Communications between individuals (who presumably know each other) should be treated like phone calls.
Communications one-to-many (presumably mostly strangers) should be treated like broadcast media. This would include memes, links, etc, that may actually be passed person to person (the broadcast is diffuse, but still a broadcast).
So censoring phone calls/chats is not ok, but censoring public posts, or memes/links intended for distribution should be. Incitement to violence is a good test, as is wilfully spreading harmful misinformation.
Eventually we are going to have to get a handle on social media - as recent events have shown (doesn't matter when this comment was written, there is always a recent event, sadly).
I disagree that all communication that is one-to-many should be treated like traditional broadcast media. A great deal of folks on the late 90s and early 2000s internet were protesting effectively this kind of censorship, in the form of the Communications Decency Act. As Yishan Wong mentions in his thread regarding Elon Musk’s planned acquisition of Twitter, the difference between the Internet then and now is that the Internet then was mostly grappling with censorship from the evangelical religious right, whereas today it is very different. However, while reality has become muddy and unclear, I feel the principles have largely stayed the same.
The fact is that the internet is becoming the fabric of all kinds of communication. All scales of communication can happen in effectively the same manner; a tweet can be sent to one person or a million and there’s no real difference. Internet communication has effectively replaced sitting in a group chatting with friends and acquaintances, something that absolutely should not be treated like broadcast media. It is tempting to try to special case this because it worked before, but I don’t think that’s the answer, and I wonder if that will even remain a feasible option into the long term future. With improving technology and the fundamental belief that people have a substantial amount of freedom to use computers (and the internet) as they like, it’s hard for me to imagine the cat going back into the bag.
So I think what we have today is most likely to not change substantially… Everyone agrees that the internet can amplify some bad behaviors, but nobody seems to agree on exactly what to do about it. Making Twitter responsible for the content of every tweet seems unreasonable, but Twitter having zero accountability for what happens in the open on their platform also seems unreasonable. That makes it seem like the answer must be somewhere in the middle, and maybe it is. But sometimes, I do wonder if maybe there will emerge an alternative approach that doesn’t seem to be a futile game of balance?
Although it is clear today that the Internet and social media is far from just a passing fad, I do wonder if it will ever hit its cultural peak at some point and begin declining in importance. I mean, how much longer can it continue to eat up other forms of interaction? Surely it will run out. Surely fatigue will build. Surely? And assuming it’s not cyclical, I hope that this eases some of the problems that come from the internet having become so important in modern society. Definitely won’t be holding my breath.
I don't believe social media does eat up other forms of interaction, at least not for most people. People still speak, they still read, they still watch tv, talk on the telephone, communicate in every way they used to.
Over 90% of the entire human population has cell phones, globally. Sure, some of them lack data or at least robust data, but the writing is firmly on the wall: people are getting online one way or another. Meanwhile, Facebook has nearly 3 billion active users on its own. It only started in 2004 and it wasn’t even available to the general public for years.
By some estimates, 4 billion people don’t even have postal addresses yet. This is substantial adoption in an exceedingly short period.
Many things can be said about exactly how and why this happened, but by and large Facebook became a utility for communicating with people who you otherwise would have trouble keeping up with due to geographical differences or other life changes.
That said, as it has become so ubiquitous, today many people use it to keep up with people they see every day. Hell, I’m more likely to get a Discord message from someone who is a room away rather than them walk over. The utility of the internet draws people in, but once you have it, it can become second nature. Many of us carry around internet communicators in our pockets 24/7. You may initially mostly have one so you can use Maps, or call someone if you need to, but if it has a data connection and a screen it can probably be used to post to Facebook or watch a YouTube video.
If it were deniable before, I’d argue COVID-19 lockdown only made it more evident just how online everyone was, and if they weren’t already, it certainly gave them a push to get there.
For economical and other reasons, I’m sure Internet and social media adoption will slow down and it will take a long time to permeate even more of life. However, many Americans probably already spend more time with social interactions online than IRL.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics:
> From 2003 to 2017, the average amount of time Americans spent socializing per day dropped from about 46 minutes to 39 minutes.
