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“Every vendor from text message services to email providers to our lawyers all ditched us too on the same day,” Matze said today on Fox News.
Fox News have a website. Fox News have servers, why doesn't Fox News host him?
Lol, even their lawyers dropped them
Good. We should not tolerate the intolerant.
Intolerant of the intolerant?
Exactly. I'm glad you finally understand.

Are you suggesting 'tolerant' people should tolerate something like, racism? You are a logical moron if you try to make that argument. You know exactly what you are doing, and it's stupid.

We've banned this account for abusing HN for ideological flamewar. We ban accounts for that, regardless of which ideology they're for or against, and regardless of how wrong other people are or you feel they are. You've been doing this a long time, you've been using the site primarily for it, and we've asked you many times previously to stop.

HN is a site for thoughtful, curious conversation. There's no substantive and interesting discussion that can't be had that way, and accounts that are unwilling to stop setting fires and attacking others are not cool here. Ironically, the people destroying the commons this way have far more in common with their enemies than they do with the bulk of the community, who come here to find interesting things to read and to escape this sort of ragey shitfest.

If you don't want to be banned, you're welcome to email hn@ycombinator.com and give us reason to believe that you'll follow the rules in the future. You've posted some good comments in the past, but the damage caused by the abusive ones unfortunately far outweighs the benefit of the good ones.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

How about we attempt to understand why people are thinking this way. Why are they not interested in thinking your way? What can be done to help both side talk and solve problems together?
we absolutely need to do all of that. but when i talk my parlerish side of the family it usually starts with them saying “if we hadn’t ended segregation we wouldn’t have these problems” and i don’t know what path to take from there
Sometimes people just need you to listen. Though it's ill adviced to agree with wild conspiracy theories, after a long discussion normal human beings tend to agree on something together, especially if not arguing.
Mutual understanding is a great idea. It is outside the job expectations of the people pulling the plug on their technical infrastructure.
No. The time has passed when it crossed into violence. We should do here what the Germans did to Nazi groups after the war. Ban them.
You are kinda overlooking the fact that we haven't had the war yet.
Appeasement was quite a famous issue in WW2.
If we use the wisdom history provides, we don't need to have the war.
Wisdom may go beyond just banning everything "we" don't like. That gets old after a while.
It is impossible. Especially for the far right and far left. Go into subreddits just to see the difference. I used to think like that too, and then seeing the actual reality its just disappointing. When Trump said that he can shoot someone at 5th avenue and his supporters will support him, that's real.

Thankfully majority of people are not far left far right, but center.

Sure. I can help with this. I was actually discussing this earlier.

The economy has been shit for middle class Americans for quite a while. Rent and home prices have been increasing far faster than wages. Furthermore, lots more nickel and diming has led to more debt and misery for the average middle american. The situation is even worse for people lower than that. However, especially for lower middle class white Americans, they aren't too far removed from a time when that was enough to have an OK life. So they remember or have heard about it. And they are unhappy.

And for a while we were working on fixing that unhappiness. But then some people came along and said something different. They said that those other people over there are the reason for your unhappiness. If it weren't for them things would be better. They are your enemy. And they've been doing this for decades now.

And things were getting more tense. Then (probably with a little outside help) someone else came along and really encouraged ramping up that anger. And said all the right things. And said if we just take over, we'll be able to make it right this time. And so many people believed this that they didn't really stop what that actually meant.

This may seem like I'm just BSing here, but I'm not. It's the same technique used by gangs, cults, and neo-nazi's. They target the young, naive, and emotionally frail. And they promise companionship and strength. And for people that feel alone and left behind, that is enough. They don't need to be dumb or evil. Just a little broken. And then the evil ones come in and take advantage.

But if you haven't ever seen how difficult it is to help someone recover from being in a cult or a neo-nazi gang... then you wouldn't realize how hard it is to deal with these groups.

> for a while we were working on fixing that unhappiness

who is "we" in this statement? and how were the things from your first paragraph being "fixed"?

I think you should go to one of these forums - parler or gab, currently /r/conspiracy, or one of the similar. Try to have a reasoned conversation with them. I really genuinely want more people to do that. Because when you do that you very quickly start to understand there is no reason. On the 5th of January, you would've heard them loudly preach that the 6th will be the "reckoning" the "true patriots" would "rise up" that Italygate was an explosive new revelation. Joe Biden had finally been caught in their trap, that and finally Trump would make his move under executive order blah blah blah. On the 7th of January you would've seen them loudly declaring that antifa undercover agents stormed the capitol to discredit them - despite the fact that storming the capitol is literally what they had been advocating on the 5th. Everything they claimed to want on the 5th was actually a setup to discredit them on the 7th.

There is no logic, there is no consistency, there is only claiming whatever is expedient at the time.

Sounds like a sort of social psychosis, lead by psychopaths in lead positions, or anonymous anarchy. Point being humans experience pleasure at such fantastical thinking, especially when validated in a group setting, even online. In the beginning this can be powerful feelings, though more like addiction and craving over time.

