Makes me wonder: could artists demand their songs not be played on radio stations that also aired Rush Limbaugh? Or did "ASCAP" and whatever other cartel schemes they had forestall that when they were set up?
What happens when someone decides that its the device at fault, not the streaming service? Is the evil in the stone or in the signs inscribed upon it?
Limbaugh (or his producers and/or stations) paid for ASCAP and BMI licensing, and the Pretenders music was released with ASCAP or BMI licensing in the USA, which allows anyone with the license to play the music (on the radio). It specifically prohibits the copyright holder from picking and choosing who can play the music.
You are right. I remembered there was controversy about him using the song, but I apparently misremembered just about every detail of it - including the song name which I thought was “Way to Go Ohio”.
Replying to myself to say I went to wikipedia to fact-check myself on this after posting, and I was 100% wrong. The Pretenders’ label made Limbaugh stop using their song, but when Chrissie Hynde found out about it she worked out a deal with him because her parents were Limbaugh fans.
IIRC, she donated the royalties from his use of her music to a charity she felt he wouldn't like. He got to use "hippy music" to promote his show and she got to use a bit of his show's income to support a cause she liked and he didn't. They both won and lost.
>Of course, Spotify could have chosen to break its $100 million exclusive contract with Rogan to host his show. But if they had, it’s worth considering what would have happened. When Rogan took his show to Spotify, exclusively, his listenership and apparent influence dropped significantly. That’s the nature of exclusivity. If Spotify broke up with him, Rogan’s show wouldn’t disappear or even miss a beat.
Just because Young did not understand this, does not mean it was not an attempt at celebrity-sponsored-censorship. And anyway, if Rogan went back to YouTube, how long could he survive there? Once you cross a line, the tech companies tend to blacklist you in unison.
100%. Just as it is fastest ever to reach from zero to 100 million audience in history. It is even faster to reach 100 million to roughly zero if one find themselves on wrong side of big tech.
He would go to Rumble or whatever the name of that other platform is ;) (don't want to get banned for mentioning it). Anyway Joe Rogan would love that play.
It likely depends on the particularities of his contract, but my guess is that he couldn't be stopped from releasing a new podcast even if his contract explicity said he can't. Spotify would be hard-pressed to justify a non-compete when they fire him and pull his episodes down.
And his contract might very well include provisions covering exactly this sort of situation. No agent/lawyer worth their salt would let a public figure sign an exclusive deal that lets the company black list their client.
I doubt Spotify can pull him off their platform without breaching their end of the contract.
What makes you think he didn't understand this? Nothing about what he's said or done implies that. He doesn't want to be associated with a platform that endorses Rogan. It's not the choice I would have made (though I'm not a Rogan fan at all either) but it's fair enough for him to make that choice.
Yes, Neil Young has the right not to associate with Spotify for whatever reasons he may have, assuming there is not a contractual agreement to the contrary. However, there is no reason to assume that his position is morally superior to anyone else's.
- it is about ethics, not moral. Young has one, Spotify doesn't.
- a platform can't be everything. If Spotify wants to be the platform for disinformation, they are on the right path. Young simply gave voice to those who don't and kept his promise to not be on the same platform with someone he believes has no ethics.
- OR Spotify could accept to be an editor and take responsibility for the bullshit that Rogan irradiates from their servers. Guess why they don't want to be recognized as such?
Rogan says you shouldn’t get medical or scientific advice from himself. He also has world leading doctors and scientists on his program. How is he “irradiating bullshit”?
Science is about finding the truth. The concept of ‘a truth’ based on ‘consensus science’ has the same relationship to the scientific method as homeopathy.
A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it. . . . An important scientific innovation rarely makes its way by gradually winning over and converting its opponents: it rarely happens that Saul becomes Paul. What does happen is that its opponents gradually die out, and that the growing generation is familiarized with the ideas from the beginning: another instance of the fact that the future lies with the youth.
— Max Planck, Scientific autobiography, 1950, p. 33, 97
It means that it took several generations of doctors to reach a consensus around the fact that viruses are actually very dangerous and we can be reasonably sure that the Rogan's objections have already been presented and discarded as bullshit. More than one time.
It also means that if Rogan, a man in his middle 50s, spreads disinformation on a platform where a large part of the audience is young, we risk that the future generation will be familiar with his bullshit theories.
That's why he shouldn't be allowed to be a popular voice.
Believing that science is always correct it's wrong, science gives us ranges, plausible certainties, risk evaluation strategies, but believing that people outside of science can disprove what people of science have studied and discussed for decades, it's idiotic.
simply put: one doctor's opinion is bullshit same as my opinions are bullshit.
If a large number of doctors say X is true and Y is bullshit, if I think Y is true and X bullshit, I need the same number of doctors to agree with me to counter the argument.
You're acting like 'doctors' are a commodity. Researchers with their names on patents that are frequently published are worth more than a thousand GPs.
That is beautiful horrific observation by one of my favorite scientists.
You are right.
Just have some lemma near some old proof.
Still being knowledgable about science and understanding its method for finding truth is currently the best weapon against the snake oil salesmen and their buttery voices.
I talk about science the method, not the group of old men grading papers. Maybe that is our misunderstanding. For you science is the scientific community, for me it is the method.
One has a consensus, one clearly does not.
Rogan’s own doctor advised him to treat coronavirus with ivermectin. Just like two hundred members of congress were treated with ivermectin. He mentioned what he was treated with as I imagine the congresspeople would.
What's your current view on the lab leak theory and if anyone should be permitted to discuss the possibility or not. Is your view the same as it was a few months ago when the tech industry worked in lock step with each other to demonize the discussion of the possibility? What are you going to do if a few months from now if some of the "bullshit" turns out to be credible as has happened so many times already throughout the pandemic?
I have defended Young in a few comments here, but just to say I totally agree with your last sentence. The person taking a moral stand is not always right. But neither does that mean that taking moral stands is wrong.
> free speech works both ways. It’s correct to argue that Joe Rogan has a right to say whatever he wants on his podcast, and that people who want to listen to his show should be able to. But it’s also correct that Neil Young has a right to make clear that he doesn’t want to be associated with a service that is associated with Rogan, and to publicize his stance.
That’s not exactly a fair interpretation. Neil first asked Spotify to censor Rogan, then removed himself from the platform. Attempting to suppress someone else’s speech is definitely not being pro-free speech, in fact it’s complete opposite.
Young didn't ask Spotify to censor Rogan. He said that Spotify could "have either Joe Rogan or Neil Young, but not both". Then, he followed through with his promise.
There's a difference between censoring and enabling.
"I sincerely hope that other artists and record companies will move off the SPOTIFY platform and stop supporting SPOTIFY’s deadly misinformation about COVID."
-Neil Young
But censorship over dialogue is always a short sighted solution and it turns people from colleagues who disagree into enemies.
There's been a 14 point shift in the United States from Democrat to Republican in the past YEAR.
One of if not the biggest political shift in recorded history since the early 1900s.
And Republicans no longer view Democrats as disagreeing colleagues but as enemies to be eliminated.
Trump is now having some of the biggest crowds in political history.
2022 is republicans are predicted to take over the house and the Senate.
2024 Trump will win again.
All over the country people who believe the election was stolen are running for political office in positions to manage voting.
I personally think the Republicans will make major changes in the political process to ensure their permanent control even if it undermines the foundation of the country.
Our two parties are going to be flavors of Republicanism.
Which is his right, at least if you support free speech. It’s no different from people refusing to buy products that are made in sweatshops or whatever else you can think of. Spotify is a commercial product, if they make decisions that make people not want to buy it then that’s just the free market regulating itself.
Until it’s the government doing it, it’s not a problem.
> He said that Spotify could "have either Joe Rogan or Neil Young, but not both".
Why it has to be mutually exclusive like an XOR operation? In a civilized discourse it is OK to have both points of view present at the same time, so that a listener can listen to one or both or none. By insisting on just one (in whatever context) we diminish our intellectual pursuits. Is it now all about cheap publicity stunts?
A lot of people in this thread are correctly pointing out the Neil Young is within his rights to only allow his music to be played on censorious platforms. What's missing is anyone saying that he isn't.
A racist is within their rights to publically discuss their views. I will happily argue that that is the way it should be until the heat death of the universe. But, importantly, you will never catch me saying the they're a decent person or they're doing the right thing. Young can be against basic human rights without exceeding the bounds of his own, but being authoritarian is still morally abhorrent.
> Young can be against basic human rights without exceeding the bounds of his own, but being authoritarian is still morally abhorrent.
Refusing to participate is far from being "authoritarian".
By that measure, any scientist refusing to engage with a crook, would be labeled as a fascist, when there are very good reasons for him or her not to do so.
"Authoritarian", like a lot of words, can have multiple meanings.
It's a moral condemnation. It also can mean someone using authority to coerce people.
I agree with you that Neil Young ought not to be accused of either of these. He obviously has the moral right to control his own creations. He obviously doesn't have the authority to get rid of Rogan, based on what just happened. He obviously doesn't have the power to completely shut up Rogan.
However, what seems true to me is that he disagrees with actions and speech of other people and has chosen not to try to convince them of his opinions through speech, but to fight them by other means.
This fact pattern seems to me like a possible definition of "authoritarian" that some people could be using, without the other baggage.
No one is asking Young to acknowledge Rogan's existence, much less engage with him. He is refusing to associate himself with an entity because they are not censoring his idealogical adversaries.
If Neil Young pulled his music from Spotify on a whim, sure, he "refused to participate". That's not what happened. Neil Young leveraged his art to limit the someone else's basic right to self-expression. If someone refused to put music on Spotify because Spotify has Jewish musicians on their platform, would we call them an antisemite, or would we say, "there's no obligation to put your music anywhere, so that's fine"?
If someone is "authoritarian" that means they are consistently bullying or dominating in some situation with a power structure already in place -- like a boss, or of course a tyrannical head of state. You know, someone like Mussolini or Stalin.
