censor it if they choose to though.
Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Nope.You left out the important qualifying word(free). "If they were free speech" meaning speech that couldn't legally be limited under the law. Obviously some speech can be restricted. The claim wasn't that "Boycotts are speech", it was that "Boycotts are free speech." Obviously the governments can restrict direct calls for violence, because they aren't free speech. If it can legally be restricted by the government, then it isn't free speech, ergo economic transactions with prohibited entities aren't free speech.Boycotts are economic action. If they were free speech, then there would be no legal way for the federal government to prohibit transactions with prohibited parties(Iran, North Korea, etc)Elon Musk made it clear that legal speech is allowed. Boycotts are free speech. Part of freedom of speech is freedom of association and the freedom to not associate with people or companies who support things you find terrible. Banning talk of boycotts is pretty authoritarian and steps even further than banning people who get people stirred up to harass the parents of murdered children
The government puts limits on speech all the time. The idea that “if it was speech, government couldn’t limit it” holds no water.
Nope. Boycotts absolutely are free speech. And there are plenty of things that are “free speech” that the government can restrict. Lying in advertising, for one.
You are quite literally trying to remove any ability for people to rebuke bad speech, and to choose not to associate with assholes.
Just speech, with the possibility of having it removed and paying a consequence for it.
The US definition of free speech is quite broad, other countries will have a narrower definition.
Any pierogi-like construct is acceptable.Yeah, but what's the best variant of Khachapuri? Imeruli? Adjaruli? All the choices!I steamed some artichokes the other night before grilling them, with some garlic and mint in the liquid, and kept the liquid thinking I could maybe use it in cooking pasta, but am now think I'll just toss it int potato-leek soup.
Thoughts?
I had spaghettios...
"Only I have the brains to rule Lylat!"
Can Musk make it any more obvious that this is completely political and which side he will tilt "free speech":
https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1521183425914417158
"Same org that covered up Hunter Biden laptop story..."
Lol WTF does that tweet even mean. It reads like word salad.
Elon petulantly lashing out because MSNBC hurt his feelings (calling him petulant), so he's condemning their sin of not magnifying GOP conspiracy theories.
Is there some kind of psychological dynamic at work where being criticized makes a certain type of asshole flip conservative? Like, just spitballing here, but does a tendency toward Type B personality disorders and enough wealth to fear its loss just prime a certain type of guy to go full Republican when broadly criticized or even questioned?
Yep.Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...It doesn't sound dangerous to me. It might conflict with the goals a private corporation may have, so they should feel free to censor it if they choose to though.
Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Yep.Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...It doesn't sound dangerous to me. It might conflict with the goals a private corporation may have, so they should feel free to censor it if they choose to though.
Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...It doesn't sound dangerous to me. It might conflict with the goals a private corporation may have, so they should feel free to censor it if they choose to though.
Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
Yep.Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...It doesn't sound dangerous to me. It might conflict with the goals a private corporation may have, so they should feel free to censor it if they choose to though.
Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
So let me get this straight.If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yes, I'm aware. And I theorized he might want to make an exception for speech that harms the viability of his free speech platform. Round and round we go...Musk has said legal speech is permitted. Calling for boycotts of companies that have their ads alongside the inevitable bigoted shit that's going to end up on Twitter is allowed on his Twitter.
Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Yep.
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
Interesting how the alt-right can't pose an argument without redefining english, innit? It's almost touching how they've started figuring out that their 'Freeze Peach' argument won't fly because of something called Popper's Paradox of Tolerance and as per usual they try to word salad that paradox into irrelevance...
Yep.
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
Interesting how the alt-right can't pose an argument without redefining english, innit? It's almost touching how they've started figuring out that their 'Freeze Peach' argument won't fly because of something called Popper's Paradox of Tolerance and as per usual they try to word salad that paradox into irrelevance...
Again....
“Elves are wonderful. They provoke wonder.
Elves are marvellous. They cause marvels.
Elves are fantastic. They create fantasies.