Anyways, that was a brief attempt to grok "crazytalk".

> I think you should go to one of these forums - parler or gab, currently /r/conspiracy, or one of the similar. Try to have a reasoned conversation with them

You'll be banned pretty quickly, they really don't care about free speech, only their speech.

Indeed, and time should not be wasted on those who argue in bad faith.
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Is anybody who espouses this view willing to define how we determine who the intolerant are (to then not tolerate them)? Where is the line?

Should Fox News be taken off the air? Should any conservative talk radio show be shut down? Should all employees for any type of org that can considered conservative or adjacent be made to pay for tolerating the intolerant?

https://medium.com/thoughts-economics-politics-sustainabilit...

https://images.app.goo.gl/nCWYshqYeZcN94kf7

Tolerating the intolerant gives the intolerant the foothold they need to get enough legitimacy to seize power and destroy the society which was tolerant of them.

I understand your viewpoint, but I'm asking where you draw the line for who counts as the intolerant?

If the risk is society's destruction as you say, then I'd imagine you'd be motivated to cast a pretty wide net for who counts as intolerant (who thus should be sanctioned and not given equal access to services until they fall in line). After all, anything can be justified to save our society from destruction, correct? It seems like it'd be better to be safe than sorry, with the stakes so high as you mention.

Are there any conservatives/republicans and their associated organizations that you think should maintain their equal access to services, and shouldn't face some sort of penalty for either directly/indirectly supporting an ideology that led to the events of January 6th?

Come on. Anyone who supported the insurrection on Jan 6th should be expelled from Congress and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law for supporting a rebellion against the US. The fact you make me spell that out that to dance around the issue is disturbing.

This is pretty straight forward. If you:

Support violence against other groups because they look different

Seek to restrict someone's rights/voting because of the above

Then you should not be tolerated in our society and you should be punished.

I understand you're emotional about it, and asking for clarification is 'disturbing' to you. I also don't like what happened and would love to figure out ways to ensure a better functioning society.

However, I think where we may differ is how we think about solutions to problems like this. I want solutions that are scalable, and that help maintain a society where a diversity of people can all thrive over the long-term. I don't believe emotional reasoning should be a strong factor in determining punishments for people, as it leads to bias and discrimination.

Most vocal people you see on the internet don't seem particularly interested in long-term/scalable solutions. It's not terribly surprising, we humans are very short-term oriented and tribal by nature. When we see members of the outgroup performing badly, we want to punish them. When members of our own ingroup perform badly, we are more likely to rationalize it away and be more charitable with the interpretation of what they've done.

I don't believe the 'punish the outgroup, forgive the ingroup' thinking is healthy for a functioning pluralistic society. The words you are using and the way you are framing things are signals to me that you may be fairly biased against your outgroup. That's why I was asking you to spell out exactly what rules should govern punishment in your mind.

The next step in critically thinking through your proposed rules is whether you would punish members of your ingroup for violating them, or if you'd add new caveats to ensure they were given some leniency. But that's just a rhetorical question given the nature of this forum.

Note: I am making no claims of equivalence between your outgroup and ingroup in terms of actions they've done. You also likely think I'm part of your outgroup for straying from the status quo by even posing such questions, and may feel inclined to use terms reserved for your outgroup. You'd be mistaken, but I understand the impulse.

this is entirely not surprising. He’s going to have to go overseas to get service
They’ll be subject to NSA monitoring at that point. Not that the executive branch was keen to act on the intel in plain sight..
It’s not like the NSA isn’t minoring everything in the US already anyway.
And then what? Get sued into the ground by the family of the slain capitol cop, and the subsequent people that are killed by the "patriots" openly plotting violence on parler?
Peering with what carrier pigeon IP service?

They'll still require a backplane service with a landing point in the US.

Unless the site goes fully Tor / Onion.

The cartels are all acting in unison.
Private companies just want to act in their best interest. Call it what you will, no one wants to be associated with them; and as such they get removed.

Amazon, Google, Facebook, et.al. owe Parler exactly nothing.

"don't like twitter, make a new one!"
I was just pointing out that these very powerful companies, some are claimed to be monopolies are acting in unison which can be argued seems like cartel behavior.
There's a big reason they act in unison now though. They're responding to a single national security threat event and possible consequencial liabilities. So it is not a random time do be doing this. There has previously been legitimate concern about extremism, and from this event seems only to accellerate until mitigated. People should enjoy free speech, but how these platforms work, the side-effects of algos and what kinds of conversations is facilitated do matter.
That is a good reason why we need to support such businesses not in the US. There is no way a European based company would ban them on such a short notice over some minor thing happening in the US. It isn't like US based companies ban much in Europe, it is just local politics driving these decisions.
I thought the free markets could do whatever they want? Funny how this works, isn't it.
I didn't say free markets could do whatever they wanted.

Also, wanted to point out that snarky comments are against the guidelines here.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

>I didn't say free markets could do whatever they wanted.

So you agree they are allowed to do as they please. What is your issue then?

>Also, wanted to point out that snarky comments are against the guidelines here.