These musicians aren't bullies, and they aren't doing anything like that. They're just saying "if your platform presents an image we don't like, or conducts itself in way that appears genuinely harmful to others -- we're not going to lend our credibility to it."
That's all. And it is perfectly within their free speech rights to do so.
Perhaps they wouldn't have stopped Neil Young at all. Being pro-free speech doesn't mean censoring those who are anti-free speech, which is the main difference between being pro- and anti-free speech in the first place.
You are attacking a strawman. Nobody is saying Niel Young should be preventing from criticizing Joe Regan to uphold freedom of speech and I doubt you think they did.
That sounds pretty standard for how boycotts work.
Spotify choosing to end their contract with Joe Rogan over this wouldn't infringe on his free speech. Having the right to say whatever you want doesn't mean any given company needs to let you broadcast it on their platform.
It is how boycotts work. But its a boycott based on spotify's refusal to engage in censorship.
>Spotify choosing to end their contract with Joe Rogan over this wouldn't infringe on his free speech. Having the right to say whatever you want doesn't mean any given company needs to let you broadcast it on their platform.
It's not government censorship, but it's still censorship.
Freedom of speech as a concept isn't just limited to the first amendment.
>It's not government censorship, but it's still censorship.
No, it's free speech, not censorship. Freedom of association, choosing NOT to say something, to NOT spend your own (including your organization's own) private resources supporting something, and advocating others don't either, is itself integral to Free Speech. You can't support a specific stance without NOT supporting all the ones opposed to it. And the idea isn't just to howl into the wind, it's to convince the rest of us hooting apes about it too! Free Speech is inherently a social endeavor to convince other minds which will result in their altering their behavior (including how they allocate their personal resources and power). You don't need it alone on an island.
>Freedom of speech as a concept isn't just limited to the first amendment.
Actually it pretty much is, or at least is limited to the area of "force". The point of free speech is to keeping the seeking of truth and debates around values to the social and economic circles vs those of force. Because we simply cannot trust coercive force to not solidify things into very bad positions that then stick across broad swaths of the population. There has to be room for people to advocate against even broad consensus, if they believe it enough. But within those spheres it's open season, a constant ever shifting dynamic back and forth that never ends. Indeed making sure "it never ends" is the essence of free speech.
And just because even broad consensus can sometimes be wrong doesn't mean it's not often right. The people arguing against it may well be horrible people. Them being shunned, argued back against, and denied other people's support is Free Speech working 100% as intended. If they truly believe it they will just have to keep at it, and it may well take decades to shift society's overall views. They may fail, and it may be expensive. That's how it is. The point is that force can't be used to completely crush all potential to change minds.
>Actually it pretty much is, or at least is limited to the area of "force".
Freedom of speech is a principle--not the bare minimum allowable under the first amendment.
You don't agree with the principle of freedom of speech if you support shunning from debate anyone who holds an opinion you disagree with. That said, you don't have to agree with the principle of free speech. And the freedom of speech / association gives you the right to shun people. But your behavior is contrary to the principle of freedom of speech.
This isn't true because shunning opinions is its own kind of speech. I think it is better captured as "freedom of association" but these are two sides of the same coin. People who see themselves as like free speech maximalists, beyond just being against the limitation of speech by government force, always seem to ignore this part.
I literally explained how its speech but against the principle of free speech--and you just cherry picked around the explanation. Hardly ignoring it.
Statement and actions that are against freedom of speech are still allowed under freedom of speech. That's not some GOTCHA against the freedom of speech. Young should be allowed to do what he's doing. But he should fully expect to be called a censoring blacklister.
I didn't cherry pick. What you're saying here just doesn't really make sense. It isn't "against freedom of speech" to exercise your own freedom of association.
Obviously you can speak against freedom of speech. The freedom of speech would allow that speech (and nobody is saying Young should be prevented from what he is doing). But you'd still be advocating censorship.
You can join a political group advocating for censorship. That's attempted censorship even if its allowed under freedom of speech.
So yes, you can exercise your freedom of speech to speak against freedom of speech. There is no contradiction.
Yes, you can speak against freedom of speech, that just isn't what's going on here. Saying "I don't want to be associated with a company that is associated with this person" is not "speaking against free speech". Saying "this person should be kept from speaking anywhere" would be speaking against free speech, but that's not what's going on here.
Yes, the principle that force should not be used to compel speech since no single oracle can be trusted to it. Not that all ideas and values are equal, and indeed on the contrary the entire point of freedom of speech is that they aren't. Freedom of speech is a process, a system to try to let us grope our way towards truth and better values and adapt to changing circumstances, to maintain a dynamic equilibrium that leaves open the chance we're wrong or that what makes sense now won't in the future. Culling out the crap is a huge part of what it's all about.
>But your behavior is contrary to the principle of freedom of speech.
Nope, yours is! A mushy "everything is the same" implicitly negates any need for protection.
>Culling out whatever you think is crap by organizing a boycott unless people literally ban that content is censorship.
No, it's free speech. It's literally engaging in freedom of association yourself and speech to try to convince other people to exercise their freedoms of association and speech towards ideas and values one considers important. And it isn't without risk or personal cost either. Boycotts necessarily involve sacrificing some value the entity offers. If other people won't go along with it because they don't agree obviously it goes nowhere. Even if lots of people do go along with it, the entity people are trying to convince may well reject it anyway and just take the hit, or calculate they can outlast it, or argue back and convince people the other way.
You're arguing that free speech shouldn't cover trying to convince anyone else of your own values, or that people shouldn't be allowed to act on said values if they are won over and wish to. That's wild stuff.
Fair enough; but it's only one principle. It doesn't override all the other principles. Some people from the land of the 1st Amendment seem to think it does.
> not the bare minimum allowable under the first amendment.
The 1st Amendment is not a "bare minimum" - AFAIAA it's the most maximalist free-speech legal provision in the world.
Someone upthread spoke of "cancelling Spotify". Cancelling is about denying people a platform, no? How is Young denying Spotify a platform, by encouraging others to stay away from Spotify? That's called a boycott, which amounts to individuals choosing freely what to do with their time and money. It has nothing to do with freedom of speech.
Like I said, you don't have to agree with the principle. But you can't claim to and still try to shun people (from society as a whole[1]).
It's not bare minimum with regard to its restrictions on government action. But it doesn't apply to (and is not meant to) apply to other institutions.
For example, nobody would anti-discrimination principles by the 14th amendment and conclude that its therefore not discrimination for a private citizen to discriminate against minorities.
[1]you can certain shun them from actual organizations that aren't meant to be open platforms for everyone. Most organizations are not open platforms, and their employers represent the organization.
> But you can't claim to and still try to shun people (from society as a whole[1])
Well, that's an interesting sentence-construction. How does person A shun person B from group X? "Shunning" isn't normally a thing that you do to someone from something.
IOW, If you are shunned by society as a whole, then it is society as a whole that has shunned you.
[Edit] And if Spotify is shunned by its users, it's the users that shunned it; nobody shunned the users "from" Spotify.
Neil Young can't censor media he doesn't control. Spotify could choose to censor Rogan, either in response to what Neil Young said (which note: he is also free to speak) or just on their own. And that's fine, it's their choice who to associate with and who not to. Note that they definitely already do censor in this way by choosing what podcasts to host and advertise on their product.
As sibling comment says, without force behind it it's not in fact censorship. It's free speech. He doesn't want to support certain speech and is taking action accordingly, and he doesn't want others to either and is saying so and why. Others may choose to agree or not and take action accordingly. He can then react to that. And on and on throughout society. That entire dynamic is the essence of free speech, not censorship.
A view can't be censorship. Censorship is the compulsory suppression of speech, and arguably the compulsion has to be done by a government (if it's not done by a government, then it's not compulsory). Censorship is an act, not an opinion.
> censorship is the intent to prevent someone from speaking.
You can't mean that seriously. If I successfully form the intention to stop someone speaking, but fail to carry through (perhaps because I don't own a police force), are you really saying that I've succeeded in censoring them?
It seems to be the fashion these days to construct arguments based on redefining words. If "censorship" is a kind of intention, then there doesn't appear to be much wrong with censorship. You've redefined a word that is generally considered to refer to something bad, to mean something that isn't bad. That's sort-of OK, but it means that we have to put a glossary of definitions at the top of anything we say.
This is a confusing take on free speech - that not only must anyone host that speech (in this case, Spotify) - but that it is censorship to say "I don't want to be associated with that so I'm choosing to leave"?
That is a pretty extreme view of what "free speech" entitles, to the point of significantly restricting the free speech of (in this case) Niel Young to preserve Joe Rogan's.
If I walk out of the room because someone is spitting nonsense is that censorship?
Spotify is associated with both of these artists, and they are free to remain associated with them or not, and the artists are free to continue to associate with Spotify or not.
Maybe so, but if the Catholic church said "we're not publishing our books on Amazon because they publish controversial authors" that would be totally fine. I honestly don't have trouble with referring to this as "attempted censorship" except that lots of people have this connotation of "censorship" as being always and definitionally bad, whereas I think that should mostly just apply when governments do it by law rather then when private entities do it by choice. Because of this nuance, I think the word "censorship" generates more heat than light. I may have less trouble with it if people consistently distinguished between "private censorship" and "legal censorship" (or something like that).
Young's objection to being on the same platform as Joe Rogan's podcast is over the podcast spreading of misinformation about vaccines. Misinformation about vaccines are not political beliefs.
I'm sure Young also objects to many political beliefs expressed by Rogan's guests, and probably Rogan himself, that's unrelated to what Young did or said.
Maybe public policy beliefs is the better word for it, but either way, undoubtedly the type of speech meant to be protected.
Earnest misinformation cannot be an exception to freedom of speech without throwing away the entire concept. A lot of commonly accepted truths were dismissed as misinformation by the powers that be.
It doesn't even work as a practical matter. You get too many false positives--how many CDC facts have been called into question. They've even deliberately lied. Should bigTech have banned people saying masks work in April 2020 and ban people saying they don't in April 2021? And its not effective. At best, you are playing wackamole. And banning people from taking opposing positions just entrenches opposing view points.