Elves are glamorous. They project glamour.
Elves are enchanting. They weave enchantment.
Elves are terrific. They beget terror.
The thing about words is that meanings can twist just like a snake, and if you want to find snakes look for them behind words that have changed their meaning.
No one ever said elves are nice.
Elves are bad.”
― Terry Pratchett, Lords and Ladies
If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
People have been targeted by offensive speech on Twitter for a long time now. Many people left. Those still on are quite addicted, especially the heavy users, and are unlikely to leave in large numbers. There are tools to help, which could be expanded.So let me get this straight.
People can post whatever they like, and that's fine. Even if what they post is considered deeply offensive and hateful to others, causing those targeted to leave the platform.
When those targeted post calls for boycotts or similar, in an effort to get the platform to limit the posts they consider deeply offensive and hateful, causing advertisers to leave the platform, that's not okay.
Your justification for this is that boycotts of advertisers harm platform revenue, making the platform no longer viable or self-sustaining based on generated revenue. E.g. the (original) TOS is not a suicide pact, so the platform can implement restrictions and expand the scope of the TOS in order to keep the platform financially stable. Makes sense.
Please tell me, what do you think is going to happen to the platform's ad revenue, which you postulate is necessary to keep the platform viable, when all the people targeted by speech they deem offensive and/or hateful leave the platform? Users choosing to leave the platform en masse reduces ad revenue as much as (or more than) specific advertisers choosing to leave the platform.
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
Their speech wouldn't be banned, just their boycott actions. They would be free to say whatever they want to the white supremacists directly. You know, engaging with bad ideas and people directly. It's the speech that harms the platform that would be shunned.Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point.If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Their speech wouldn't be banned, just their boycott actions. They would be free to say whatever they want to the white supremacists directly. You know, engaging with bad ideas and people directly. It's the speech that harms the platform that would be shunned.Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point.If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Their speech wouldn't be banned, just their boycott actions. They would be free to say whatever they want to the white supremacists directly. You know, engaging with bad ideas and people directly. It's the speech that harms the platform that would be shunned.Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point.If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Yep.
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
Interesting how the alt-right can't pose an argument without redefining english, innit? It's almost touching how they've started figuring out that their 'Freeze Peach' argument won't fly because of something called Popper's Paradox of Tolerance and as per usual they try to word salad that paradox into irrelevance...
Again....
“Elves are wonderful. They provoke wonder.
Elves are marvellous. They cause marvels.
Elves are fantastic. They create fantasies.
Elves are glamorous. They project glamour.
Elves are enchanting. They weave enchantment.
Elves are terrific. They beget terror.
The thing about words is that meanings can twist just like a snake, and if you want to find snakes look for them behind words that have changed their meaning.
No one ever said elves are nice.
Elves are bad.”
― Terry Pratchett, Lords and Ladies
No no no, don't you see?? It's the people that want me to stopIf you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Popper meant you should refuse to tolerate the intolerant, in this example, the white supremacists. Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point. It creates a world where only the bigots speak, where only hateful messages are allowed.
You missed the point - and the imagery - of the little cartoon you posted.
Still, it'll be interesting to watch Twitter turn into the alt-right paradise and turn everyone else away. It's a strategy that worked wonders for Gab and Parler, and I hear Truth Social is doing really well.
Speaking only for myself: allowing others to confront the speech is not unchecked speech. I still believe that direct confrontation of the speech is the best method to confronting hate.Their speech wouldn't be banned, just their boycott actions. They would be free to say whatever they want to the white supremacists directly. You know, engaging with bad ideas and people directly. It's the speech that harms the platform that would be shunned.Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point.If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Allowing bigoted speech to remain unchecked is what harms a platform, it's why the platforms that allow it never made it anywhere near mainstream social network levels.
No no no, don't you see?? It's the people that want me to stopIf you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Yep.Yeah, protect free speech by suppressing free speech, great
Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Popper meant you should refuse to tolerate the intolerant, in this example, the white supremacists. Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point. It creates a world where only the bigots speak, where only hateful messages are allowed.