You call the tech companies cartels, and I'm the one against guidelines? Makes sense....

There is a full on assault on anything remotely related to the Capitol Hill intrusion.
Saw this joke on Twitter today:

That’s what I call “serverless infrastructure”

Would love to hear how a shared message board platform can be serverless. You are aware databases are servers right?
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They should be able to find a cloud provider in Russia
In Soviet Russia, cloud provider finds you! Miss the old /. days.
Most of the old /. tropes would probably earn some kind of moderation penalty here for being too similar to a low-effort Reddit-style comment.

I also miss those days.

> "They made an attempt to not only kill the app, but to actually destroy the entire company. And it’s not just these three companies. Every vendor from text message services to email providers to our lawyers all ditched us too on the same day."

If everybody else is an asshole, maybe you're the asshole.

Said the church to the scientist. Said the mob to the witch.

Be careful about where this goes. This one doesn't affect you and I, but the next one might. It certainly will when it gets to HN or Signal. But then it'll be too late.

First they came for...

cry me a river
Ehhh I've looked at parler out of curiosity. Basically full of hate, conspiracy, calls for violence, blatant racism "kill blacks" type stuff.

I'm amazed companies were willing to work with them in the first place. Providing services to a company like that is like providing service to the KKK

Is this speech illegal?
Hate speech, discriminatory speech and defamation, lots of speech is criminal. It depends on context and intent, for which misguided tolerance for bullying we're now witnessing. For especially bad cults, ie. Germany banned Nazi symbols and speech.

Policy is made in a context, not just blind ideology.

What are tech companies liabilities for hosting criminal speech?
If they know of criminal conduct, they might be liable for not reporting or supporting such activities. There's also bad PR and various guilt-by association. Take a hard look what happened to the founder of Wikileaks for instance.
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The right to refuse service isn't limited to illegal activity.
Inciting murder is illegal in the USA, here in Britain and in most countries.
That's pretty close to how Twitter is often described.
And all of that except for the "kill blacks" and calls for violence would be perfectly fine on Reddit on /r/conservative. Most of it would also be fine on Twitter or Facebook, except that some of the conspiracy stuff might get a misinformation warning and/or a fact check link.

That's why sites like Parler, Gab, and Voat end up as cesspools. Those who don't feel the need to post racism and calls to violence can just stay on the mainstream services, getting both their political discussion and their non-political discussion in one convenient place.

Voat tried to have the non-political stuff too, but it just ended up with racism there too. For example, in /v/movies people complaining that the "Call of the Wild" cast included a black actor, and going off about how it was the Jews in Hollywood behind this for nefarious reasons.

Yet Galileo was indefinitely imprisoned for denying a geocentric model of the universe, which Everyone Knew to be True. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galileo_affair

The point is that the majority is often wrong, and consensus does not confer virtue.

(I am deliberately making no remark on this instance; I am speaking purely of the underlying principle.)

This underlying principle would argue that democracy itself is unjust, and that we cannot, say, have laws against murder simply because the majority of people think that murder is bad. What if it's actually good? Consensus does not infer virtue. Shall we suspend all laws?

The answer is that, while such an argument is technically true, we have yet to find a better way to structure society. Your example of Galileo strongly suggests that we should not hand over this sort of decision-making to princes or priests, which are the usual alternatives to the ballot box. The judgment of the majority is regularly wrong, but it is also the most regularly not-wrong thing we know about.

If you think the majority is wrong, convince them that they are wrong. It will take time. I'm sorry there isn't a better way.

> This underlying principle would argue that democracy itself is unjust...while such an argument is technically true, we have yet to find a better way to structure society.

We certainly have found a better way to structure society: a Constitutional government that honors certain principles that even the democratically elected Congress and President can only override with much more than a majority, with judges trusted to guard those principles.

Who writes the constitution, and more importantly, who gives it their assent? Who appoints the judges and decides that they are trustworthy?

I'm not arguing for rule by simple majority. I do agree that important things need the consensus of much more than 51% of society (let alone 51% of people who bother to vote).

If it were only a simple majority of cloud hosts, text messaging services, email providers, and lawyers that ditched Parler, they would be in no danger at all.

> I do agree that important things need the consensus of much more than 51% of society (let alone 51% of people who bother to vote).

Even if all the cloud hosts, text messaging services, email providers, and lawyers in America agreed, that's still much less than a simple majority of Americans.

I haven't seen any evidence that a supermajority supports banning Parler, which was the #1 downloaded app on both Google and Apple app stores back in November[1].

1: https://techcrunch.com/2020/11/09/parler-app-store-facebook/

Those persecuting Galileo were not “everyone else” though, it was just the Catholic Church authorities, and in fact even many church scholars were sympathetic to Galileo views and confirmed his observations. Also Galileo was subject to actual persecution by the authorities, not simply being dropped by business partners. It’s a completely spurious example.
Everybody was not an asshole for the two years this existed and suddenly became one a mere week ago. Strange, innit?
All those people became brainwashed last week then?
Prior to a week ago, there hadn't been an attack against the US Capitol planned on the app while the owners defend the right of the planners to use it for that purpose ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

It should be expected that when historically unprecedented things happen, people's viewpoints change.