Meanwhile, many reports have cited frankly alarming amounts of time spent on platforms like Facebook and phones in general, with one claiming that Americans on average spend 7 hours a week using Facebook, and a report[1] from Pew Research Center asserts that 31% of American adults claim to be online “almost constantly.”
Of course, this is U.S. centric to some degree, but the writing is on the wall. People still speak, read, watch TV, talk on the telephone, and communicate in every way they used to. Except they use Facebook more, and they use the “telephone” to do internet communication more than they use it to do voice calls over the traditional phone network. No matter how you look at it, the internet is eating up social interactions of all kinds. And if you don’t see it yet, you probably won’t have to wait long on this trajectory. For better and worse.
Also the prevalence of homicide decreasing would mean that the laws need to be relaxed. There was no enforcement in the beginning of the net and violence did not increase at all. In that case restrictions on speech don't have any justification as provided by empirical evidence.
Those that call for tighter regulation need to adjust to a realistic approach to the problem, not an emotional with reference to current event.s
Broadcast media is regulated because it uses a limited resource deemed for the public good - the broadcast spectrum. There is no equivalent to the broadcast spectrum on the internet. Note that non-broadcast media like cable is far less regulated for that reason.
Also, incitement to violence is already against the law and the TOS for social media platforms.
I think the incitement to violence exception is a simple phrase that is highly complex. To me, our former president continuing to harp on the lie that the election was stolen was a clear incitement to violence.
But to many, they disagree. He didn't specifically say "go commit violence" (although he has done so in the past in other situations).
There are many people that were arguing that calling COVID-19 the china violence was one of the things leading to increased violence against Asians. So would that constitute incitement to violence? I don't think so, but I can definitely see a very blurry line here.
No, censorship is not OK, and free expression will probably win in end. People don't like to be shut up, and in the long run capitalism provides people with what they like.
Capitalism won't however, allow for speech which threatens its own existence. Utterances which pose a threat and cannot be subsumed by capitalism are stopped, erased, and penalized. I'll argue that this is the very speech that is most important to protect.
It's not that this certain someone is anti-capitalist. Establishment big business class has tentacles of influence that extends into the establishment politician class. Making enemies of establishment politicians made him the enemy of big business.
The depressing part was that a globalist billionaire (and not a particularly conservative one historically) was perceived as the only viable option conservatives had to disrupt the existing party cronyism. In 1992, that option was Ross Perot, also a billionaire, until the deal with Bush and the weird withdrawing and reentering the candidacy. The mainstream Republican Party has been generally disliked by conservative voters for a long time, but they don't have anywhere else to go, and Democrats' policy positions are completely unacceptable to them.
Phone calls can have more than one person, for example, so those laws could still apply cleanly.
IMO - anything with a bound and mutual audience is "Direct Messaging". Eg. a private FB account posting to ONLY its followers (who had to be manually "friend request accepted") is a private message. A public twitter feed that anyone can view is a public broadcast. A private message with the permissions changed by the creator to become a public is - wait for it - public.
The grey area here in my view is FB groups (which can have 10s of thousands of members). I would say its public since its not universally mutual with each pair. that said, if you IRL went to AA or church or something and shared something for a group, you'd consider it a private conversation. I think this is where the vagueness of law would say something like "could the speaker have consented to this audience with the expectation that it would be private."
The giant caveat to what you are saying is that the nature of the 'broadcast' is not isolated to the individual - it's on a platform.
So - for 'web sites' - yes. That should apply. And it does: you can make your own 1-to-many site and say almost whatever you want.
Twitter is not that, there's much more going on.
In the public interest, it may be worthwhile to have maybe some regs around it, and the notion of 'banned for having an opinion' is not entirely unreasonable.
That said, most people on Twitter are not banned for that.
And of course are the statements: "The Election Was Stolen!" or "The Voting Machines Were Hacked By China" or "Vaccines Were Invented By Big Pharma To Control US" 'opinions'?
I would argue that AWS should have very little leeway in terms of who they can host or not - much like 'net neutrality' they should have 'service neutrality'.
Same for Email.
But for things that are truly social networks, they should have a fair bit of lattitude to set their own policies.
