I read the article, but I kind of agree with the people they're trying to portray as the villains. I think they're doing a service for the internet.
These "thots" is bad for stuff like twitch, youtube etc and they are constantly protected even if they break policies (because they are women). It is good that Paypal doesn't fuck around and ban them outright for abusing the service and it is good that people report abuses.
And why sex-workers and porn industry (I'm talking about legal stuff here) have not created their own paypal all these years?
Note: For the most part I agree with the sentiment of the article and I am allergic to all harassment but the "financial domination" thing rings other bells. The people having a taste for it seem to me akin to gambling addicts and in need of protection.
I'm guessing that it's because of the larger cut that these 'high risk' platforms and processors take or a bunch of other restrictions we are not aware of?
Hm - not sure I get why the risk in porn industry is higher. If anything I'd bet that it's the most stable industry ever catering for a real need that won't go away as long as people care about sex.
Dunno but I feel that there are a lot of business opportunities here and a huge market that has been sloppily served for anyone that cares to look at it seriously.
That's why most payment collectors don't allow payments for porn sites. Husband pays for XXX.com on his credit card, wife sees the charge, husband cries out "It wasn't me, my card details were stolen." He initiates a chargeback as his wife stands over his shoulder watching.
There's some interesting math/statistics at work here.
Whatever group you want to identify with, given a large enough group size, will display very bad behavior in some individuals.
The tendency is to ignore that behavior in the groups you are a member of (After all, aren't we all mostly right? There are just a few bad apples.) and emphasize that bad behavior in groups you are not a member of. (All of those folks are crazy/evil/dangerous/etc!)
Social media companies are caught directly in the middle of all of this.
I don't want to get into who is the _real_ villain, what to do, or any of that. The general principle holds no matter what the groups are. So even if you ban groups A, B, and C, it won't go away. In fact, my gut tells me you'd just make matters worse, cramming more and more unhinged and unpleasant people into larger and larger groups.
For that reason, punishing the group for the actions of the members isn't going to work.
> The MGTOW community—a more extreme offshoot of the incel movement whose adherents consider women subhuman—
That's some fine journalism there.
It's always fun to read parallels made between platform removing people for political reasons and platforms removing people because they did not adhere by their usage policy.
13 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 41.0 ms ] threadI read the article, but I kind of agree with the people they're trying to portray as the villains. I think they're doing a service for the internet.
These "thots" is bad for stuff like twitch, youtube etc and they are constantly protected even if they break policies (because they are women). It is good that Paypal doesn't fuck around and ban them outright for abusing the service and it is good that people report abuses.
Note: For the most part I agree with the sentiment of the article and I am allergic to all harassment but the "financial domination" thing rings other bells. The people having a taste for it seem to me akin to gambling addicts and in need of protection.
> No honey, I never used this service. Our card must have been stolen.
That's why most payment collectors don't allow payments for porn sites. Husband pays for XXX.com on his credit card, wife sees the charge, husband cries out "It wasn't me, my card details were stolen." He initiates a chargeback as his wife stands over his shoulder watching.
Whatever group you want to identify with, given a large enough group size, will display very bad behavior in some individuals.
The tendency is to ignore that behavior in the groups you are a member of (After all, aren't we all mostly right? There are just a few bad apples.) and emphasize that bad behavior in groups you are not a member of. (All of those folks are crazy/evil/dangerous/etc!)
Social media companies are caught directly in the middle of all of this.
I don't want to get into who is the _real_ villain, what to do, or any of that. The general principle holds no matter what the groups are. So even if you ban groups A, B, and C, it won't go away. In fact, my gut tells me you'd just make matters worse, cramming more and more unhinged and unpleasant people into larger and larger groups.
For that reason, punishing the group for the actions of the members isn't going to work.
That's some fine journalism there.
It's always fun to read parallels made between platform removing people for political reasons and platforms removing people because they did not adhere by their usage policy.
My only anger comes from the new definition of the word "thot" - which I had been using for decades as a substitute for the word "thought."
Middlemen in payment systems hold far too much power.