Trump can organize another attack on the next platform his followers migrate to. Will you ban that we well? What makes you think platforms are the problem and not the actual person that started it? Do you think with the ban of this platform the problem has been fixed?
They almost certainly were assholes the whole time, it’s just that very recently they proved they were not just assholes but murderous treasonous ones in action in a way that removed all reasonable doubt.
I mean, if for a few years you lead people to believe that you’re the type of person who poops in the pool, and then you finally do it one day, who’s gonna invite you over to their house?

You can make the argument that it sucks that so much infrastructure is built upon orgs that have their own first amendment rights and I’d agree with that, but just that, no one is forced to associate with you. If a group of companies are refusing your cash, might want to reevaluate your viewpoints respective to the broader community.

There have been enough mob rule systems in history to prove that saying entirely wrong.

Was Oppenheimer an asshole during the McCarthy hysteria?

Was Solschenizyn an asshole during communism?

We are seeing similar methods of silencing now, starting with universities, open source projects and now free speech apps in monopolies or oligopolies that should be forced to adhere to common carrier rules.

That’s how free speech ends.
And yet they are still online (edit: looks like they'll be online with AWS until 1159 PCT, my mistake)

I am pretty sure that coordinated withdrawal of services like this would amount to Tortious Interference wouldn't it?

Given Parler/Foxx's pentant for exaggeration and playing the victim I'm a little incredulous to be honest.

I don't like censorship or support it. Parler should stay, for all its issues. But that doesn't mean they're the victim of some giant conspiracy either.

I mean you can't run a site with no censorship where people are openly plotting the violent takeover of the us government and/or violent events. It is just a liability issue.

This isn't some kind of censorship issue, that just isn't legal and never has been legal.

The great irony here is Parler DOES engage in loads of censorship (no parody, no Pro-Cannabis comments, no positive antifa comments, I don't think you can even be left wing on there).

So I'm stuck defending a censorous site against censorship!?

I am a weirdo, because a public site like Parler is exactly where I hope insurrection should be planned. Why wasn't the FBI ready to swoop and arrest actual violent people given they were posting their plans in plane view? Why are we relying on AWS to moderate away trumps lies and fix the US Political landscape?

To me, killing parler (for all its shit-ness), is a perfect example of "we have to do something, and this is something".

Does anyone actually think that if Parler had gone offline 4 weeks ago, the events of the last week would have been different? They'd have planned on twitter or Facebook or reddit or wherever.

When can we solve the actual problems here (failure to deal with trump, a poor relationship with the truth for all politicians, law enforcement complete lack of interest in right wing threats, lack of basic security etc)?

Censoring random websites seems like farting in a Jucuzzi, censorship is almost always a way of ignoring actual problems while pretending you are acting. And here we are again.

Sorry, its late here in the UK and I'm ranting. Thanks for reading.

I think widespread suppression of information about this planned protest would've mattered, but I don't think it was justified before the events at the capitol. Now I think it is a clear and easily foreseeable risk to allow this to continue.
I'm all for arresting anyone who plans specific violence. Before/after the events at the capital, I don't care. Go arrest them. Banning one site just moves them to another and gives them a persecution complex. 12months in prison for conspiracy to commit public disorder is a much better deterant for future planned insurrections.
So we should be referring everyone making idle threats on the internet to law enforcement? That seems unrealistic and honestly way more totalitarian than just moderation and censorship.

I also don't think law enforcement has the bandwidth to deal with it.

If someone makes a specific threat, yes.

Then when they get 50 referrals from r/knitting and 50mil from parlar, law enforcement can raise an eyebrow, investigate and prevent these things.

To me, that seems fair and effective.

The alternative is that we ban parlar. But only after the violence. And we know that banning parlar won't prevent this from happening, we're just moving the problem.

Why bother? Keep parler, by now every second account should an FBI agent. It's even better than twitter/reddit/facebook: all the noise is gone, it's just the crazies planning violence...

> Why wasn't the FBI ready to swoop and arrest actual violent people given they were posting their plans in plane view?

I assume because the vast majority of such posts were and are fantasies masquerading as plans, and there aren't the resources to set up stings for each such "plan".

Edit: this is a snarky comment and I should have been polite. I wasn't. I apologise.

Original comment: Turns out the resources were just the price of a plane ticket to Washington...

That sure is pithy, but it doesn't make any sense unless you're suggesting that there was only one public plan for what people were going to do on the 6th, right? While I haven't looked for them, I would be very surprised if that was the case.
Yeah, sorry, pithy is me being snarky really. That was cheap of me and I apologise.

Actually that is what I'm saying. Was the average insurrectionist more planning than that in this case?

I know some bombs were found, leaving them out this seems like a mob with guns. They coordinated the date and location and just winged it from there it seems.

If someone has a complex plan, you can't be sure they'll go through with it till they've taken significant action.