Finally you have the issues of distribution. App Store and Google Play have very difficult and problematic barriers to the content on apps. I had an app 'not pass muster' because someone in a bit of content was talking about whether or not a particular male celebrity was 'hot or not'. Ridiculous.
So, a final point might be to at minimum require 'objectivity' and 'transparency' to Social Network management, such that people are at least treated consistently according to a clear set of rules.
Twitter 'verification' is a giant 'black box' - that's just unfair.
One-to-many should be treated on a site-by-site basis. Hacker news is pretty heavily moderated, and that's fine for hacker news. 4chan is lightly moderated, depending on the board, and that's fine for 4chan. But back in the day, even 4chan decided to ban specific things beyond legal issues like CSAM or raids or people sharing personal information (all of which could also face legal penalties even if they were not publicly broadcast). They specifically banned My Little Pony content on /b/, just because it was annoying too many users. No clue if the ban is still present, but it's their business whether it is or not.
Sites shouldn't need to justify this to any central authority, the government does not need to be more involved in this process, and this law is stupid (and would likely lead to conflicts with another stupid set of laws, SESTA and FOSTA).
This is fabricating a huge number of brand new handcuffs for social interaction. And there's not a single iota of justification or reasoning presented. It's purely say so.
It totally ignores that anyone but the individual has rights. It admits to no clash, acknowledges that no one else has rights. If the entire world except you votes unanimously that your posting is just the lowest grade most toxic trash that no one would ever go near & has no value, this asserts that since you shared it with >1 person, no syst nor person nor networlay get in the way with you sharing it with the whole world. We all have to listen.
This is a farcical & unserious position. The agenda here is just malice, a bunch of people seeming to use the law to interject themselves as they please in a way no one can reject, utterly secure in their bloviation/unchallengeable.
Recent events have shown the shouting class os obnoxious & toxic & most spcial networks are fed up with these problematic overimposing loud few. That these few take suchkdern umbrage with the most minimal & gentle of private curbings & immediately resort to trying to get thr goverent to force them to be unignorable, unavoidable shows what real moral standing they have.
I disagree. That isn't realistic for the communication channels of today. Also liberals and conservatives randomly switch opinion on this matter depending on the content.
Social networks were successful because they allowed it to be a soapbox for everyone. Overall that is certainly an improvement over traditional media channels.
Recent events, I guess you are referring to someone going on a shooting spree again, cannot justify censorship as the homicide rate in the US is still vastly lower than 1985.
To avoid having to carry Texas spammers, Texas bot herders and Texas neo-nazis that will alienate everyone, Texans and non-Texans alike. There are many, many more non-Texans in the USA, much less the whole world.
That's a real problem with national or international corporations that have a lot of monopoly power. They don't have to service everyone, and if you don't fit their idea of maximum profit, you don't get serviced.
I guess Texans who feel cut-out of modern discourse could use VPNs to appear to be from Connecticut or New York City.
So, hypothetically, if Twitter were to say that nobody is allowed to use Twitter from Texas, would that mean that Twitter could be sued by anyone in Texas, or is denying access functionally different (as common sense would have it) from censorship?
It's for a Texas court to decide in this case. But all it takes is one user lying, or moving to Texas and getting banned for the state to bring a suit.
How does this square up with owners of private property having the ability to determine what they do with that private property? I mean, do these plaintiffs have ownership in whatever social network?
Can spammers sue for being censored? What about bot herders?
I acknowledge that there's some tension in the various rights here, but the USA has rarely mandated that non-common-carriers and non-broadcast media carry particular speech. The old "fairness doctrine" is a notable exception, but we all cheered and waved the flag when that got disposed of.
This looks like a particular political faction having a tantrum about some media not going 100% their way. Back in the Reagan Years, when we all agreed to get rid of things like the fairness doctrine, restrictions on cross-ownership of forms of media and number of markets, one political faction cheered this and everyone else was told cry more, that market forces would take care of things.
Now that markets have shifted, we're seeing the faction that cheered removing barriers crying. I'm having a hard time mustering sympathy, but maybe that's because I'm old.
You’ve already thought about this more than the legislators who voted for this inane and unconstitutional law, who are just trying to “own the libs” for their voter base.