You missed the point - and the imagery - of the little cartoon you posted.
Still, it'll be interesting to watch Twitter turn into the alt-right paradise and turn everyone else away. It's a strategy that worked wonders for Gab and Parler, and I hear Truth Social is doing really well.shitting on the restaurant floorabusing trans folks that are the Nazis! I have every right to, if I choose!
/HistoryDave/s
With apologies to HistoryDave
You can only poop on the floor in the men's restaurant, sir.Wait. Do I have to ask the indifferent staff where the restroom is, or can I just poop on the floor?
Speaking only for myself: allowing others to confront the speech is not unchecked speech. I still believe that direct confrontation of the speech is the best method to confronting hate.
I also believe that banning it entrenches it.
And, again, there are types of speech that are not protected. Such as calls for race wars, direct threats against people, and doxxing people, even Justices of the US Supreme Court, the insurrection of Jan 6, 2020, etc. Nor is that a comprehensive list.
Speaking only for myself: allowing others to confront the speech is not unchecked speech. I still believe that direct confrontation of the speech is the best method to confronting hate.Their speech wouldn't be banned, just their boycott actions. They would be free to say whatever they want to the white supremacists directly. You know, engaging with bad ideas and people directly. It's the speech that harms the platform that would be shunned.Banning the people who speak against the white supremacists is exactly the inverse of Popper's point.If you allow speech that threatens the viability of your free speech platform, then it may cease to exist. To best protect it, you paradoxically might have to suppress that speech that threatens it. It's mostly a thought exercise, taking the principle of free speech to extremes, but it shows, like Popper's tolerance paradox, there is still room in a "maximum free speech" model to restrict some speech.Hang on a moment.
So imagine a white supremacist group uses their free speech to tweet about how good a white-only world would be, and how they wish they had some final answer get rid of all those annoying 'others.' Twitter places an ad for some pillow manufacturer next to those tweets and some non-white supremacists contact the pillow company to make them aware. The pillow company says they're happy to appear next to a pic of some guy with a swastika tattoo yelling that non-whites need to get out of his country. The non-white supremacists organise a boycott and you support Twitter banning them because they threaten Twitter's ad revenue?
Do I have that right? And you post Karl Popper's paradox of tolerance to support your point?
Or do you mean Musk would get rid of the white supremacists from Twitter, in my example?
I doubt Elon's Twitter would come close to a total free speech model anyways.
Allowing bigoted speech to remain unchecked is what harms a platform, it's why the platforms that allow it never made it anywhere near mainstream social network levels.
I also believe that direct confrontation of the speaker is... well, not bad, but less than ideal because it converts no one, nor does it address the contents of the speech.
This is why I am an advocate for free speech. I believe that the best means of confronting hateful and bigoted speech is to confront it directly. I also believe that there are better ways and worse to do so, but this last isn't a matter of free speech.
I also believe that banning it entrenches it. Nazi Party v Skokie, IL typifies my stance, although that was an actual 1st Amendment case. While the 1st Amendment isn't a factor here, the principles I hold stem from that.
Even though it's fictional, I also feel it was well-expressed in the movie The American President starring Michael Douglas and Annette Bening. In the third act, Michael Douglas as the US President expresses (paraphrased) that America is hard. And, among other examples, he speaks of supporting someone speaking out that which you would spend your life opposing, and that then you can speak about freedom of speech.
Neither you, Twitter, YouTube, et al are obligated to support such speech. But I think the best method to fight it is to bring it into the light of day and to confront the false premises behind that speech.
And, again, there are types of speech that are not protected. Such as calls for race wars, direct threats against people, and doxxing people, even Justices of the US Supreme Court, the insurrection of Jan 6, 2020, etc. Nor is that a comprehensive list.
This in no way approaches anything resembling an answer to the question I asked you.People have been targeted by offensive speech on Twitter for a long time now. Many people left. Those still on are quite addicted, especially the heavy users, and are unlikely to leave in large numbers. There are tools to help, which could be expanded.So let me get this straight.