If the plan is "meet in Washington on Tuesday, bring a gun so we can shoot democrats,see you there" then it seems you can arrest that plotter as soon as he has a gun and a plane ticket.

I think so many people either have public profiles or wore ID or literally spelt their name out to reporters, they can't have been actual planning, prepared criminals.

Edit:

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/01/10/us/politics/capitol-arres...

I picked the above up, it seems like 2 people Brough zip ties to take prisoners. 2 more were in possession of firearms when arrested. That's the level of planning with these people, most of them seem to have just turned up.

I'm not at all saying that excuses their actions. Quite the opposite: it brings the bar for actual conspiracy down when the crime is simple.

Thank you for your response!

Some people on the right (and a very few on the left) would view being armed as the natural state of free people. Especially when discussing suggestions from righties, it seems like "bring your firearm" is right next to "don't forget your keys".

I think that's one of the issues that really worries me about all this: the cultures of the left and right are different enough that the left views behavior the right considers normal to be violently deviate, and then the right (at least on my own social feeds) reacts as though the left is targeting them personally.

My best argument that no insurrection was intended by those present is that the bombs (or bomb-making materials, or whatever) that were found weren't used, even though the mob had control of the Capitol building. Indeed, even though a significant percentage of the rioters were likely armed (see above), the only shots fired were by Capitol police. More than anything else, that confirms for me that the mob didn't arrive with the intention of taking the Capitol, or insurrection, or anything like it. They had the materials available to make things much, much worse, and instead they acted like tourists. Why? Clearly (I think!), because there was no intent by 99+% of them to do anything but show up and support legislators in finding the courage to dissent from what the Trumpists believe to be fraud.

When they stopped filming people streaking on sports fields it stopped happening. When school shooters get tons of media coverage school shootings go up. Same with suicides.

People don't like to think that censorship works, but the truth is that censorship does work a lot of the time.

I can see some argument for that. But It still makes no sense to ban parler. And you now need to filter the content of all media to prevent those people getting publicity elsewhere.

So is that the plan? Keep parler but install censors there AND in every website mod office, newspaper, TV station and radio studio?

That's a lot of work. When we could just put FBI agents on parler and have them prevent crimes with conspiracy charges.

And you still can't actually justify a ban on parler.

Note that the alternative would be forcing private companies to do business with a party they do not want to do business with. That has its own set of issues.
You're right and it does. But we do already do that with (other) utilities: the power company can't cut off the supply to the local KKK office as long as they're operating legally and they pay their bills.

This is the price we pay for an open society. Freedom means freedom for morons as well as for us. I wish there were an easier answer, but I wouldn't even trust myself with the power to decide who is allowed to speak and who isn't, so I won't trust Amazon Web Services PR department. So no one gets the job and sometimes that stinks.

So are you arguing for declaring cloud computing platforms public utilities?
I guess I'm arguing for 2 things:

* declaring pretty much any company (including cloud computing platforms and maybe the Apple app store and few others) a utility IF they have this sort of market breaking power.

* creating a lower tier than full "utility" status where a company does not have market breaking power but where they do have excess power.

I'm not convinced AWS has market breaking power because parler could get another provider. But getting and moving to another provider on ~24h notice is pretty market breaking. So maybe AWS (and other sub-utilities or whatever you want to call them) can cut you off BUT they need to give you 28 days notice and arrange for transfer of data and continuity of service. To me this is like if you're out of lease, your landlord still has to give you notice, they can't just turn up at 9am and tell you you need to be out by 5.

I don't think those are too onerous as requirements. And I do think that many companies (Google for search and ads, Visa/Mastercard) have gotten just as "infrastructural" as power/water/phone companies were back when the original push to utility status occurred. There should be a push to balance that.

That's power that reaches across our society without any check or balance or democratic input.

In fairness, Google etc have been pretty good at NOT abusing that power. But why wait for an abuse.

Ironically that's what parlar should teach us: be a bit more proactive about your problems, don't wait for a seige of the senate chamber.

What do you think? Have I gone off the deep end? :)

Fyi, this isn't just about parlar and controversial content etc. YouTube bans educational channels pretty much at random and no one does anything about it until there is a twitter storm. That's not right. Apple thinks it has a right to ban tumblr because nipples. Also, wrong imho. If Apple want be the main app provider (via app store for non-jail-broken users), they need to play fair not favourites.

You could hold individuals responsible for crimes when they are reported or found.
According to the Washington Post, a lot of the planning was done on Facebook and Twitter.

Edit:

Interesting that researchers made their findings public weeks before this event that there was specific violence was planned to storm the Capitol.

Source: Originally published in the Washington Post. https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/capitol-siege-was-...

AWS isn't pulling the plug until tonight. It doesn't mean anything that the site is still up.
is it coordinated or is everyone just sick of them? their lawyers left too, they are not part of some silicon valley cabal
It's becoming obvious that the capital was stormed by crazies largely organized on the platform. It's coordinated in a way by companies realizing it's an enormous legal and political liability to have a relationship to them
Is this true that it was largely organized on Parler?