If Donald Trump successfully lobbied bigTech to censor "misinformation" about covid, would you believe a fucking thing you heard from those sources?
> Earnest misinformation cannot be an exception to freedom of speech
I agree with this. It is a matter for the audience to decide what speech they will listen to, and how they will evaluate it. It is cause for regret thaat so many people lack the means to evaluate the utterances of crackpots. But you can't start to evaluate it if you haven't heard it; there are "forbidden views" that you won't hear on MSM or the big internet platforms.
I'm not a free-speech maximalist. Incitement to hatred or violence is forbidden here, and I'm cool with that. Lying, fakery and distortion are permitted (provided it's not in furtherance of selling stuff), and I'm OK with that too.
I'm not OK with a whole swath of views being suppressed without any process.
That's not what's happening with Young and Rogan. Rogan has been paid by Spotify for his podcast; if they decide to shut him down, well he has other platforms. And he gets to keep the money. There's no chance he'll be silenced.
I'm not OK with the way the word "censorship" is being bandied around here. Once upon a time, when email blocklists started to become popular, spammers accused MSPs of censorship, which was ludicrous. Nobody has a right to use the private property of others to exercise their free speech. You can say what you like, but I don't have to lend you my megaphone, and I don't have to stand next to you on the platform while you say it.
> But its a boycott based on spotify's refusal to engage in censorship.
Spotify dropping Rogan would not have been censorship: Rogan would have been able to continue talking as much as he wanted, just like he was before his deal with Spotify.
Based on your comments it sounds like you believe that Neil Young's statements are both censorship and free speech. If that's the case, what should we do about it? Clearly boycotting him for censorship would be censoring his speech.
Is there any form of consequences for speech that would not be censorship?
I'm sincerely baffled by how many people seem to feel that the exact order of operations in this situation makes a big difference.
Let's assume, for the sake of argument, that Young really did say "get rid of Rogan or I'll leave". How is that any different from saying "I'm leaving because you won't get rid of Rogan"? Or "I'm leaving, but I'll consider coming back if you get rid of Rogan"?
In all of those cases, the end result (and the negotiating power of all parties) is essentially the same, so what makes one "free speech" and another "anti-free speech"?
>I'm sincerely baffled by how many people seem to feel that the exact order of operations in this situation makes a big difference.
Bias. If they disagree with Rogan in the first place, not on this specific subject but in a multiple different angle, although in modern days that tends to be politics, then they just need to find a narrative to make sure what they are doing is good.
Gruber is extremely bias towards Apple. ( USB-C, AirPod sold at Cost, big.LITTLE, Unified Memory etc... ) So a narrative against Spotify wouldn't hurt.
The principled way to do this is “I’m leaving indefinitely because I don’t approve of your editorial priorities,” not single out one guy and try to bribe or extort the company into breaking their commitments with him. Only customers en masse should be able to demand a change like this, because the company’s duty is to customers rather than competing vendors.
And actually conspiring against this guy just fuels the conspiracy theories out there.
There is huge difference between a government censoring a private citizen and a non government company or private citizen censoring a private citizen. When governments censor history has shown over and over very bad things follow.
There used to be a difference. That difference has been rapidly shrinking. Depending on which side of the censorship issue you’re on, you either realize this and push back or you keep pretending everything’s fine until they start censoring you too. By which point it may be too late.
Do people really not believe that the Information Age has fundamentally changed the axioms which underlie things like “only governments can censor” ?
I don't buy this idea that stating firmly and publicly: "If you continue to host X on your platform, then I won't be associated with your platform" -- is equivalent to top-down, administrative censorship in the usual sense of the term. Which by most sources is specifically rooted in an exercise of state power (or of something more or less equivalent to it). Not the editorial decisions made by publishing entities.
Even for a Neil Young, Spotify doesn't really pay artists anyway. It's like trying to make a living as a YouTuber.
Neil and those who're following his lead are doing the right thing but they are NOT foregoing massive seventies-record-industry wealth here. If they're not happy with how Spotify acts there is very little to keep them on board.
For anybody less significant than Neil Young, most likely they get nothing from Spotify in the first place. It's basically the bad old record industry all over again, but more so. Back in the day they used to care about setting up 'gotchas' like shellac breakage adjustments applied to CDs, so you'd sign off on a bad deal because it was the only one on offer but some effort would go into making a case why they deserved to not pay you.
These days I don't think those in power feel a need to bother. This applies to Spotify. If they don't feel like paying you they just won't. Neil Young is likely losing nothing here.
> most likely they get nothing from Spotify in the first place. It's basically the bad old record industry all over again
What makes you think the "old record industry" is gone? Spotify doesn't pay artists directly. All money goes to the "old record industry" which then pays the artists.
No one asks where the money disappears when it reaches the "old record industry" because criticizing those companies likely means commercial death for many artists.
However, it's easy to criticize Spotify because... they can't say anything either: they depend on those companies.
> There is nothing "right" about trying to strongarm a platform into censoring someone.
How about telling a platform that they are associating with someone (who you think) is a bad person doing bad things, and they should stop supporting this (according to you) bad person?
Are we allowed to say that certain people are (at least in our opinion) bad people? Are we allow to do that?
Was telling Coca-Cola that they should stop associating with apartheid in South Africa "censorship"?
Sure there is. Taking a moral stand and voting with your feet at some personal loss is a rare and noble thing to do. He isn't strongarming anyone and clearly can't. He's boycotting a business he has a personal moral issue with. Even if you don't share his moral calculation (and I don't) this is one good way to act on a moral disagreement.
Back in the era when some businesses were still racially segregated, would it be noble to vote with your feet against a business that chose to desegregate?
Yeah you're right. What I meant is that it can be a noble thing to do. It is not always noble, but it's also not always ignoble. I definitely made this point poorly here.
Old white music dudes don't have the privilege they've enjoyed their whole life anymore and are playing temper tantrums, the only ones rooting for them is the bourgeois elite and press.
It is perfectly within your free speech rights to decide not to associate with anyone for any reason, and to argue that others should do the same. It is not pro free speech to use your free speech rights to attempt to suppress the speech of others.
Pro free speech would be for Young to use his visibility to highlight rebuttals of claimed misinformation. Arguments, not suppression, are how you win back people who have lost trust in institutions. Suppression just amplifies the distrust. It leaves a largely clear field for these heterodox doctors to command, because lacking rebuttals, many of their claims sound quite convincing. And people are being convinced in large numbers.
I agree with your comment, but disagree about the use of the word "misinformation". That word is clearly a propaganda tool used to suppress dissent, similar to "conspiracy theorist" or "white supremacist". If people are going to argue against views they don't approve of, they should do it fairly and not resort to what is essentially state-sponsored slander.
Agreed, although there exists the problem where it's a lot easier to produce bullshit than refute it. Perhaps it's just a reality we must contend with.
No one has yet proposed a mechanism other than some form of censorship that actuallyworks to deal with the problem of the amount of BS totally overwhelming the time and ability of the average person to have even a ghost of chance of telling what is BS and what is not, except perhaps by becoming sufficiently authoritarian so take away the rights and powers of people to make decisions that believing the bullshit would affect.
But sufficiently authoritarian regimes usually also heavily censor, so you still end up censorship even in that case.
I'd love to hear an alternative that is actually known to work for societies that are both large and have near zero costs to produce and widely spread information.
What is your opinion on cloth masks and has that been your opinion throughout the pandemic? If not, why did it change and why was it different previously?
So someone can effectively break "the system" by drowning it in misinformation (or bullshit of any sort), because the only allowable response is "argument"? Hmm, this sounds like a well-known political strategy both at the national and international level.
This is also isomorphous to the problem that exists when deciding how tolerant to be of intolerance.
Your insistence that the only response to "the wrong thing" is "do the right thing" is a major weakness with "the right thing". I'm not saying that "do the right thing" is a bad idea, just that if that is your only response, you've got a massive weak spot that can be disastrously exploited by bad actors.
What bad actors? Since when is "argument" not effective? Who drowns the media in misinformation: normal people, or organizations?
Are you calling for an end to argumentation, and instead a resort to force? Are you saying Joe Rogan is a politically motivated misinformation source, intentionally trying to destabilize our society?
I am pointing out a paradox. Since you seem particularly motivated by the misinformation context, I'll just point more the paradox of tolerance.
I believe that is good to be tolerant, even of intolerance. But there's also no doubt in my mind that if you are too tolerant of intolerance, you can end up allowing the destruction of a tolerant society. So what should one do? Clearly the answer is not "Don't be tolerant". But how can you know where the line is, or should be? The point is that certain stances toward the world, such as tolerance, have an inherent weak spot that can exploited by people who want to do so, and that AFAIK there is no way of defending that weak spot without risking violating those positions.
So it's a paradox.
So to repeat: I'm not calling for anything, I'm pointing out that things are not as simple as "defeat bad speech with more speech".
Tolerance is not a weakness, what you're referring to is an inept government and broken society. A strong culture and society has no issue with creating reasonable rules to live by that work for the majority of people.
Misinformation is an artifact of our decaying society, so what exactly is the "paradox" here? The paradox of suppressing discussion that tries to deal with societal rot? To what end? Why not actually fix the problem?
This problem should be easy to solve, but isn't because someone is getting in the way.
> A strong culture and society has no issue with creating reasonable rules to live by that work for the majority of people.
That must explain why people have written about the paradox of tolerance for hundreds of years, across many different cultures. Clearly, the authors must all have come from weak cultures, since it's so fucking obvious that there's no issue with this all.
Misinformation can be in part an artifact of a decaying society, it can also be be the result of deliberate attempts to undermine part of, or even the entirety of, an existing social order.
The paradox is that "the only (acceptable) way to defeat bad speech is with more speech that explains why the bad speech is wrong" is that simply by flooding a culture with bad speech, you can completely jam things up as everyone tries to respond to the flood of bullshit.
This is a documented strategy for both intra- and inter-national actors.
> Misinformation can be in part an artifact of a decaying society, it can also be be the result of deliberate attempts to undermine part of, or even the entirety of, an existing social order.