People can post whatever they like, and that's fine. Even if what they post is considered deeply offensive and hateful to others, causing those targeted to leave the platform.
When those targeted post calls for boycotts or similar, in an effort to get the platform to limit the posts they consider deeply offensive and hateful, causing advertisers to leave the platform, that's not okay.
Your justification for this is that boycotts of advertisers harm platform revenue, making the platform no longer viable or self-sustaining based on generated revenue. E.g. the (original) TOS is not a suicide pact, so the platform can implement restrictions and expand the scope of the TOS in order to keep the platform financially stable. Makes sense.
Please tell me, what do you think is going to happen to the platform's ad revenue, which you postulate is necessary to keep the platform viable, when all the people targeted by speech they deem offensive and/or hateful leave the platform? Users choosing to leave the platform en masse reduces ad revenue as much as (or more than) specific advertisers choosing to leave the platform.
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ch ... ment-tools
You can only poop on the floor in the men's restaurant, sir.Wait. Do I have to ask the indifferent staff where the restroom is, or can I just poop on the floor?
You don't know them. Not the people. The leaders, true. The people they're a different animal. They feel ignored (flyover country), denigrated (deplorables) and dismissed. They've turned to the only leaders talking to them. It's how Hitler came to power. Lenin. Mao. bin Laden. History is full of such examples.Speaking only for myself: allowing others to confront the speech is not unchecked speech. I still believe that direct confrontation of the speech is the best method to confronting hate.
Here's the beauty of reality. We don't have to "believe" things. We have evidence for things.
And the reality is this: direct confrontation of bigots by those they are bigoted against doesn't work. The latter requires the victims of bigotry to basically be attacked and just take it. The latter legitimizes the "debate" by having it actually happen and being required to take it seriously (notably their opposition does not take it seriously). And as long as the point remains "debatable", then people think that it is a legitimate question (the bigots won just by having the debate happen).
That's not a thing I "believe". That is what has been proven time and again.
Are people on 4chan or 8kun being deradicalized from bigotry? No. Why not? They're "free speech" platforms; people can say whatever bigoted or anti-bigoted thing they want. If your method worked, then those sites would be perfect breeding grounds for deradicalization. But they're not.
Until your "beliefs" can explain this objective reality, you will find these "beliefs" to be a hard sell. A hypothesis that predicts X, but then not-X is found in reality, is a bad hypothesis.
You have been asked many times before to provide evidence for your "beliefs", and you cannot. You simply choose to believe them based on... well, this is what you must believe to be true in order to be a free speech absolutist. Well, OK, but you have no right to tell those of us with actual evidence on our side that we're wrong.
I also believe that banning it entrenches it.
Again, you can believe things. But reality tells a different story. Deplatforming works. Deplatforming of hateful bastards allows minoritized people to participate on platforms. Deplatforming of hateful bastards allows minoritized people to interact with normal people, getting them used to speaking with and interacting with them without constantly having to deal with bigotry and hate. Deplatforming fascists makes it harder for fascists to convert others. And so forth.
Yes, no bigots are convinced by being deplatformed. But they're bigots; most of them didn't reason themselves into their bigotry, so there was never any reasoning them out of their bigotry.
And, again, there are types of speech that are not protected. Such as calls for race wars, direct threats against people, and doxxing people, even Justices of the US Supreme Court, the insurrection of Jan 6, 2020, etc. Nor is that a comprehensive list.
Do you honestly think that Elon fucking Musk would prohibit such speech? Maybe direct threats, but I highly doubt he'd do anything about the stuff leading to the insurrection, including what Trump and his ilk were saying and doing.
The problem is that you think these people are acting in good faith. They're not. They're fascists. For them, "free speech" is when they get to talk and their enemies are silent. Any claims to the contrary are merely to get their foot in the door.