A Washington Post article said it was very visible on Twitter and Facebook.

(not the person you replied to)

I think its almost the inverse: if there were 1m comments on Facebook/Twitter about it, they're among 1trn other comments on Facebook/twitter. If there 100k comments on parler, that's 10 times less. But there are only 100k (edit: 250k) comments on parler total and they're often about violently defending trumps "victory".

But the point is where was most of the planning for violence done?

I realize you're not being literal about all the comments centered around violence on Parler. Or maybe you are?

Are you saying most of the comments there are violent or a good number of them?

Sorry, I should have picked better numbers. I'm just saying many of the comments, I won't pretend I know "most" let alone all.

It's too late to stop the violence that's already happened. That's cheap and I don't like it but it's true sadly. There are real questions to be asked why the FBI weren't all over this from day 1. They need to be asked because it's (literally) their job to prevent this.

Im just suggesting really that we make the system work as it's meant to: FBI investigates, people plotting violence are intercepted before they commit it. Even if they are right wing nuts.

Im also pretty convinced parler isn't "responsible" in the sense that if it didn't exist there wouldn't have been violence (that doesn't excuse them for profiting off it). It would have been coordinate on r/TheDonald or via Facebook or twitter or wherever. Parler wasn't even a thing for most of the last 4 years and this has been brewing at least that long in my opinion. That's actually why I would like the idea of prevention. Banning parler gives us all an excuse to go back to sleep till next time and then (again) say "how did this happen?".

Thanks for listing to my rant!

You raise a good question about why this wasn't stopped before it happened.

Apparently at least one prominent group made public weeks ago that violence was planned at the Capitol. Specific violence to place members of congress under "citizens arrest". I expect to see congressional hearings about this. It's really hard to fathom they were unprepared if the planning was done right out in the open.

https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/capitol-siege-was-...

To me, this whole thing stinks of the "bystander effect". That's from twitter/reddit not banning more and earlier, to the FBI and law enforcement failing to investigate, to individual police opening doors or declining to stop criminals literally entering the buildings.

Everyone thought "the next time I'll do something, someone else will catch this in some other office".

I get why, its political and touches on censorship and people rightly hesitate to use power (not the law enforcement side, that's their job). Plus you're making money from ads next to pages of QAnon or Stopthesteal or whatever other BS is there.

But that's just my opinion. As you say, we should have a real investigation with witnesses and experts and actual factz. Congresd is the right place for that to happen imho

I hope something actually comes of this. It would be shameful for it to be buried because its hard and no one wants to be less able to mobalise theirside...

> But the point is where was most of the planning for violence done?

There are two questions here - impact and optics. You are asking the former, but it’s likely the latter that caused trouble.

A smaller platform with larger percentage of offensive messages will look worse than a larger platform with a small percentage even if the total impact of the large platform is 100 time more.

Lawyers routinely represent the worst of our society. That includes literal baby killers, tobacco companies, companies that have catastrophic environmental impact or even mass poisoning.

The idea that lawyers spontaneously decided to quit representing a media business because they finally got sick on that particular day is hard to believe.

they will be shut off at 11:59 pacific time.
Imagine cheering this as a victory..
Didn't he just post yesterday that there were many vendors lined up offering to host them after AWS kicked them out, and they would rewrite the app and be up and running in a week?
Yes he did. It's the same kind of baseless lying bullshit his dear leader been spouting every day of his life.
I think both could be true. Yesterday it was just aws, and maybe they had a hosting provider lined up. But then today it became every vendor that they work with which is another level of problem, like having to build their own sms system.
It will eventually be like this anyway. Nothing is preventing them from building stuffs themselves. Even if they and Trump build their own platform, they will have to build their own bare metal server clusters and scatter those across USA. Not to mention they will have to hire and pay actual market salary from DevOps, backend developers, frontend developers, UX designer, testing engineer, security engineer etc. In the end they will burn their money fast just paying those engineers salary building stuffs just for them without the ability to generalize their platform and amortizing the cost like AWS, and they will fold in a few months.

There is no way out. Everything is dead end. You want to isolate yourself from your neighbors. Sure, that is fine, go alone if you want to go fast. Just don't complain when your neighbors are isolating themselves from you.

In the West, the communications infrastructure will cut you off anyway. You can go elsewhere which has its own set of problems.
But the communication infrastructure is owned by the government, not a private company.

If they want they always can do peer to peer, mesh network style.

No it isn’t, at least not in the US. Private companies own the vast majority of it.
How far should this go? Should banks refuse to service employees? Grocery stores? Gas stations? They are private businesses, they have no reason to tolerate people who are thinking the wrong way.
Yes fascists should be refused by everyone. It’s in everyone’s interests to have more customers so this works itself out through game theory.
Let's take away everything from fascists. Then they have nothing left to lose.
Yes. Then they lash out and then there is a reckoning. This is ideal.
They're fascists, they're planning to lash out anyway. At least let's maybe make things slightly more difficult for them. Or even slightly less comfortable.
Ok. I mean... they had the presidncy and apparently that wasn't enough. One thing you have to reckon with is the fact that the people leading this movement have everything and are still trying to overthrow the government. There is barely a person on earth who is materially more comfortable than DT. It didn't stop him doing this. So I don't really see why the idea of fascists having nothing would be more scary than well resourced fascists.