It doesnt. These people want everyone hosting things online to have to meet some ill defined mystical special status as "publishers" to be able to decide anything for themselves (with ill-defined requirements/consequences for declaring so) or be forced to host whatever trashy hoi-poi shows up & starts screaming hell. They want to insist platforms have no right to taste or discernment.
Everyone who doesnt qualify for this weird made up non-legal term "publisher" is a "platform", which clearly to these folk (and no one else) implies a public utility subject to complete government regulation that far outstrips any rights of either the company, or the public, either of which maybe perhaps just would never vote with their feat/want to use a so called "platform" which insisted upon letting the shouting braying class into their feeds in the first place.
It's bitter, it's shallow, it's insanely hyper-regulatory to tell people & companies they have to accept private intrusion to support some loudmouth shouting class's "right" to yell at all of us. This right to yell, this particular deranged psycho-world rendition of free speech, trumps all other rights anyone might have
.
I think that's why the Trump administration tried to distinguish between some "God Given" rights, and rights established some other way. Tensions between, say gun ownership, and private property (No Guns in the bar & grille rules) can be resolved their way.
Conservatives argue that all people should be required to publish anything produced by a conservative, as anything else is censorship. Conservatives, and this conservative law, are unequivocally opposed to free speech. This has been their position for decades, this law is just a new variation: forcing people to host speech against their will, rather than the traditional conservative censorship.
Trump and similar "conservatives" got "censored" after repeatedly breaking the same rules against misinformation, false claims, etc. He could have avoided "censorship" by simply stopping those false and fraudulent claims, but he didn't and was subsequently dropped from multiple platforms - for the same reason anyone else would have been banned from those platforms.
The problem is that conservative politicians have aggressively pushed for suppressing content that they don't like, and now they're seeing people suppress content that they actually like, and they want that to be people suppressing that to be illegal as well.
I want to be very clear - to me there is a large difference between an actual conservative viewpoint and the "conservative" viewpoints that are getting legal protection. "conservative" seems to be false/misinformation rather than any position on social spending, taxes, etc
44 comments
[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 111 ms ] threadCommunications one-to-many (presumably mostly strangers) should be treated like broadcast media. This would include memes, links, etc, that may actually be passed person to person (the broadcast is diffuse, but still a broadcast).
So censoring phone calls/chats is not ok, but censoring public posts, or memes/links intended for distribution should be. Incitement to violence is a good test, as is wilfully spreading harmful misinformation.
Eventually we are going to have to get a handle on social media - as recent events have shown (doesn't matter when this comment was written, there is always a recent event, sadly).
The fact is that the internet is becoming the fabric of all kinds of communication. All scales of communication can happen in effectively the same manner; a tweet can be sent to one person or a million and there’s no real difference. Internet communication has effectively replaced sitting in a group chatting with friends and acquaintances, something that absolutely should not be treated like broadcast media. It is tempting to try to special case this because it worked before, but I don’t think that’s the answer, and I wonder if that will even remain a feasible option into the long term future. With improving technology and the fundamental belief that people have a substantial amount of freedom to use computers (and the internet) as they like, it’s hard for me to imagine the cat going back into the bag.
So I think what we have today is most likely to not change substantially… Everyone agrees that the internet can amplify some bad behaviors, but nobody seems to agree on exactly what to do about it. Making Twitter responsible for the content of every tweet seems unreasonable, but Twitter having zero accountability for what happens in the open on their platform also seems unreasonable. That makes it seem like the answer must be somewhere in the middle, and maybe it is. But sometimes, I do wonder if maybe there will emerge an alternative approach that doesn’t seem to be a futile game of balance?
Although it is clear today that the Internet and social media is far from just a passing fad, I do wonder if it will ever hit its cultural peak at some point and begin declining in importance. I mean, how much longer can it continue to eat up other forms of interaction? Surely it will run out. Surely fatigue will build. Surely? And assuming it’s not cyclical, I hope that this eases some of the problems that come from the internet having become so important in modern society. Definitely won’t be holding my breath.
By some estimates, 4 billion people don’t even have postal addresses yet. This is substantial adoption in an exceedingly short period.