“Who will think of the ignorant backwater racists?”You don't know them. Not the people. The leaders, true. The people they're a different animal. They feel ignored (flyover country), denigrated (deplorables) and dismissed. They've turned to the only leaders talking to them. It's how Hitler came to power. Lenin. Mao. bin Laden. History is full of such examples.
But you don't want to hear this. So you won't. And this will just go on.
“Who will think of the ignorant backwater racists?”You don't know them. Not the people. The leaders, true. The people they're a different animal. They feel ignored (flyover country), denigrated (deplorables) and dismissed. They've turned to the only leaders talking to them. It's how Hitler came to power. Lenin. Mao. bin Laden. History is full of such examples.
But you don't want to hear this. So you won't. And this will just go on.
You don't know them. Not the people. The leaders, true. The people they're a different animal. They feel ignored (flyover country), denigrated (deplorables) and dismissed. They've turned to the only leaders talking to them. It's how Hitler came to power. Lenin. Mao. bin Laden. History is full of such examples.Speaking only for myself: allowing others to confront the speech is not unchecked speech. I still believe that direct confrontation of the speech is the best method to confronting hate.
Here's the beauty of reality. We don't have to "believe" things. We have evidence for things.
And the reality is this: direct confrontation of bigots by those they are bigoted against doesn't work. The latter requires the victims of bigotry to basically be attacked and just take it. The latter legitimizes the "debate" by having it actually happen and being required to take it seriously (notably their opposition does not take it seriously). And as long as the point remains "debatable", then people think that it is a legitimate question (the bigots won just by having the debate happen).
That's not a thing I "believe". That is what has been proven time and again.
Are people on 4chan or 8kun being deradicalized from bigotry? No. Why not? They're "free speech" platforms; people can say whatever bigoted or anti-bigoted thing they want. If your method worked, then those sites would be perfect breeding grounds for deradicalization. But they're not.
Until your "beliefs" can explain this objective reality, you will find these "beliefs" to be a hard sell. A hypothesis that predicts X, but then not-X is found in reality, is a bad hypothesis.
You have been asked many times before to provide evidence for your "beliefs", and you cannot. You simply choose to believe them based on... well, this is what you must believe to be true in order to be a free speech absolutist. Well, OK, but you have no right to tell those of us with actual evidence on our side that we're wrong.
I also believe that banning it entrenches it.
Again, you can believe things. But reality tells a different story. Deplatforming works. Deplatforming of hateful bastards allows minoritized people to participate on platforms. Deplatforming of hateful bastards allows minoritized people to interact with normal people, getting them used to speaking with and interacting with them without constantly having to deal with bigotry and hate. Deplatforming fascists makes it harder for fascists to convert others. And so forth.
Yes, no bigots are convinced by being deplatformed. But they're bigots; most of them didn't reason themselves into their bigotry, so there was never any reasoning them out of their bigotry.
And, again, there are types of speech that are not protected. Such as calls for race wars, direct threats against people, and doxxing people, even Justices of the US Supreme Court, the insurrection of Jan 6, 2020, etc. Nor is that a comprehensive list.
Do you honestly think that Elon fucking Musk would prohibit such speech? Maybe direct threats, but I highly doubt he'd do anything about the stuff leading to the insurrection, including what Trump and his ilk were saying and doing.
The problem is that you think these people are acting in good faith. They're not. They're fascists. For them, "free speech" is when they get to talk and their enemies are silent. Any claims to the contrary are merely to get their foot in the door.
Because the primary concern of the platform(allegedly) is free speech, not revenue. If the goal was revenue maximization, your arguments would be making sense. Within the framework of maximizing free speech to the detriment of everything else, it does not.This in no way approaches anything resembling an answer to the question I asked you.People have been targeted by offensive speech on Twitter for a long time now. Many people left. Those still on are quite addicted, especially the heavy users, and are unlikely to leave in large numbers. There are tools to help, which could be expanded.So let me get this straight.
People can post whatever they like, and that's fine. Even if what they post is considered deeply offensive and hateful to others, causing those targeted to leave the platform.