So who do you think is spreading said misinformation? Again, are you saying fucking Joe Rogan is trying to destroy social order? Think about this for one god damn second.
I think that the Russian state is quite interested in spreading (and encouraging the spread of) misinformation. The US has certainly done way more than its fair share of covert operations in other nations, but the playbook has tended to be different.
Do I think that Rogan is trying to destroy the social order? No, of course not. Do I think that Rogan doesn't see any downside to long extended chitchats, stoned or otherwise, about any random idea that is floating in the cultural ether? No, I don't think he does. Do I think that there are downsides to the "every POV is legitimate, lets just put it all out there" model of contemporary discourse? Yes, I do.
No, sorry. That's your opinion, and it doesn't have anything particularly "better" about it than anyone else's. You'll have to engage in explaining why you think other people aren't allowed to have one, and until you get your way you'll have to deal with their opinions.
Neil had already sold the rights to his music to a label. They sold rights to Spotify.
Imagine building a house then selling it, then when neighbors you personally find undesirable move into the neighborhood demanding the home owners association load one of the houses, of which you own neither, and truck it out.
Edit:
He may own half, and the label Warner was the one that made the deal with Spotify.
As far as I understand, Neil Young sold 50% of the rights to all his songs, meaning that the investment firm would make money off publishing rights. That doesn't mean that they get to unilaterally decide what to do with his music.
Politically-speaking, its hard to exorcise the ghost of his 1980s pronouncements, when he swung hard-right behind the Reagan presidency and lashed out at gays ("you go to the supermarket and you see a [censored] behind the fucking cash register, you don't want him to handle your potatoes") and welfare spongers. "Stop being supported by the government and get out and work," Neil advised. "You have to make the weak stand up on one leg, or half a leg, whatever they've got."
I'd say that the lesson is that most people make immensely stupid statements at times, and when you sit in a glass house you should not throw with stones.
The other lesson is that some people are selectively punished and canceled for three stupid statements during their lifetime, while others (like Biden) are not.
But I can get past your troll-of-a-term "free speech privilege." It's as if you are attempting to downgrade the principle of freedom of speech to limit it to describing an annoying pattern of rich guys mouthing off. (And completing the example from the "other rich guy" in this instance.)
What's the upshot here? Are you a staunch supporter of freedom of speech or not? I can't tell at all from your comment nor from the text of the article (which is merely a review of Neil Young's output).
> Apple, clearly, does not host Steve Bannon’s podcast. Apple’s podcast directory is akin to a search engine; they index the feeds of open podcasts. They do have lines for content they won’t index (porno, of course, and hate speech)
If you look at Apple's content guidelines[0] section 2.2 they do explicitly forbid "Encouragement of criminal activity or illegal acts" Given that treason, sedition, and advocating the overthrow of the government are illegal under 18 U.S.C[1] there's a good argument that Bannon's podcast should not be allowed.
I'm not sure what Apple's mechanism is for enforcing their guidelines but it seems the argument could be made for delisting Bannon as well.
> In the event that a creator’s content does not meet these guidelines, Apple may take action to label or remove the content from Apple Podcasts. [emphasis added]
> If a podcast contains harmful or objectionable content that is disputed by authoritative sources, Apple may label the podcast to reflect the dispute. [emphasis added]
Those "may"s gives Apple a nice out here. They do not state that they will take any action, only that they may take some action (including possible removal).
It is worth noting the role that living memory plays:
Both Neil Young and Joni Mitchell had Polio when they were children. They are old enough to remember the huge impact of mass vaccination on that terrifying disease, that they themselves suffered under. They might take anti-vaccination disinformation personally.
When generational knowledge like this is lost; there is a danger that a lesson of history is forgotten and the same mistakes made again.
Spotify's policy on COVID misinformation is, according to a statement they gave last April [1]:
> Spotify prohibits content on the platform which promotes dangerous false, deceptive, or misleading content about COVID-19 that may cause offline harm and/or pose a direct threat to public health. When content that violates this standard is identified it is removed from the platform.
Spotify has removed episodes from other podcasters that violate this, but the won't touch Rogan's episodes.
This is what ultimately limits the size of companies: competing interests.
Perfect example: Apple TV original programming. Apple having Apple money can (and do) throw big money at creating content. But Apple being Apple is also concerned about their overall image so none of that content is going to be too edgy or controversial and this limitation on artistic freedom is a recipe for mediocrity that, for example, HBO never had. When HBO made the Sopranos it was pretty edgy. That sort of risk will never happen on Apple TV.
So Spotify has branched into podcasts from streaming music. Worse, it's not just a neutral host of such content (as, say, Youtube might be perceived). By paying a large amount for exclusivity this is de facto original Spotify programming. That means if there's anything controversial it can hurt Spotify's other business.
Does Neil Young withdrawing his catalogue matter? Revenue-wise? Not at all. It's not necessarily the PR you want though. Does Joni Mitchell matter? Individually? No. But if this ever gets to the point of Taylor Swift or Ariana Grande? Oh boy, that's going to be rough.
But the point is by buying into this separate market for original programming (effectively), Spotify has bought themselves a whole bunch of new problems they never would've had otherwise.
For the record, I respect people who put their money where their mouth is (like Neil Young). Given the $100 million we all knew how this was going to go but hey, respect nonetheless.
Excellent take. This limiting function on companies / platforms that I thought would just be unstoppable has been surprising to me, and this is a very good description of the problem facing these companies.
Are you suggesting that Young is attention-seeking for financial gain?
He's already pretty wealthy, he loses money by leaving Spotify, and he's a muso, not a politico - people buy his records because they like the music, not because they admire his opinions.
Spotify, when they made the insane decision to pivot to podcasts, revealed a deep misunderstanding of the fundamental nature of audio. Or perhaps it would be clearer to say: music is not just “audio” and podcasts are not just “audio” and you can’t pretend they are equivalent.
I recently had to drop Spotify because it was showing advertisements for gay fetish podcasts on my work computer. In large size, with graphic illustration, above the fold, with no way to disable. I never used Spotify for podcasts.
I was a loyal subscriber for years but I had to drop them. This is one specific example, but there are many other consequences for a company that forgets what it’s product is - or perhaps hallucinates some connection between completely unrelated product categories, and tries to shove it down their customers’ throats; ironically reminiscent of some extreme BDSM content they advertise on my screen share-prone work computer.
Spotify has been actively wasting money on a massive blunder in search of growth and it is going to backfire even more than it already has. And they still haven’t done the bare-minimum work to make a good podcast client.
(Notice how Google is smart enough to put an ‘E’ for explicit tag on the podcasts)
Podcasts are not fucking music, but they are of course happy to fuck their users, the open podcast ecosystem, and in the long run their investors with them. Maybe they’ve been listening to too much https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cDovL2ZlZWRzLmxpYnN5bi5...
You can take a principled stand by dropping your subscription and blocking them with pihole, as I have. Be careful though, they’re sneaky with their domains.
In the short run as well. Most Tech stocks are down recently, but the Neil Young incident seems to have had a disproportionate effect. Still early to tell but so far investors are reacting strongly negatively.
BDSM content they advertise on my screen share-prone work computer.
Excuse me if I stray a little from the main point but have you considered the possibility that someone is using computers in your workplace (maybe even yours) to listen/download this kind of content?
I've had some bosses that I could easily picture in a black leather suit.
Possibly. Although it first happened when I opened a podcast (hosted with Spotify’s platform) in overcast on my phone with LGBTQ themes. Probably a coincidence, but seeing my Spotify recommendations change from the usual news and events to Boy Talk and Jockstrap Stories an hour later spooked me.
I work from home and my work computer is used only for work and only by me. The recommendations are specific to the account, not the device; recommendations were always the same between my iPhone and the desktop client.
So Joni Mitchell is pulling her stuff now too? This could snowball into more than just a story about Neil Young being cranky. If it snowballs, Spotify will have to cave. Artists will have to hope they do because streaming platforms are only popular because they manage to be just cheap and convenient enough to edge out piracy.
Come on, both Mitchell and Young will be trying to get back on Spotify in less than 2 years if that.
The irony to me is they are just too old to know about all the rap songs glorifying drinking lean during an opioid epidemic. Not even misinformation about lean, actively promoting.
> The irony to me is they are just too old to know about all the rap songs glorifying drinking lean during an opioid epidemic. Not even misinformation about lean, actively promoting.
Or they think misinformation is worse. Or they think Spotify hand picking Rogan's show to fund and promote came with responsibility just distribution doesn't.
Hardly any rogan advocates are saying young shouldn’t be able to do this, at least according to my Twitter feed.
In fact people are happy with young being able to do it and basically laughing at him.
So I don’t think anti young people are somehow not understanding what free speech is.
What they are critiquing is someone who spent his life being anti power and establishment doing the bidding of an establishment who’s also spread plenty of misinformation about Covid and many other things.
(And on a side note, rogan actually had opposing sides on as well, the CNN health guy. I don’t see anyone on the public health side actually being willing to engage with any of the people questioning their judgement, they just dismiss them as anti science. And it turns out a lot of things they were right about. Cloth masks being the most recent example, but you can count the lab leak hypothesis and many other things among them)
I've seen, in the multiple discussions on this topic that have shown up on HN since it broke, a significant percentage of posts arguing precisely that Young shouldn't be able to do this, because, in their view, it's "censorship" and "violating free speech".
I've seen a ton of people saying Young shouldn't have done it (which I agree with), but not a single one saying he shouldn't have been able to do it. There's a big difference.
I think there's an important distinction between infringing on free speech and being anti-free speech, and that Young only fell into the latter. Now had Spotify caved, then a lot of people would call that the former.
As another example, imagine a group of protesters arguing for the repeal of the Bill of Rights. Since that includes the First Amendment, their position is clearly anti-free speech, but they're not infringing on anyone's free speech by having their protest. (And in fact, if someone tried to ban that protest, they'd be the ones infringing on free speech.)