Many things can be said about exactly how and why this happened, but by and large Facebook became a utility for communicating with people who you otherwise would have trouble keeping up with due to geographical differences or other life changes.
That said, as it has become so ubiquitous, today many people use it to keep up with people they see every day. Hell, I’m more likely to get a Discord message from someone who is a room away rather than them walk over. The utility of the internet draws people in, but once you have it, it can become second nature. Many of us carry around internet communicators in our pockets 24/7. You may initially mostly have one so you can use Maps, or call someone if you need to, but if it has a data connection and a screen it can probably be used to post to Facebook or watch a YouTube video.
If it were deniable before, I’d argue COVID-19 lockdown only made it more evident just how online everyone was, and if they weren’t already, it certainly gave them a push to get there.
For economical and other reasons, I’m sure Internet and social media adoption will slow down and it will take a long time to permeate even more of life. However, many Americans probably already spend more time with social interactions online than IRL.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics:
> From 2003 to 2017, the average amount of time Americans spent socializing per day dropped from about 46 minutes to 39 minutes.
Meanwhile, many reports have cited frankly alarming amounts of time spent on platforms like Facebook and phones in general, with one claiming that Americans on average spend 7 hours a week using Facebook, and a report[1] from Pew Research Center asserts that 31% of American adults claim to be online “almost constantly.”
Of course, this is U.S. centric to some degree, but the writing is on the wall. People still speak, read, watch TV, talk on the telephone, and communicate in every way they used to. Except they use Facebook more, and they use the “telephone” to do internet communication more than they use it to do voice calls over the traditional phone network. No matter how you look at it, the internet is eating up social interactions of all kinds. And if you don’t see it yet, you probably won’t have to wait long on this trajectory. For better and worse.
[1] https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021/03/26/about-three...
Those that call for tighter regulation need to adjust to a realistic approach to the problem, not an emotional with reference to current event.s
Also, incitement to violence is already against the law and the TOS for social media platforms.
But to many, they disagree. He didn't specifically say "go commit violence" (although he has done so in the past in other situations).
There are many people that were arguing that calling COVID-19 the china violence was one of the things leading to increased violence against Asians. So would that constitute incitement to violence? I don't think so, but I can definitely see a very blurry line here.
What are some examples of that kind of speech?
Free expression has always had limits, particularly regarding 'spreading lies about others' and 'inciting bad stuff'.
IMO - anything with a bound and mutual audience is "Direct Messaging". Eg. a private FB account posting to ONLY its followers (who had to be manually "friend request accepted") is a private message. A public twitter feed that anyone can view is a public broadcast. A private message with the permissions changed by the creator to become a public is - wait for it - public.
The grey area here in my view is FB groups (which can have 10s of thousands of members). I would say its public since its not universally mutual with each pair. that said, if you IRL went to AA or church or something and shared something for a group, you'd consider it a private conversation. I think this is where the vagueness of law would say something like "could the speaker have consented to this audience with the expectation that it would be private."
So - for 'web sites' - yes. That should apply. And it does: you can make your own 1-to-many site and say almost whatever you want.
Twitter is not that, there's much more going on.
In the public interest, it may be worthwhile to have maybe some regs around it, and the notion of 'banned for having an opinion' is not entirely unreasonable. That said, most people on Twitter are not banned for that.
And of course are the statements: "The Election Was Stolen!" or "The Voting Machines Were Hacked By China" or "Vaccines Were Invented By Big Pharma To Control US" 'opinions'?
I would argue that AWS should have very little leeway in terms of who they can host or not - much like 'net neutrality' they should have 'service neutrality'.
Same for Email.
But for things that are truly social networks, they should have a fair bit of lattitude to set their own policies.
Finally you have the issues of distribution. App Store and Google Play have very difficult and problematic barriers to the content on apps. I had an app 'not pass muster' because someone in a bit of content was talking about whether or not a particular male celebrity was 'hot or not'. Ridiculous.
So, a final point might be to at minimum require 'objectivity' and 'transparency' to Social Network management, such that people are at least treated consistently according to a clear set of rules.
Twitter 'verification' is a giant 'black box' - that's just unfair.
Sites shouldn't need to justify this to any central authority, the government does not need to be more involved in this process, and this law is stupid (and would likely lead to conflicts with another stupid set of laws, SESTA and FOSTA).