When those targeted post calls for boycotts or similar, in an effort to get the platform to limit the posts they consider deeply offensive and hateful, causing advertisers to leave the platform, that's not okay.
Your justification for this is that boycotts of advertisers harm platform revenue, making the platform no longer viable or self-sustaining based on generated revenue. E.g. the (original) TOS is not a suicide pact, so the platform can implement restrictions and expand the scope of the TOS in order to keep the platform financially stable. Makes sense.
Please tell me, what do you think is going to happen to the platform's ad revenue, which you postulate is necessary to keep the platform viable, when all the people targeted by speech they deem offensive and/or hateful leave the platform? Users choosing to leave the platform en masse reduces ad revenue as much as (or more than) specific advertisers choosing to leave the platform.
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ch ... ment-tools
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
Because the primary concern of the platform(allegedly) is free speech, not revenue. If the goal was revenue maximization, your arguments would be making sense. Within the framework of maximizing free speech to the detriment of everything else, it does not.This in no way approaches anything resembling an answer to the question I asked you.People have been targeted by offensive speech on Twitter for a long time now. Many people left. Those still on are quite addicted, especially the heavy users, and are unlikely to leave in large numbers. There are tools to help, which could be expanded.So let me get this straight.
People can post whatever they like, and that's fine. Even if what they post is considered deeply offensive and hateful to others, causing those targeted to leave the platform.
When those targeted post calls for boycotts or similar, in an effort to get the platform to limit the posts they consider deeply offensive and hateful, causing advertisers to leave the platform, that's not okay.
Your justification for this is that boycotts of advertisers harm platform revenue, making the platform no longer viable or self-sustaining based on generated revenue. E.g. the (original) TOS is not a suicide pact, so the platform can implement restrictions and expand the scope of the TOS in order to keep the platform financially stable. Makes sense.
Please tell me, what do you think is going to happen to the platform's ad revenue, which you postulate is necessary to keep the platform viable, when all the people targeted by speech they deem offensive and/or hateful leave the platform? Users choosing to leave the platform en masse reduces ad revenue as much as (or more than) specific advertisers choosing to leave the platform.
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ch ... ment-tools
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
Because the primary concern of the platform(allegedly) is free speech, not revenue. If the goal was revenue maximization, your arguments would be making sense. Within the framework of maximizing free speech to the detriment of everything else, it does not.This in no way approaches anything resembling an answer to the question I asked you.People have been targeted by offensive speech on Twitter for a long time now. Many people left. Those still on are quite addicted, especially the heavy users, and are unlikely to leave in large numbers. There are tools to help, which could be expanded.So let me get this straight.
People can post whatever they like, and that's fine. Even if what they post is considered deeply offensive and hateful to others, causing those targeted to leave the platform.
When those targeted post calls for boycotts or similar, in an effort to get the platform to limit the posts they consider deeply offensive and hateful, causing advertisers to leave the platform, that's not okay.
Your justification for this is that boycotts of advertisers harm platform revenue, making the platform no longer viable or self-sustaining based on generated revenue. E.g. the (original) TOS is not a suicide pact, so the platform can implement restrictions and expand the scope of the TOS in order to keep the platform financially stable. Makes sense.
Please tell me, what do you think is going to happen to the platform's ad revenue, which you postulate is necessary to keep the platform viable, when all the people targeted by speech they deem offensive and/or hateful leave the platform? Users choosing to leave the platform en masse reduces ad revenue as much as (or more than) specific advertisers choosing to leave the platform.
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ch ... ment-tools
Are you suggesting that the offended users be compelled to continue using the platform? If so, how would you implement that? If not, why is one class of revenue-reducing speech worth protecting while another class of revenue-reducing speech is worth banning?
You mistake "revenue" for "participation".
You can only poop on the floor in the men's restaurant, sir.Wait. Do I have to ask the indifferent staff where the restroom is, or can I just poop on the floor?