His stance is not anti-free-speech at all. It is "I don't think Spotify should associate with this specific person and I don't want to associate with them if they do". It would not be anti-free-speech for me to refuse to go to a dinner party where I know they've also invited someone I don't want to associate with, or to tell the hosts why I don't want to be there.
Young's stance is more like "I don't think Spotify should associate with this specific person because he exercises his freedom of speech to say things that I disagree with, and I don't want to associate with them if they do". Not wanting to associate with Spotify isn't in and of itself anti-free speech, but it is when that's your reason why.
No his problem is pretty clearly with the content itself, not the meta-issue of his ability to express it. And it's totally fine to not want to associate with people you don't want to associate with or with people who associate with those people. We all do this picking and choosing of associations all the time; it's ordinary.
We're obviously talking about a lot of diverse comments but...
Just because some people are saying it infringes on free speech (it could), or that it's censorship (which it's a call for), doesn't mean it shouldn't be allowed.
From where I'm standing, I'll say again, hardly anyone says Young shouldn't be able to do it. Even if it is a call for censorship.
> About 80% of the top comments here are "this infringes on free speech".
Indeed, and I'm pretty astonished.
Obviously Young himself isn't infringing anyone's freedom to speak. Maybe he is inviting Spotify to remove Rogan; I don't see that, but even if he is, that doesn't remove Rogan's freedom to speak.
One could argue that he's called for a boycott. I don't see that either; but even if he has, that just amounts to inviting individuals to make informed choices about which services they patronize, and which they don't.
I guess there's just a lot of HNers that like to listen to Young on Spotify, and are pissed off.
It's not a contradiction. Speech that infringes on free speech is allowed under freedom of speech. Young can say what he wants. But we can call him a censor for it. He can call Rogan an idiot and a misinformation peddler--and that isn't censorship. Saying spotify should ban his podcast is censorship.
Young quitting Spotify is in itself not an act of censorship. However, it is an act in support of censorship as a principle; in executing his rights to free expression Young aspires to facilitate censorship of ideas he doesn’t like.
The amusing thing in all of this is that Neil Young has unleashed the Streisand Effect. People who never knew that a person called Joe Rogan exists are now not only aware of who he is but also have been told that his show contains forbidden information, which pretty much guarantees a bunch of new people will end up checking it out.
Nonsense. Joe Rogan is already plenty famous (or infamous), this story hasn't reached any further than a zillion others. If this exposed the existence of Rogan to anyone, it's probably old Neil Young fans who will accept Young's position and not seek out Rogan's show.
There are almost certainly more people unaware of Neil Young's existence than of Joe Rogan's. I suspect this is a case where the Streisand effect will go both ways: some will discover and appreciate Rogan because of this and others will discover and appreciate Neil Young because of it.
And the effect itself will go both ways for the likes of Old Neil. Until his recent tantrum I had no idea what a disgusting vile hateful piece of shit he is.
My wonderful kind loving gentle uncle was a young gay man when Mr. Young said this, and the idea of this pathetic coward using his power to be stirring up hatred against him and everyone like him makes me feel physically ill. I wonder how many gay beatings and murders and how much bullying this piece of human garbage's outspoken hatred resulted in.
Turns out he hasn't changed his spots either (which they never do they just try to blend in).
This loser looks like a typical hypocrite limousine liberal to me, attaching itself like a parasite to "causes" that others have actually sweat and bled for, in order to feed off its popularity, while actually being a hateful selfish hypocrite. A sad, pathetic, angry, cowardly little loser. A washed-up irrelevant has-been. Fuck Neil Young, we still don't want him around.
If Neil Young disagrees with something, it's worth looking into. Never listened to Rogan before, might give him a try now on Neil's glowing recommendation.
I don’t care for Neil Young, but did you read to the end of that article or just the first few paragraphs?
In his 2002 biography of Neil Young, Shakey, Jimmy McDonough writes “I had found out that Young was planning on donating the proceeds from the ‘Philadelphia’ track to the Gay Men’s Health Crisis center. He acknowledged it was true but didn’t seem anxious to publicize the fact. I got the feeling there were other chartable acts I didn’t know about
I only linked that article because the original isn't so easy to find (after wasting all of a few minutes of my life searching for it). Old Neil must have found a good agency to try keep that quiet. But no, I don't think a rich hatemonger buying indulgences that in practice cost them nothing long after the fact and long after the winds have shifted in the other direction demonstrates anything at all about his character except he's even more spineless than I would have thought if he'd have faced up to it.
Funny how he allegedly wanted to keep his "good deeds" private and yet somehow his biographer found out about it ("planned" donation? Did he even donate or just claim he would?), and said-biographer can assure us there were other charitable acts too. Wow. Great PR.
But no, as I've already seen he doesn't change his spots, very few actually do in my experience. And even if he had, what does he want some sort of medal for not being a hatemonger? That wouldn't absolve him of what he did or make him worthy of a second chance. His reward for that is not living as a piece of shit for some years of his life.
There's an infinite number of people who deserve attention and respect, there's absolutely no need to go back and look for reasons why hatemongers and their ilk should get more chances.
Has Joe Rogan ever used his position of power to stir up hate against those weaker than him? If Joe is the evil one and Neil is the pious one here in this twisted hypocrite world, I'll take my chances in secular-hell. Much better company. The "fa---ts" that Saint Neil hates so much would be quite welcome too.
The way I would put this is that both the freedom of speech and the freedom of association are important. Sometimes they seem to be in tension, but they aren't really. Rogan is free to speak. Spotify is free to associate with him, or not. And Young is free to associate with Spotify, or not. And Young is free to speak about the reason he is choosing not to associate with Spotify, and they are free to ignore him. I don't really see any problems here, everyone seems to be speaking and acting for themselves, nobody seems to be forcing anybody to do anything.
If someone passed a law to force Rogan off Spotify, or to force Young to stay on, then I'd have a problem with it, but as it is, this really seems like a nothingburger.
In my view neither of those rights are implicated here. Those are rights against interference by the government. Private individuals and corporations are free to interfere with each other’s speech as long as it doesn’t break any laws.
To me, this is just a variety of boycott, and boycotts are something that we have been ok with for a long time.
I agree, but many people recognize a freedom of speech that is broader than just the prohibition on its infringement by government, and many here are arguing from that school of thought. I believe that if you recognize that broader definition of free speech, that it must also include free association, otherwise you force people to associate with speech they abhor and the whole thing falls apart.
I see what you’re saying, it’s just that one party is using their free speech to speak out against free speech. So while technically no rights are violated it is not a win for free speech.
Nobody is speaking out against free speech in this situation. Saying "I do not want to be associated with that person" is not speaking out against free speech.
We are all fighting here over what is ultimately not the fault of individuals, but of social media companies. SM optimize for engagement at any cost: that means novelty, anti establishment, outrage. We're all fighting because of algorithms and systems designed to promote content that induces fighting.
Neil Young is an angry old man who is inconsistent about what he throws temper tantrums about. It's not becoming for a counter-culture icon to try to impose his views through bullying.
It’s insane to me that people still claim that Joe Rogan is some kind of neutral observer, when he literally argued against evidence provided to him by his own crew in his discussion with Josh Zepps..
Now, to what degree did Joe Rogan push back against Robert Malone?
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[ 3.8 ms ] story [ 260 ms ] threadWhat happens when someone decides that its the device at fault, not the streaming service? Is the evil in the stone or in the signs inscribed upon it?
in the people, surely.
And his contract might very well include provisions covering exactly this sort of situation. No agent/lawyer worth their salt would let a public figure sign an exclusive deal that lets the company black list their client.
I doubt Spotify can pull him off their platform without breaching their end of the contract.
Right. It's not like the internet mob is going to stop at Spotify or stop at Joe Rogan.
- a platform can't be everything. If Spotify wants to be the platform for disinformation, they are on the right path. Young simply gave voice to those who don't and kept his promise to not be on the same platform with someone he believes has no ethics.
- OR Spotify could accept to be an editor and take responsibility for the bullshit that Rogan irradiates from their servers. Guess why they don't want to be recognized as such?
You are very confused.
Certainty pertains to religions and turns into a cult when it becomes dogmatic.
Science is all about consensus around different possibilities.
They are called theories, not commandments.
What you talk about is politics.
Which is one that the scientific community agrees on .
Politics is about having the majority of the votes.
Politics is not evaluated on the basis of falsifiability.
— Max Planck, Scientific autobiography, 1950, p. 33, 97
It means that it took several generations of doctors to reach a consensus around the fact that viruses are actually very dangerous and we can be reasonably sure that the Rogan's objections have already been presented and discarded as bullshit. More than one time.
It also means that if Rogan, a man in his middle 50s, spreads disinformation on a platform where a large part of the audience is young, we risk that the future generation will be familiar with his bullshit theories.
That's why he shouldn't be allowed to be a popular voice.
Believing that science is always correct it's wrong, science gives us ranges, plausible certainties, risk evaluation strategies, but believing that people outside of science can disprove what people of science have studied and discussed for decades, it's idiotic.
If a large number of doctors say X is true and Y is bullshit, if I think Y is true and X bullshit, I need the same number of doctors to agree with me to counter the argument.
You are right. Just have some lemma near some old proof.
Still being knowledgable about science and understanding its method for finding truth is currently the best weapon against the snake oil salesmen and their buttery voices.
I talk about science the method, not the group of old men grading papers. Maybe that is our misunderstanding. For you science is the scientific community, for me it is the method. One has a consensus, one clearly does not.
Science is the method.
The method is to put the burden of the proof on the humans that disagree with what the method has reached an agreement on.
Because it's really hard to trick the method given a large enough community that disagree on the results.
We are fallible, the method, at least, doesn't care about our feelings.
The doctors that Rogan has on will be the ones to stand the test of time and the rest of the medical establishment will turn out to be wrong on this.
Rogan's opinions are not to be taken seriously (and mine as well),unless they pass the test of time.
But Rogan opposes to smth that has already passed the test of time.
So the burden of the proof is on him.
change idea.