It totally ignores that anyone but the individual has rights. It admits to no clash, acknowledges that no one else has rights. If the entire world except you votes unanimously that your posting is just the lowest grade most toxic trash that no one would ever go near & has no value, this asserts that since you shared it with >1 person, no syst nor person nor networlay get in the way with you sharing it with the whole world. We all have to listen.
This is a farcical & unserious position. The agenda here is just malice, a bunch of people seeming to use the law to interject themselves as they please in a way no one can reject, utterly secure in their bloviation/unchallengeable.
Recent events have shown the shouting class os obnoxious & toxic & most spcial networks are fed up with these problematic overimposing loud few. That these few take suchkdern umbrage with the most minimal & gentle of private curbings & immediately resort to trying to get thr goverent to force them to be unignorable, unavoidable shows what real moral standing they have.
Social networks were successful because they allowed it to be a soapbox for everyone. Overall that is certainly an improvement over traditional media channels.
Recent events, I guess you are referring to someone going on a shooting spree again, cannot justify censorship as the homicide rate in the US is still vastly lower than 1985.
Users will then pressure for a repeal
No, that won't happen. Why would a social media company want to do that?
That's a real problem with national or international corporations that have a lot of monopoly power. They don't have to service everyone, and if you don't fit their idea of maximum profit, you don't get serviced.
I guess Texans who feel cut-out of modern discourse could use VPNs to appear to be from Connecticut or New York City.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-44248448
Do you just ask the user? What if they move? What if they lie? The Texas law/judges won't care and will bring a suit forth anyway
Can spammers sue for being censored? What about bot herders?
I acknowledge that there's some tension in the various rights here, but the USA has rarely mandated that non-common-carriers and non-broadcast media carry particular speech. The old "fairness doctrine" is a notable exception, but we all cheered and waved the flag when that got disposed of.
This looks like a particular political faction having a tantrum about some media not going 100% their way. Back in the Reagan Years, when we all agreed to get rid of things like the fairness doctrine, restrictions on cross-ownership of forms of media and number of markets, one political faction cheered this and everyone else was told cry more, that market forces would take care of things.
Now that markets have shifted, we're seeing the faction that cheered removing barriers crying. I'm having a hard time mustering sympathy, but maybe that's because I'm old.
Everyone who doesnt qualify for this weird made up non-legal term "publisher" is a "platform", which clearly to these folk (and no one else) implies a public utility subject to complete government regulation that far outstrips any rights of either the company, or the public, either of which maybe perhaps just would never vote with their feat/want to use a so called "platform" which insisted upon letting the shouting braying class into their feeds in the first place.
It's bitter, it's shallow, it's insanely hyper-regulatory to tell people & companies they have to accept private intrusion to support some loudmouth shouting class's "right" to yell at all of us. This right to yell, this particular deranged psycho-world rendition of free speech, trumps all other rights anyone might have .
I also note that if this law has any effect at all, we'll get to see Elon Musk's Twitter experience the Heat Death of The Intolerance Paradox (https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Paradox_of_tolerance)
Conservatives argue that all people should be required to publish anything produced by a conservative, as anything else is censorship. Conservatives, and this conservative law, are unequivocally opposed to free speech. This has been their position for decades, this law is just a new variation: forcing people to host speech against their will, rather than the traditional conservative censorship.
Trump and similar "conservatives" got "censored" after repeatedly breaking the same rules against misinformation, false claims, etc. He could have avoided "censorship" by simply stopping those false and fraudulent claims, but he didn't and was subsequently dropped from multiple platforms - for the same reason anyone else would have been banned from those platforms.
The problem is that conservative politicians have aggressively pushed for suppressing content that they don't like, and now they're seeing people suppress content that they actually like, and they want that to be people suppressing that to be illegal as well.
I want to be very clear - to me there is a large difference between an actual conservative viewpoint and the "conservative" viewpoints that are getting legal protection. "conservative" seems to be false/misinformation rather than any position on social spending, taxes, etc
Both left and right can come in authoritarian and libertarian variants. Texas is definitely auth-right despite pretending to like small government.