Donald Trump with no resources is 'old man yells at cloud' rather than '5 dead at the capitol'.

Great Idea! Until someone calls you a Fascist.
Who decides who are the fascists?

A community activist in Seattle is organizing against Antifa calling them terrorists for causing violence and hijacking social justice issues such as Black Lives Matter and the homeless issue.

Should that group also be refused by everyone, or does it depend on political ideology?

Source:

https://twitter.com/choeshow/status/1345184414016278528

https://twitter.com/choeshow/status/1345192831602679809

> Who decides who are the fascists?

Well, let’s start with: the ones who took over the US Capitol building. And then later we can look at the results, decide if that was enough or not, and act accordingly.

That's a strange framework to decide who the fascists are.
That’s what’s great about it—you don’t need a framework at all. You can look at your surroundings and decide what is most appropriate right now.
So when Veronica Beach talks about Antifa terrorizing parts of Seattle, are they fascists?
If they haven’t tried taking over the government yet, I’d say, wait.
No, fascists are by definition right wing.
Common sense and arbitrary decisions. If you’re making this point you’re a bad faith actor.
Can you explain how I'm a bad faith actor.
Because the literal definition of fascism is far-right and authoritarian.
Here are some definitions of fascism:

"forcibly suppressing opposition and criticism"

"violent suppression of the opposition"

The business owner in the video has said the Antifa group has retaliated against his business by smashing their windows and causing destruction to other business for sending a letter to the Mayor.

Victoria Beach from the African-American community relations says in the video "if you don't agree with them they're going to attack you in some way, in a group, not one on one. They are cowards and we aren't going to take it".

According to the literal definition they are fascists.

No, being a fascist by definition requires you to be on the right of the political spectrum. Where did you get those definitions from? Parler?
In what sense are big banks private businesses?

Banks, especially the big ones, will always be bailed out in a crisis. We've just had a demonstration about a decade ago.

Everyone gets bailouts at some level, hence welfare, stimulus cheques, Medicare and Medicaid in the US. More so over here (Brit).

Financial services get very heavily regulated which imposes huge costs, so it is arguable that imposes a certain level of obligation on government. I think that’s a reasonable case, though I’m not entirely happy with the way it’s been handled in practice. It’s not a perfect world.

In general I think we all should be free to associate or do business with whoever we choose. That should be the default position. There may have to be some exceptions where available options are limited for crucial services. I’m trying to avoid using the word Monopoly because it’s bandied about so much inappropriately, but some services are so essential and providers are so limited that we should probably expect them to be provided to anyone making a legal request for access.

Those are specific circumstances though and I don’t think any of these - law firms, internet hosting, etc reach that threshold.

Legal counsel is not essential?
Legal counsel != a specific law firm.

AWS is one service. YouTube is one service. Twitter is one service.

Yes, they are big services - in most cases, the biggest service among their competitors.

They have stakeholders and financial incentives to not be associated with - or worse, seen as condoning - deeply unpopular or controversial political positions.

Why is it so easy to understand when it's a baker refusing to bake a cake for a homosexual wedding or a Christian-owned company refusing to provide birth control for their employees?

I don't think the average person is at risk of starting riots with white supremacists. Parler should be treated the same way as Al Queda. Totally radioactive
There's two questions which we should distinguish:

1. Should there be a bright-line rule - either enforced by government or strong social pressure - about whether people must engage in business with other people, and on what grounds they may discriminate?

2. Should there be a social norm that businesses should try to serve all customers where possible, for the good of customers?

Our society generally answers 1 with that you must refrain from discriminating on the grounds of deep personal characteristics and no otherwise. You cannot throw someone out of your bar for being black. You can throw them out for being drunk and picking fights. You cannot refuse to hire an employee who needs to take a few breaks a day to pray. You can refuse to hire an employee who needs to take a few breaks a day to hire Fiverrs to do their job for them. You cannot refuse to offer credit cards to ethnic North Koreans living in America. You can (and must!) refuse to offer credit cards to North Korean citizens.

This is a sensible position, because it balances the general right to freedom of association / the government not micromanaging your business transactions with the more specific individual rights to participate in society. I cannot change my race, and (we have decided) it's unreasonable to expect me to change my religion. I can (we have decided) change my competence, and I can certainly change whether I start bar fights.

We could decide otherwise, but I think the existing position has a lot of merit.

Number 2 is a more interesting question, but I think the norm of our society is that it should be answered by the free market. We expect that businesses want to serve as many customers as possible anyway because it's the most profitable. Should they decide that they don't want to serve certain customers, it's generally not the place of either the government or strong social norms to say, we wish to override your decision-making process and tell you what to do (apart from the bright-line rule in question 1). Part of the freedom of a free market is that actors are free to decide what to do on their own, including to make mistakes, and no central planning committee tells them what is best for society. We expect this approach will lead to fewer mistakes and a better society.

