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Electronic Frontier Foundation Social Networks Censorship

EFF, Cory Doctorow Warn About the Dangers of De-Platforming and Censorship (eff.org) 231

Last week Cory Doctorow shared his own answer for what Apple and Google should've done about Parler: They should remove it, and tell users, "We removed Parler because we think it is a politically odious attempt to foment violence. Our judgment is subjective and may be wielded against others in future. If you don't like our judgment, you shouldn't use our app store."

I'm 100% OK with that: first, because it is honest; and second, because it invites the question, "How do we switch app stores?"

Doctorow warns that "vital sectors of the digital economy became as concentrated as they are due to four decades of shameful, bipartisan neglect of antitrust law."

And now Slashdot reader esm88 notes that "The EFF has made a statement raising concerns over tech giants control over the internet and who gets to decide which speech is allowed" (authored by legal director Corynne McSherry, strategy director Danny O'Brien, and Jillian C. York, EFF director for international freedom of expression): Whatever you think of Parler, these decisions should give you pause. Private companies have strong legal rights under U.S. law to refuse to host or support speech they don't like. But that refusal carries different risks when a group of companies comes together to ensure that forums for speech or speakers are effectively taken offline altogether... Amazon's decision highlights core questions of our time: Who should decide what is acceptable speech, and to what degree should companies at the infrastructure layer play a role in censorship? At EFF, we think the answer is both simple and challenging: wherever possible, users should decide for themselves, and companies at the infrastructure layer should stay well out of it....

The core problem remains: regardless of whether we agree with an individual decision, these decisions overall have not and will not be made democratically and in line with the requirements of transparency and due process. Instead they are made by a handful of individuals, in a handful of companies, the most distanced and least visible to the most Internet users. Whether you agree with those decisions or not, you will not be a part of them, nor be privy to their considerations. And unless we dismantle the increasingly centralized chokepoints in our global digital infrastructure, we can anticipate an escalating political battle between political factions and nation states to seize control of their powers.

On Friday Bill Ottman, founder and CEO of the right-leaning blockchain-based social network Minds (which includes a Slashdot discussion area), posted that in order to remain in the Google Play store, "We had to remove search, discovery, and comments..." We aren't happy and will be working towards something better. What is fascinating is how Signal and Telegram are navigating this and in my opinion they are still there because they are encrypted messengers without much "public" content. Obviously controversial speech is happening there too...

We will be releasing a full report on our plan for fully censorship-resistant infrastructure.

Ottman also advises users downloading apps from Apple's store to "leave if you're smart."
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EFF, Cory Doctorow Warn About the Dangers of De-Platforming and Censorship

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  • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @11:48AM (#60951664)

    Back in November Amazon was already warning Parler about not removing content that violated their TOS.

    https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]

    Also this. https://i.redd.it/uazhmn3neta6... [i.redd.it]

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by arbiter1 ( 1204146 )
      So then why didn't they also war twitter about same thing? What about that Deal that reportedly Amazon signed recently with twitter? This all stinks of massive collusion to destroy the company.
  • So, yyyeaaah. In a perfect libertarian-anarchist world, anyone can do anything they want, at any time, under any circumstances, to anyone else, with zero consequences and at zero cost.

    Down here in the real world, it's messier. They're talking about app stores, eh? Ok, let's use Walmart as an analogy. I can walk into Walmart and buy almost anything I want. The key word there is ALMOST. A while ago, we figured out that letting people take a shopping cart through the medicine isle and cleaning out the ent
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by KimDotOrg ( 7630658 )
      The dark web is exactly where people will go to meet like minded friends. Some of the moderates will be chased there as well. The result is more polarization and extremism, because there's nobody left to offer a contrary opinion.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by hdyoung ( 5182939 )
        No. There are exactly zero moderates on Parler. People on that platform are NOT interested in having a real discussion. They've already made up their mind and are simply looking for like-minded (or like-mind-less) people. Trying to claim Parler as "contrary opinion" is basically an extension of the "alternative facts" that one political party has been promoting for the last 4 years. We're gonna disagree, but I fully support confining this stuff to the fringe, where it belongs. It's debunked, illegitimate, p
      • So totally unlike the world of filter bubble circle jerks that is "social media", you mean?
        Just look at Reddit. Or Facebook.

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        You mean no one left to offer a pro-murder, pro-civil war, pro-racist pro-fascist opinion? That should be the goal, not the danger.

        You aren't advocating for free speech when you pursue the destruction of society, you are exploiting free speech.

    • Over here, we say "Your freedom ends where my freedom begins.". It reduces libertarianism to a logical fallacy.