But it's a big if.
what's Spotify gonna do if in a few months both the lab leak theory and Rogan's bullshit turns out to be propaganda backed by malevolent actors?
what are Rogan's supporters do?
I'm quite sure they would call it a conspiracy.
But I could be wrong.
> as has happened so many times already throughout the pandemic?
it hasn't and absolutely not "so many times".
on the contrary, at the beginning many times the alerts have been discarded as exagerated and then things happened exactly as foreseen if not worse.
Think about what Trump administration said of Fauci for example (AKA 'Fauci and these idiots' as he called them)
Even if we could prove that it was a lab leak, it has no relation with underestimating the danger of covid-19 as it happened in many countries
That’s not exactly a fair interpretation. Neil first asked Spotify to censor Rogan, then removed himself from the platform. Attempting to suppress someone else’s speech is definitely not being pro-free speech, in fact it’s complete opposite.
There's a difference between censoring and enabling.
He's trying to cancel Spotify.
But censorship over dialogue is always a short sighted solution and it turns people from colleagues who disagree into enemies.
There's been a 14 point shift in the United States from Democrat to Republican in the past YEAR.
One of if not the biggest political shift in recorded history since the early 1900s.
And Republicans no longer view Democrats as disagreeing colleagues but as enemies to be eliminated.
Trump is now having some of the biggest crowds in political history.
2022 is republicans are predicted to take over the house and the Senate.
2024 Trump will win again.
All over the country people who believe the election was stolen are running for political office in positions to manage voting.
I personally think the Republicans will make major changes in the political process to ensure their permanent control even if it undermines the foundation of the country.
Our two parties are going to be flavors of Republicanism.
And it will be their right as well.
https://cdn.substack.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q...
Until it’s the government doing it, it’s not a problem.
Why it has to be mutually exclusive like an XOR operation? In a civilized discourse it is OK to have both points of view present at the same time, so that a listener can listen to one or both or none. By insisting on just one (in whatever context) we diminish our intellectual pursuits. Is it now all about cheap publicity stunts?
A racist is within their rights to publically discuss their views. I will happily argue that that is the way it should be until the heat death of the universe. But, importantly, you will never catch me saying the they're a decent person or they're doing the right thing. Young can be against basic human rights without exceeding the bounds of his own, but being authoritarian is still morally abhorrent.
Refusing to participate is far from being "authoritarian".
By that measure, any scientist refusing to engage with a crook, would be labeled as a fascist, when there are very good reasons for him or her not to do so.
It's a moral condemnation. It also can mean someone using authority to coerce people.
I agree with you that Neil Young ought not to be accused of either of these. He obviously has the moral right to control his own creations. He obviously doesn't have the authority to get rid of Rogan, based on what just happened. He obviously doesn't have the power to completely shut up Rogan.
However, what seems true to me is that he disagrees with actions and speech of other people and has chosen not to try to convince them of his opinions through speech, but to fight them by other means.
This fact pattern seems to me like a possible definition of "authoritarian" that some people could be using, without the other baggage.
If Neil Young pulled his music from Spotify on a whim, sure, he "refused to participate". That's not what happened. Neil Young leveraged his art to limit the someone else's basic right to self-expression. If someone refused to put music on Spotify because Spotify has Jewish musicians on their platform, would we call them an antisemite, or would we say, "there's no obligation to put your music anywhere, so that's fine"?
You may want to look into what the term "authoritarian" actually means.
>favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.
So I'll ask that you do a little work and point me at the definition you'd prefer.
These musicians aren't bullies, and they aren't doing anything like that. They're just saying "if your platform presents an image we don't like, or conducts itself in way that appears genuinely harmful to others -- we're not going to lend our credibility to it."
That's all. And it is perfectly within their free speech rights to do so.
But morally, it goes against free speech and aligns with fascism.
It’s just an observation that someone clearly doesn’t support free speech if they give an ultimatum like that.
Spotify choosing to end their contract with Joe Rogan over this wouldn't infringe on his free speech. Having the right to say whatever you want doesn't mean any given company needs to let you broadcast it on their platform.
>Spotify choosing to end their contract with Joe Rogan over this wouldn't infringe on his free speech. Having the right to say whatever you want doesn't mean any given company needs to let you broadcast it on their platform.
It's not government censorship, but it's still censorship.
Freedom of speech as a concept isn't just limited to the first amendment.
No, it's free speech, not censorship. Freedom of association, choosing NOT to say something, to NOT spend your own (including your organization's own) private resources supporting something, and advocating others don't either, is itself integral to Free Speech. You can't support a specific stance without NOT supporting all the ones opposed to it. And the idea isn't just to howl into the wind, it's to convince the rest of us hooting apes about it too! Free Speech is inherently a social endeavor to convince other minds which will result in their altering their behavior (including how they allocate their personal resources and power). You don't need it alone on an island.
>Freedom of speech as a concept isn't just limited to the first amendment.
Actually it pretty much is, or at least is limited to the area of "force". The point of free speech is to keeping the seeking of truth and debates around values to the social and economic circles vs those of force. Because we simply cannot trust coercive force to not solidify things into very bad positions that then stick across broad swaths of the population. There has to be room for people to advocate against even broad consensus, if they believe it enough. But within those spheres it's open season, a constant ever shifting dynamic back and forth that never ends. Indeed making sure "it never ends" is the essence of free speech.
And just because even broad consensus can sometimes be wrong doesn't mean it's not often right. The people arguing against it may well be horrible people. Them being shunned, argued back against, and denied other people's support is Free Speech working 100% as intended. If they truly believe it they will just have to keep at it, and it may well take decades to shift society's overall views. They may fail, and it may be expensive. That's how it is. The point is that force can't be used to completely crush all potential to change minds.
Freedom of speech is a principle--not the bare minimum allowable under the first amendment.
You don't agree with the principle of freedom of speech if you support shunning from debate anyone who holds an opinion you disagree with. That said, you don't have to agree with the principle of free speech. And the freedom of speech / association gives you the right to shun people. But your behavior is contrary to the principle of freedom of speech.
Statement and actions that are against freedom of speech are still allowed under freedom of speech. That's not some GOTCHA against the freedom of speech. Young should be allowed to do what he's doing. But he should fully expect to be called a censoring blacklister.
You can join a political group advocating for censorship. That's attempted censorship even if its allowed under freedom of speech.
So yes, you can exercise your freedom of speech to speak against freedom of speech. There is no contradiction.
Yes, the principle that force should not be used to compel speech since no single oracle can be trusted to it. Not that all ideas and values are equal, and indeed on the contrary the entire point of freedom of speech is that they aren't. Freedom of speech is a process, a system to try to let us grope our way towards truth and better values and adapt to changing circumstances, to maintain a dynamic equilibrium that leaves open the chance we're wrong or that what makes sense now won't in the future. Culling out the crap is a huge part of what it's all about.
>But your behavior is contrary to the principle of freedom of speech.
Nope, yours is! A mushy "everything is the same" implicitly negates any need for protection.
Culling out whatever you think is crap by organizing a boycott unless people literally ban that content is censorship.
No, it's free speech. It's literally engaging in freedom of association yourself and speech to try to convince other people to exercise their freedoms of association and speech towards ideas and values one considers important. And it isn't without risk or personal cost either. Boycotts necessarily involve sacrificing some value the entity offers. If other people won't go along with it because they don't agree obviously it goes nowhere. Even if lots of people do go along with it, the entity people are trying to convince may well reject it anyway and just take the hit, or calculate they can outlast it, or argue back and convince people the other way.
You're arguing that free speech shouldn't cover trying to convince anyone else of your own values, or that people shouldn't be allowed to act on said values if they are won over and wish to. That's wild stuff.
Fair enough; but it's only one principle. It doesn't override all the other principles. Some people from the land of the 1st Amendment seem to think it does.
> not the bare minimum allowable under the first amendment.
The 1st Amendment is not a "bare minimum" - AFAIAA it's the most maximalist free-speech legal provision in the world.
Someone upthread spoke of "cancelling Spotify". Cancelling is about denying people a platform, no? How is Young denying Spotify a platform, by encouraging others to stay away from Spotify? That's called a boycott, which amounts to individuals choosing freely what to do with their time and money. It has nothing to do with freedom of speech.
It's not bare minimum with regard to its restrictions on government action. But it doesn't apply to (and is not meant to) apply to other institutions.
For example, nobody would anti-discrimination principles by the 14th amendment and conclude that its therefore not discrimination for a private citizen to discriminate against minorities.
[1]you can certain shun them from actual organizations that aren't meant to be open platforms for everyone. Most organizations are not open platforms, and their employers represent the organization.
Well, that's an interesting sentence-construction. How does person A shun person B from group X? "Shunning" isn't normally a thing that you do to someone from something.
IOW, If you are shunned by society as a whole, then it is society as a whole that has shunned you.
[Edit] And if Spotify is shunned by its users, it's the users that shunned it; nobody shunned the users "from" Spotify.
There is no contraction. A call for censorship is allowed under freedom of speech.
I would never force spotify to platform anyone they don't want to. But I will criticize those who demand others blacklist.
Answer this: Was the Hollywood self-enforced blacklist of communists censorship?
Fortunately Neil Young lacks the power to enforce his view, but make no doubt, his view is censorship.
Whether you succeed or not depends on other things (in particular, an individual’s power).
All else is a red herring. As the saying goes, ”In the Soviet Union, we have freedom of speech. But in the US, you have freedom after* speech.”
You can't mean that seriously. If I successfully form the intention to stop someone speaking, but fail to carry through (perhaps because I don't own a police force), are you really saying that I've succeeded in censoring them?
It seems to be the fashion these days to construct arguments based on redefining words. If "censorship" is a kind of intention, then there doesn't appear to be much wrong with censorship. You've redefined a word that is generally considered to refer to something bad, to mean something that isn't bad. That's sort-of OK, but it means that we have to put a glossary of definitions at the top of anything we say.
Intent matters. Fortunately, Neil Young failed.
Same with censorship.
That is a pretty extreme view of what "free speech" entitles, to the point of significantly restricting the free speech of (in this case) Niel Young to preserve Joe Rogan's.