Again, I think this position has a lot of merit, and we should figure out why we want to change it.

I’d hate to be in his position right now. Business wise, i hope they have backups and hire people for moderation.
When your business is fascism you deserve this. I don’t see this being all that different from having an open marketplace for assassinations or contract killings.
Hey, don't insult Silk Road like that.
I believe that in AWS's statement they said that they would help them retain their data. I'm sure it just means that after midnight their S3 and RDS services are going read only until they're done taking their data out. Maybe make a final backup of their databases and put it in a bucket.

I'd be a bit more disturbed if AWS was going to remove read access after midnight.

The sad thing is a platform does nothing to help us find common ground and move past the chaos which has overtaken discourse. What is the solution here?
Solution is pretty simple, called Constitution of the United States.
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The Constitution gives a format for making decisions and living with them when we don't agree. It's not really for finding common ground. That's up to us.
you don't need common ground Constitution is common ground. what are problem of just following the Constitution. Democrats and Republican abolish Constitution that is a problem.
Some people need to lose some attitude and respect fellow human beings. Nobody knows everything and believing random texts online is nuts. Just stay humble and help those around you and locally.

The irony is the bad qualities they hate in others, only festers in themselves, they're unable to let go of the hate.

I read this as: every vendor was pretty quiet until the final outcome becaome known and it was safe to "bravely come forward with the decision" that will benifit said vendors in discussions with the current political powers
could it be... everything is built on AWS?? :-)
I’m sure their benefactors will happily fork over a few million for some machines and space in a datacenter.
So you are saying Trump or Addleson or the Koch brothers should invest in the service.
How many $100 millions does a good sedition + terrorism legal defence run these days?

Factor in asset seizure / forfeiture.

The problem is that they don’t have many benefactors. Rich right wingers don’t throw money into a toxic hole.

Ironically, if they did have moderation so it was just a Twitter with /r/conservative people and not the_donald people, it might be successful. BUT, if it was - it wouldn’t be necessary in the first place! Those people can just use Twitter!

Twitter’s moderation is so permissive that the only thing left outside is going to be toxic.

I wonder if anybody has asked Parler if they agree with Trump's position on Section 230. Trump wants to peel back the liability shield 230 provides.
There’s something very ironic about Parler—-which kicks users off its platform for espousing liberal ideology—-whining about being kicked off other platforms.

From their own TOS:

> "Parler may remove any content and terminate your access to the Services at any time and for any reason or no reason“

At this point they need to go build your own modern internet.
Parler may have just ended its own business, I think. They should have pivoted to be a free speech alternative to sensible conservatives, with sensible moderation, and market their product as such. As it is, no one wants to do business with a company that openly allows neo-nazis, anti-semites, and lately, criminals, on their platform, and no one with a brain would even want to be on such a platform.

I'm open to a Twitter alternative that is lenient on conservative views, as long as it has the right sort of moderation. And I really hope this alternative learns from Parler's mistakes.

Twitter itself is open to conservative views. It’s just not open to outright lies about factual matters of critical importance, or to incitements to violence or the overthrow of the state. Surely one can express conservative opinions without resorting to such things—and most do.
I agree, but conservatives have been complaining about the phenomenon of shadow-banning on the platform for years, and this was pretty much confirmed after the Twitter hack last year. To allow conservative views but reduce their visibility is just a more subtle form of censorship, reflecting a left-leaning bias. I don't think Twitter or Facebook would even bother denying any of this at this point.
> shadow-banning ... this was pretty much confirmed after the Twitter hack last year

Citation? Also, Twitter says otherwise: https://blog.twitter.com/en_us/topics/company/2018/Setting-t...

To have the technological capability to do something does not necessarily imply that it is being used for the wrong reasons. Without proof, all there is is speculation.

> To allow conservative views but reduce their visibility is just a more subtle form of censorship

You're moving the goalposts. I was referring to allowing speech - you're talking about amplifying it. There is a huge difference between tolerance and amplification, and nobody should expect Twitter or any other media you don't own to amplify what you say for free. If you want people to follow you, say interesting things and influence people (but don't cross the line of inciting violence or calling on people to overthrow the government).

How the hell did we get from "this platform should allow me to post what I want" to "this platform should broadcast what [person X] says with equal volumetric distribution to non-subscribers as it does [person Y]?"

Parler seems purpose built for revolution.
I read your other comment under the submission, and suddenly this makes more sense. It's possible there's something these companies know/aware of that we don't, or that the government is secretly involved in it somehow. What I know for certain is that it's extremely rare for all the FAANGs to gang up on a company like that simply because of differences of opinion.
"our lawyers all ditched us" That pretty much should tell you this is not a free speech issue... your service is just a shit business no one wants to be associated with. BYEE
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So what's the next step, free speech absolutists? Force private businesses to host them? Does 1a overrule 13a?