    • Wal Mart shouldn't be the ones deciding how much cold medicine you can buy, or that you need an ID to purchase it. Yes, there are limits placed on such things but those ought to be in the form of Laws and Regulations. And in that example, there are.
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Sure, The limit on Walmart (and anyone else) selling bulk quantities of pseudoephedrine is probably necessary. The decision to implement that limit was made by a duly elected government answerable to the people, not by a CEO answerable only to the stockholders.

      Note that that answerability is why people with legitimate uses for reasonable quantities of pseudoephedrine can still buy it.

      That's the real issue. I don't have the first hand knowledge of Parler I would need to form an opinion (just a ton of hearsay

  • .(..That are condescending control freak nannies too, modeled after Steve Jobs.)

    Their whole schtick is to make it hard to switch "app stores", or hell, to even *think* beyond the concept!
    (Package managers anyone? Being paid for actual work instead of imaginary 'property' anyone? Let alone if it wasn't even your own work but you're just leeching on them, calling it a "platform", dear Google, Apple, Uber, etc.)

    Locking in and controlling us, essentially like a human herd, a "resource", is what they are.

    Instead

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @12:00PM (#60951698) Homepage

    The entire reason why most of these 'conservative' forums exist is that the people on them objected to similar platforms that call themselves non-partisan. Whether they are non-partisan or liberal does not matter.

    Given that, they should not object when other companies that call themselves non-partisan (which may be liberal or may be non-artisan) also say "Get off of us too."

    What Apple etc. did is no more objectionable than what Parler did. They left people they disagree with.

    The real problem is that monopolistic powers of the phone stores. Apple Store and Google Play should NOT be the only ways to download apps to your phones. Just as anyone can create their own website and let people log in to it, anyone must be able to offer download an app directly into your phone.

    For android phones, this does exist. The one I use is F-Droid. But I do not think one exists for Apple products and it should.

    Yes, there is a trustworthiness issue, but that is something for the consumer to decide, NOT the product manufacturer.

    The problem is not de-platforming, but the monopolistic power of Apple. They have no business preventing other people from offering apps to download to their phones.

    Also not, none of this is censorship. Censorship, as everyone should know, is about government control, not corporate decisions. You can make your own company without other companies arresting or killing you. You can't make your own government without going to war with the current one.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      But how does Apple have a monopoly?

      Do they have the only smartphone available? No. Google, Samsung, LG, and a whole host of others make smartphones too.
      Are they the makers of the only Smartphone OS? No. Android exists.
      Do they control a vast majority of the market? No.
      Do they even have a small majority of the market? No. Counterpoint has them, as of Q32020, at 40% of the market. Samsung is next with 30%. LG then with 13%. Combine those tow makers control more market share with Android phones than Apple.

      Apple

      • That is TOTALLY something new. And it is a monopoly.

        Cars do not control the gas you put in them or where you go. Blank notebooks do not control what pen you use in them or what you write in them.

        Other people have tried to do this same monopoly thing before - printers try to stop what ink you can put in them, but they do not have the 100% control that Apple does.

        The control of what you can put on something does not matter that much when you are one of 10 competiors. It is still a monopoly, but no one care

  • While I do believe in free speech, I don't believe that media companies (which Amazon is one) must allow everybody to use the platform to disseminate/broadcast whatever anybody wants to say even if they are paying for it.

    If someone were to go to Fox News and say that I want to pay for an hour of air time to broadcast leftist views on abortion, gun control, single-payer medical insurance and civil rights I would expect the Fox News editors to tell that person to find someplace else to peddle their socialist

    • US conservatives fought for a baker to have the right to refuse making a cake for a gay couple because it went against their beliefs and values - why doesn't the same argument apply for hosting companies like AWS when it comes to hosting far right speech which probably violates their hosting guidelines?

      Not to mention said content contained threats to commit acts of terrorism against Amazon itself.

    • US conservatives fought for a baker to have the right to refuse making a cake for a gay couple because it went against their beliefs and values - why doesn't the same argument apply for hosting companies like AWS when it comes to hosting far right speech which probably violates their hosting guidelines?

      Because a baker is not in the middle of his supply chain but at the user end of it, competing with other bakers. If he refuses a customer, that person can go elsewhere.