If I walk out of the room because someone is spitting nonsense is that censorship?
That is a far cry from performing at the same event or socializing in the same room. I would 100% support Young if that was what he was objecting to.
But Young's situation is more like refusing to play on a university that doesn't shun someone he thinks is wrong. That's censorship.
*(not sure I'd call Rogan that but for lack of a better word)
If the Catholic Church organized a boycott of Amazon unless decided to de-platform controversial authors that is a clear example of censorship.
Isn't Rogan only on the one platform?
Apple and Amazon have Rogan's comedy specials.
But blacklisting people for political beliefs is quintessential censorship. Can't believe that has to be said.
Young is asking for him to be banned from Spotify.
I'm sure Young also objects to many political beliefs expressed by Rogan's guests, and probably Rogan himself, that's unrelated to what Young did or said.
Earnest misinformation cannot be an exception to freedom of speech without throwing away the entire concept. A lot of commonly accepted truths were dismissed as misinformation by the powers that be.
It doesn't even work as a practical matter. You get too many false positives--how many CDC facts have been called into question. They've even deliberately lied. Should bigTech have banned people saying masks work in April 2020 and ban people saying they don't in April 2021? And its not effective. At best, you are playing wackamole. And banning people from taking opposing positions just entrenches opposing view points.
If Donald Trump successfully lobbied bigTech to censor "misinformation" about covid, would you believe a fucking thing you heard from those sources?
I agree with this. It is a matter for the audience to decide what speech they will listen to, and how they will evaluate it. It is cause for regret thaat so many people lack the means to evaluate the utterances of crackpots. But you can't start to evaluate it if you haven't heard it; there are "forbidden views" that you won't hear on MSM or the big internet platforms.
I'm not a free-speech maximalist. Incitement to hatred or violence is forbidden here, and I'm cool with that. Lying, fakery and distortion are permitted (provided it's not in furtherance of selling stuff), and I'm OK with that too.
I'm not OK with a whole swath of views being suppressed without any process.
That's not what's happening with Young and Rogan. Rogan has been paid by Spotify for his podcast; if they decide to shut him down, well he has other platforms. And he gets to keep the money. There's no chance he'll be silenced.
I'm not OK with the way the word "censorship" is being bandied around here. Once upon a time, when email blocklists started to become popular, spammers accused MSPs of censorship, which was ludicrous. Nobody has a right to use the private property of others to exercise their free speech. You can say what you like, but I don't have to lend you my megaphone, and I don't have to stand next to you on the platform while you say it.
Spotify dropping Rogan would not have been censorship: Rogan would have been able to continue talking as much as he wanted, just like he was before his deal with Spotify.
Is there any form of consequences for speech that would not be censorship?
Let's assume, for the sake of argument, that Young really did say "get rid of Rogan or I'll leave". How is that any different from saying "I'm leaving because you won't get rid of Rogan"? Or "I'm leaving, but I'll consider coming back if you get rid of Rogan"?
In all of those cases, the end result (and the negotiating power of all parties) is essentially the same, so what makes one "free speech" and another "anti-free speech"?
Bias. If they disagree with Rogan in the first place, not on this specific subject but in a multiple different angle, although in modern days that tends to be politics, then they just need to find a narrative to make sure what they are doing is good.
Gruber is extremely bias towards Apple. ( USB-C, AirPod sold at Cost, big.LITTLE, Unified Memory etc... ) So a narrative against Spotify wouldn't hurt.
And actually conspiring against this guy just fuels the conspiracy theories out there.
Do people really not believe that the Information Age has fundamentally changed the axioms which underlie things like “only governments can censor” ?
I don't buy this idea that stating firmly and publicly: "If you continue to host X on your platform, then I won't be associated with your platform" -- is equivalent to top-down, administrative censorship in the usual sense of the term. Which by most sources is specifically rooted in an exercise of state power (or of something more or less equivalent to it). Not the editorial decisions made by publishing entities.
Neil and those who're following his lead are doing the right thing but they are NOT foregoing massive seventies-record-industry wealth here. If they're not happy with how Spotify acts there is very little to keep them on board.
For anybody less significant than Neil Young, most likely they get nothing from Spotify in the first place. It's basically the bad old record industry all over again, but more so. Back in the day they used to care about setting up 'gotchas' like shellac breakage adjustments applied to CDs, so you'd sign off on a bad deal because it was the only one on offer but some effort would go into making a case why they deserved to not pay you.
These days I don't think those in power feel a need to bother. This applies to Spotify. If they don't feel like paying you they just won't. Neil Young is likely losing nothing here.
Does this mean you agree with censoring Rogan?
What makes you think the "old record industry" is gone? Spotify doesn't pay artists directly. All money goes to the "old record industry" which then pays the artists.
No one asks where the money disappears when it reaches the "old record industry" because criticizing those companies likely means commercial death for many artists.
However, it's easy to criticize Spotify because... they can't say anything either: they depend on those companies.
Which specific doctors and scientists do you think shouldn’t have appeared on Rogan’s podcast?
There is nothing "right" about trying to strongarm a platform into censoring someone.
How about telling a platform that they are associating with someone (who you think) is a bad person doing bad things, and they should stop supporting this (according to you) bad person?
Are we allowed to say that certain people are (at least in our opinion) bad people? Are we allow to do that?
Was telling Coca-Cola that they should stop associating with apartheid in South Africa "censorship"?
* https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1986-09-18-860309...
* https://peaceworks.afsc.org/ending-apartheid-south-africa
* your chances of catching getting COVD by 2.5x (508 vs. 221),
* your chances of being hospitalized by 5x (993 vs 172), and
* your chance of going to the ICU by 11x (263 vs 22).
* https://covid19-sciencetable.ca/ontario-dashboard/#riskbyvac...
is doing a bad thing. Rogan is causing needless pain, suffering, and probably even death by spreading information. I would qualify that as "bad".
See also his taking ivermectin, a deworming veterinary drug formulated for use in cows and horses:
* https://www.npr.org/2021/09/01/1033485152/joe-rogan-covid-iv...
I'm sure that are some good qualities to Rogan, but what he's doing with respect to COVID is not among them.
Pro free speech would be for Young to use his visibility to highlight rebuttals of claimed misinformation. Arguments, not suppression, are how you win back people who have lost trust in institutions. Suppression just amplifies the distrust. It leaves a largely clear field for these heterodox doctors to command, because lacking rebuttals, many of their claims sound quite convincing. And people are being convinced in large numbers.
But sufficiently authoritarian regimes usually also heavily censor, so you still end up censorship even in that case.
I'd love to hear an alternative that is actually known to work for societies that are both large and have near zero costs to produce and widely spread information.
This goes both ways
This is also isomorphous to the problem that exists when deciding how tolerant to be of intolerance.
Your insistence that the only response to "the wrong thing" is "do the right thing" is a major weakness with "the right thing". I'm not saying that "do the right thing" is a bad idea, just that if that is your only response, you've got a massive weak spot that can be disastrously exploited by bad actors.
Are you calling for an end to argumentation, and instead a resort to force? Are you saying Joe Rogan is a politically motivated misinformation source, intentionally trying to destabilize our society?
I am pointing out a paradox. Since you seem particularly motivated by the misinformation context, I'll just point more the paradox of tolerance.
I believe that is good to be tolerant, even of intolerance. But there's also no doubt in my mind that if you are too tolerant of intolerance, you can end up allowing the destruction of a tolerant society. So what should one do? Clearly the answer is not "Don't be tolerant". But how can you know where the line is, or should be? The point is that certain stances toward the world, such as tolerance, have an inherent weak spot that can exploited by people who want to do so, and that AFAIK there is no way of defending that weak spot without risking violating those positions.
So it's a paradox.
So to repeat: I'm not calling for anything, I'm pointing out that things are not as simple as "defeat bad speech with more speech".
Misinformation is an artifact of our decaying society, so what exactly is the "paradox" here? The paradox of suppressing discussion that tries to deal with societal rot? To what end? Why not actually fix the problem?
This problem should be easy to solve, but isn't because someone is getting in the way.
That must explain why people have written about the paradox of tolerance for hundreds of years, across many different cultures. Clearly, the authors must all have come from weak cultures, since it's so fucking obvious that there's no issue with this all.
Misinformation can be in part an artifact of a decaying society, it can also be be the result of deliberate attempts to undermine part of, or even the entirety of, an existing social order.
The paradox is that "the only (acceptable) way to defeat bad speech is with more speech that explains why the bad speech is wrong" is that simply by flooding a culture with bad speech, you can completely jam things up as everyone tries to respond to the flood of bullshit.
This is a documented strategy for both intra- and inter-national actors.
So who do you think is spreading said misinformation? Again, are you saying fucking Joe Rogan is trying to destroy social order? Think about this for one god damn second.
Do I think that Rogan is trying to destroy the social order? No, of course not. Do I think that Rogan doesn't see any downside to long extended chitchats, stoned or otherwise, about any random idea that is floating in the cultural ether? No, I don't think he does. Do I think that there are downsides to the "every POV is legitimate, lets just put it all out there" model of contemporary discourse? Yes, I do.
Imagine building a house then selling it, then when neighbors you personally find undesirable move into the neighborhood demanding the home owners association load one of the houses, of which you own neither, and truck it out.
Edit:
He may own half, and the label Warner was the one that made the deal with Spotify.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-55557633
https://www.theguardian.com/music/2003/sep/17/popandrock.nei...
Politically-speaking, its hard to exorcise the ghost of his 1980s pronouncements, when he swung hard-right behind the Reagan presidency and lashed out at gays ("you go to the supermarket and you see a [censored] behind the fucking cash register, you don't want him to handle your potatoes") and welfare spongers. "Stop being supported by the government and get out and work," Neil advised. "You have to make the weak stand up on one leg, or half a leg, whatever they've got."
What's your point, anyway.
The other lesson is that some people are selectively punished and canceled for three stupid statements during their lifetime, while others (like Biden) are not.