  • Hyprocisy (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DERoss ( 1919496 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @12:04PM (#60951716)

    From a column by David Lazarus published in the Los Angeles Times on 15 January:

    The Trump administration didn’t hesitate to side with a Colorado baker who nearly a
    decade ago insisted that his religious beliefs allowed him to refuse service to a
    same-sex couple seeking a wedding cake. . . . But President Trump and his allies were livid when Twitter exercised its own commercial prerogative and banned him — not to mention tens of thousands of his conspiracy-minded supporters — after Trump’s incendiary words helped spark last week’s rioting at the Capitol. They were equally incensed by Amazon using similar reasoning this week to remove
    the conservative social media site Parler from its web-hosting servers. . . . The message from conservative quarters is that a company has every right to refuse service to customers it doesn’t want, except when those customers are people conservatives like.

    • This bakery story is really popular these days, even though the way it`s presented is not what really happened: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/baker-who-refused-make-cake-gay-wedding-i-don-t-n880061

      If I asked a bakery in Seattle to make a cake saying ``Trump Is The President`` I would be refused service (haven`t tried though).

      You could compare bakery to twitter if the owner of the bakery owned all bakeries in town. If he did though that would not be a problem because you can open your own ba
      • First of all the baker trying to defend himself only contradicted himself. His point was that he does not discriminate against people by not making a wedding cake only for a gay couple by stating he does not make Halloween cakes for anyone. The gay could did not ask him to make a Halloween cake; they asked him to make a wedding cake which he does for other people.

        Second when did Twitter become "all" social media platforms? They are by far the most popular right now but there are alternatives.

    • Yeah, we took away his voice box and cut off his hands because that is exactly the same as not making an *artistic* work for hire.

      Exactly the same.

    • by Dusanyu ( 675778 )
      Invoking the "bakery case never made sense to me as it was a case built around freedom of religion and boiled down to should this small business be forced to celebrate a practice that is technically against the tenants of their religion. An intriguing challenge would be if a business owned by a single person should get the protections that the citizen who operates it is granted. Google on the other hand would have a hard time making the freedom of religion argument, as they have never claimed a theologi
  • The issue of private property seems to be missing from these discussions. Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Twitter, and others are all private companies and their infrastructure and services are private property. If you don't like their practices then start your own service. If you want a free speech all the time network then lobby the government to build one. Private entities are not required to support any and all speech.

    There is no shield, legal or otherwise, that protects one from the social consequences of o

  • This never would have been an issue if these extremist nutjobs used USENET. Do you think that Apple is going to ban a newsreader because it COULD be used to incite a riot? They wouldn't dare, and if they did, there would always be another way to access it (like via http).
  • So, it sounds like if there was instead a wide selection of hosting and media platforms, then, due to competition, some of them would allow any kind of speech to be published, including violent N@zi-like rhetoric?

    Or do we still assume that, even with a liberal and non-monopolized market there are reasonable constraints on some sorts of speech (like the violent racist N@zi stuff?). And if we do - then we should see that the market worked in the current situation "as designed", by deplatforming exactly that k

    • It is that it speech feels entitled to speak from a specific selection of platforms, those providing the widest possible reach and audience.

      Yes. And the reason for that is that those specific platforms have a (near) monopoly. Not on the technology that enables social media, but on the ability to actually reach that wide audience. They have a monopoly on eyeballs. If you want to inform or engage the general public - especially people who might be interested in what you have to say but haven't heard of you yet - you'll most likely need the large "tech" companies; starting your own platform or joining a niche one isn't going to cut it. And if

  • Whether you think it is OK or not, only the government can censor you, you do not have an absolute right to shout fire in somebody else's house.

    Under the reasonable person doctrine [wikipedia.org] you don't have the right to force somebody else to publish your speech, provide a platform ever, especially when that is detrimental to their interests. That is actual settled law promoted and protected by Newspaper magnets for as long as they have existed. This is also something exploited by the TV channels which are owned by th

    • Whether you think it is OK or not, only the government can censor you,

      You might want to look up the definition of "censor" again - as it makes no such distinction. Censoring is defined by the action taken against speech/expressions, not by who does it. The distinction OTOH does matter when looking at whether it is acceptable or not.

      Why do "TV censors" exist, or why does "self censorship" exist, if what you say is true?

  • by DeplorableCodeMonkey ( 4828467 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @12:39PM (#60951812)

    Unfortunately for Apple, Gab recorded [archive.org] all of their interactions for public record, and they're insane. The extent to which Apple went to find "offending content," including disabling Gab's filters and pretending Gab wasn't in compliance is just nuts. Also, "we found someone using racist language on your app." As Gab's CEO said back "welcome to the Internet, I can find all of those words in 30 seconds on Twitter and Instagram."

    • Wow. Frightening stuff. Thanks for posting the archive link.
    • Gab makes a big deal out of the delay to review the app, but this is after two rejections. Do they expect that a company that owes them nothing should suddenly jump when they ask?