But I can get past your troll-of-a-term "free speech privilege." It's as if you are attempting to downgrade the principle of freedom of speech to limit it to describing an annoying pattern of rich guys mouthing off. (And completing the example from the "other rich guy" in this instance.)
What's the upshot here? Are you a staunch supporter of freedom of speech or not? I can't tell at all from your comment nor from the text of the article (which is merely a review of Neil Young's output).
[1] https://www.bad-news-beat.org/2015neil-young-supports-love
His principled credibility includes homophobia.
"You go to a supermarket and you see a fa--ot behind the fuc--ng cash register, you don’t want him to handle your potatoes.”" - Neil Young
Via L.A. Times https://t.co/uClB2YkeU3
[1] https://www.bad-news-beat.org/2015neil-young-supports-love
If you look at Apple's content guidelines[0] section 2.2 they do explicitly forbid "Encouragement of criminal activity or illegal acts" Given that treason, sedition, and advocating the overthrow of the government are illegal under 18 U.S.C[1] there's a good argument that Bannon's podcast should not be allowed.
I'm not sure what Apple's mechanism is for enforcing their guidelines but it seems the argument could be made for delisting Bannon as well.
0. https://podcasters.apple.com/support/891-content-and-subscri... 1. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/part-I/chapter-11...
> If a podcast contains harmful or objectionable content that is disputed by authoritative sources, Apple may label the podcast to reflect the dispute. [emphasis added]
Those "may"s gives Apple a nice out here. They do not state that they will take any action, only that they may take some action (including possible removal).
If only the rules were applied consistently.
Both Neil Young and Joni Mitchell had Polio when they were children. They are old enough to remember the huge impact of mass vaccination on that terrifying disease, that they themselves suffered under. They might take anti-vaccination disinformation personally.
When generational knowledge like this is lost; there is a danger that a lesson of history is forgotten and the same mistakes made again.
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joni_Mitchell#1943%E2%80%93196...
> Spotify prohibits content on the platform which promotes dangerous false, deceptive, or misleading content about COVID-19 that may cause offline harm and/or pose a direct threat to public health. When content that violates this standard is identified it is removed from the platform.
Spotify has removed episodes from other podcasters that violate this, but the won't touch Rogan's episodes.
[1] https://www.theverge.com/2021/4/27/22406315/joe-rogan-vaccin...
Perfect example: Apple TV original programming. Apple having Apple money can (and do) throw big money at creating content. But Apple being Apple is also concerned about their overall image so none of that content is going to be too edgy or controversial and this limitation on artistic freedom is a recipe for mediocrity that, for example, HBO never had. When HBO made the Sopranos it was pretty edgy. That sort of risk will never happen on Apple TV.
So Spotify has branched into podcasts from streaming music. Worse, it's not just a neutral host of such content (as, say, Youtube might be perceived). By paying a large amount for exclusivity this is de facto original Spotify programming. That means if there's anything controversial it can hurt Spotify's other business.
Does Neil Young withdrawing his catalogue matter? Revenue-wise? Not at all. It's not necessarily the PR you want though. Does Joni Mitchell matter? Individually? No. But if this ever gets to the point of Taylor Swift or Ariana Grande? Oh boy, that's going to be rough.
But the point is by buying into this separate market for original programming (effectively), Spotify has bought themselves a whole bunch of new problems they never would've had otherwise.
For the record, I respect people who put their money where their mouth is (like Neil Young). Given the $100 million we all knew how this was going to go but hey, respect nonetheless.
That has, sadly, been my experience as well — so many people that treat life like a game where the only currency is ... currency?
He's already pretty wealthy, he loses money by leaving Spotify, and he's a muso, not a politico - people buy his records because they like the music, not because they admire his opinions.
I recently had to drop Spotify because it was showing advertisements for gay fetish podcasts on my work computer. In large size, with graphic illustration, above the fold, with no way to disable. I never used Spotify for podcasts.
I was a loyal subscriber for years but I had to drop them. This is one specific example, but there are many other consequences for a company that forgets what it’s product is - or perhaps hallucinates some connection between completely unrelated product categories, and tries to shove it down their customers’ throats; ironically reminiscent of some extreme BDSM content they advertise on my screen share-prone work computer.
Spotify has been actively wasting money on a massive blunder in search of growth and it is going to backfire even more than it already has. And they still haven’t done the bare-minimum work to make a good podcast client.
https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8...
https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cDovL2ZlZWRzLmZlZWRidXJ...
(Notice how Google is smart enough to put an ‘E’ for explicit tag on the podcasts)
Podcasts are not fucking music, but they are of course happy to fuck their users, the open podcast ecosystem, and in the long run their investors with them. Maybe they’ve been listening to too much https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cDovL2ZlZWRzLmxpYnN5bi5...
You can take a principled stand by dropping your subscription and blocking them with pihole, as I have. Be careful though, they’re sneaky with their domains.
In the short run as well. Most Tech stocks are down recently, but the Neil Young incident seems to have had a disproportionate effect. Still early to tell but so far investors are reacting strongly negatively.
Excuse me if I stray a little from the main point but have you considered the possibility that someone is using computers in your workplace (maybe even yours) to listen/download this kind of content?
I've had some bosses that I could easily picture in a black leather suit.
I work from home and my work computer is used only for work and only by me. The recommendations are specific to the account, not the device; recommendations were always the same between my iPhone and the desktop client.
And other than Joni Mitchell so far, it looks like the rest of the artists in the world are siding with Spotify.
Because even if you don't agree with Joe Rogan you have to agree that cancel culture is wrong and expression of a variety of views is valuable.
Artists seem like the wrong group of people to try to get to side with you on censorship.
The irony to me is they are just too old to know about all the rap songs glorifying drinking lean during an opioid epidemic. Not even misinformation about lean, actively promoting.
Or they think misinformation is worse. Or they think Spotify hand picking Rogan's show to fund and promote came with responsibility just distribution doesn't.
In fact people are happy with young being able to do it and basically laughing at him.
So I don’t think anti young people are somehow not understanding what free speech is.
What they are critiquing is someone who spent his life being anti power and establishment doing the bidding of an establishment who’s also spread plenty of misinformation about Covid and many other things.
(And on a side note, rogan actually had opposing sides on as well, the CNN health guy. I don’t see anyone on the public health side actually being willing to engage with any of the people questioning their judgement, they just dismiss them as anti science. And it turns out a lot of things they were right about. Cloth masks being the most recent example, but you can count the lab leak hypothesis and many other things among them)
As another example, imagine a group of protesters arguing for the repeal of the Bill of Rights. Since that includes the First Amendment, their position is clearly anti-free speech, but they're not infringing on anyone's free speech by having their protest. (And in fact, if someone tried to ban that protest, they'd be the ones infringing on free speech.)
Just because some people are saying it infringes on free speech (it could), or that it's censorship (which it's a call for), doesn't mean it shouldn't be allowed.
From where I'm standing, I'll say again, hardly anyone says Young shouldn't be able to do it. Even if it is a call for censorship.
Indeed, and I'm pretty astonished.
Obviously Young himself isn't infringing anyone's freedom to speak. Maybe he is inviting Spotify to remove Rogan; I don't see that, but even if he is, that doesn't remove Rogan's freedom to speak.
One could argue that he's called for a boycott. I don't see that either; but even if he has, that just amounts to inviting individuals to make informed choices about which services they patronize, and which they don't.
I guess there's just a lot of HNers that like to listen to Young on Spotify, and are pissed off.
I doubt he's doing anyone's bidding. He has good reason to oppose anti-vaxxers; he's a polio victim.
http://www.tunesdujour.com/neil-youngs-homophobia-aids-phobi...
My wonderful kind loving gentle uncle was a young gay man when Mr. Young said this, and the idea of this pathetic coward using his power to be stirring up hatred against him and everyone like him makes me feel physically ill. I wonder how many gay beatings and murders and how much bullying this piece of human garbage's outspoken hatred resulted in.
Turns out he hasn't changed his spots either (which they never do they just try to blend in).
https://twitter.com/DonaldJTrumpJr/status/148638898697320039...
This loser looks like a typical hypocrite limousine liberal to me, attaching itself like a parasite to "causes" that others have actually sweat and bled for, in order to feed off its popularity, while actually being a hateful selfish hypocrite. A sad, pathetic, angry, cowardly little loser. A washed-up irrelevant has-been. Fuck Neil Young, we still don't want him around.
If Neil Young disagrees with something, it's worth looking into. Never listened to Rogan before, might give him a try now on Neil's glowing recommendation.
In his 2002 biography of Neil Young, Shakey, Jimmy McDonough writes “I had found out that Young was planning on donating the proceeds from the ‘Philadelphia’ track to the Gay Men’s Health Crisis center. He acknowledged it was true but didn’t seem anxious to publicize the fact. I got the feeling there were other chartable acts I didn’t know about
Funny how he allegedly wanted to keep his "good deeds" private and yet somehow his biographer found out about it ("planned" donation? Did he even donate or just claim he would?), and said-biographer can assure us there were other charitable acts too. Wow. Great PR.
But no, as I've already seen he doesn't change his spots, very few actually do in my experience. And even if he had, what does he want some sort of medal for not being a hatemonger? That wouldn't absolve him of what he did or make him worthy of a second chance. His reward for that is not living as a piece of shit for some years of his life.
There's an infinite number of people who deserve attention and respect, there's absolutely no need to go back and look for reasons why hatemongers and their ilk should get more chances.
Has Joe Rogan ever used his position of power to stir up hate against those weaker than him? If Joe is the evil one and Neil is the pious one here in this twisted hypocrite world, I'll take my chances in secular-hell. Much better company. The "fa---ts" that Saint Neil hates so much would be quite welcome too.
If someone passed a law to force Rogan off Spotify, or to force Young to stay on, then I'd have a problem with it, but as it is, this really seems like a nothingburger.
To me, this is just a variety of boycott, and boycotts are something that we have been ok with for a long time.
Now, to what degree did Joe Rogan push back against Robert Malone?
If anyone is unfamiliar with Robert Malone.