      Also, in my experience, such delays are not uncommon. My experience is with the Google Play Store, in which we were trying to get an app approved and published after some changes relating to usage of SMS (Google had changed the rules about apps that could use SMS). The app complied with the rules, but we had waited weeks for Google

  • I think this is pretty simple. If Apple and friends are taking on the legal responsibility for policing the content in the apps in their ecosystem, then they should be legally liable when they fail at doing so. For example, anyone who had property damaged or received personal injury from the multitudes of BLM protests over the last year should have the right to sue Apple if it is apparent that software in the Apple App store was used to organize or otherwise facilitate those protests.

    You are either totally

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @12:45PM (#60951834)
    Cory Doctorow served as editor of Boing Boing. That site was and probably still is one of the most censorious websites to have existed. It was common for moderators to "disemvowel" comments they didn't like - literally strip all the vowels out of the comment. Beyond that they would ban people left, right and center if the DARED hold an opinion different from the group think. I remember it happening to me for the high crime commenting there might be more to some arrests made during some Occupy protests than the article let on. For that high crime I got a perma ban. Apparently I'm not "woke" enough for the site, or I might have hurt someone's precious feelings.

    So for Doctorow to complain about censorship is the height of fucking hypocrisy. If his site can ban / censor someone for a difference of opinion then how the hell can he complain that another site, or users get banned for actual incitement or death threats?

    And why I think there is a debate to be had where the limits lie, he is not the one to bring it. It is the pot calling the kettle black.

  • While it's nice to pretend you're entitled to services from private parties because you want them, that's obviously a dodge.
    Want hosting? Host it yourself.
    Want DDOS protection? Do it yourself.
    Want unmoderated content or only your content?
    Pay for everything required.
    Don't like your own nation?
    Copy 4chan (the real voice of the GOP, the Alt Right is all of the right) and host in a country you're not trying to seize by armed revolt.

    What they really want is ENTITLEMENT TO A SPECIFIC AUDIENCE

  • To sum up:

    Corey
    EFF
    ACLU
    Germany
    Mexico

    All say deplatforming is wrong.

    I'll add this is in a context of Democrats taking control of everything, threatening section 230 or outright breakup, either of which costs tens of billions in loss, if they don't "voluntarily" censor harrassing or "dangerous" tweets. "Oh, hey, that includes our political opponents, wink!"

    Except a wink is quiet. They are very loud about it.

  • I really hate when we get stuck talking solely about theory.

    I mean, in theory I totally support free speech. I don't want you limiting mine, and you don't want me limiting yours. We don't want government or business limiting either of us or limiting us from seeing opposing views, learning about all sides and implications and making our own decisions. In theory, this is all great and we should fight to ensure that remains the case.

    But there's more to it than just speech, there's also civility and respect and

  • All the people who cheered for online banning by oligopolies when it was directed against the final week of you-know-who and his crazed you-know-whats are having second thoughts about what they just approved. First, we're about to see inner parts of the Internet supply chain be classified as common carriers, assuring that the next lefty equivalent to Parler cannot be denied a domain name or server access purely because of its political views. Will app stores be classified this way, or will all operating sys

  • Apple and Google ... (Score:3, Informative)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @03:41PM (#60952486)

    ... didn't de-platform Parler. Amazon did.

    Until they did, one could still access Parler via their web interface.

  • So first of all, Facebook is not infrastructure, Apple is not infrastructure, and Amazon is not infrastructure (although they will manage infrastructure for you, as a service). Conflating platforms with infrastructure is not a great way to begin an argument. Moreover, if Facebook is infrastructure, then so is Parlor, so is and so is every platform that hosts content. If we don't have clear delineation, then the term is meaningless.

    Second, compelling private entities to give a voice to views with which th

  • For me, it's clear why these companies banned/deplatformed a group of people - because they were actively violent, or fomenting violence.

    Under normal circumstances, those people would rightly be legally classified as 'domestic terrorists' or 'traitors' or 'seditionous' or 'fascists' or whatever else appropriately applies (but they're currently not of because some of the spinelessness/abettors currently in government), and those companies would then be required to do so anyways.

    So from their point of view, i

  • by Morpeth ( 577066 ) on Saturday January 16, 2021 @08:33PM (#60953290)

    If you know him and Xeni Jardin from Boing Boing -- you know anything not extremely left and woke gets immediately shut down down and removed from forums, and opposing views (even moderate/alternate ones) are not tolerated at all. So hearing him talk about censorship is beyond laughable.

    His and his pals has a loooong history of censoring and cancelling (before it was called that)
    https://www.informationweek.co... [informationweek.com]

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