Posted on 10/17/2018 2:38:11 PM PDT by walford
An 85-page Google internal briefing, chillingly and perhaps oxymoronically titled The Good Censor, was just leaked. The big tech giants are moving away from supporting a free internet, it says. Instead, they move toward censoring their users. Thats inevitable. And possibly even good.
The briefing matter-of-factly notes that global internet freedoms have gone downhill for the past seven years. Users now question celebrating the openness of the internet. People are no longer willing to see the platforms as neutral mediators of social life.
More people are asking, isnt big tech really big media in disguise?
Is it possible to have an open and inclusive internet while simultaneously limiting political oppression and despotism, hate, violence and harassment? asks Nathaniel Tkacz. He teaches in the Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies at the University of Warwick.
Several news sources are quoted calling for the big tech giants to be treated as media companies due to the increasing censorship. So far, big tech has rejected the label in order to retain their immunity from liability. Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act states that tech firms have legal immunity for the majority of the content posted on their platforms. This is unlike traditional media outlets. But, the report notes, more people are asking, isnt big tech really big media in disguise?
Googles Principles for Determining the Right Amount of Censorship
Be more consistent.
Dont take sides.
Police tone instead of content.
Be more transparent.
Enforce standards and policies clearly.
Justify global positions.
Explain the technology.
Be more responsive.
Improve communications.
Take problems seriously.
Be more empowering.
Positive guidelines.
Better signposts.
The briefing cites breeding conspiracy theories as one of the reasons for the censorship. What example does it offer? President Trumps claim that Googles search engine was suppressing the bad news about Hillary Clinton.
Isnt this a conspiracy theory? No. Robert Epstein, a behavioral psychologist who supported Hillary Clinton, found it was true. His research determined that Google favored Clinton over Trump during the election.
The briefing notes the tech giants first partial steps to censorship. They hurt the target without actually removing particular statements. Twitter removes the verified blue check from those who violate its policies. Facebook, Twitter and YouTube briefly suspend accounts. YouTube demonetizes videos.
But they also indulge in full banning. Google banned ads about guns and ads from payday lenders. YouTube increased the number of people on the lookout to ban content to more than 10,000.
The briefing notes that tech firms are forming a balancing act between two incompatible positions. On the one hand, they are trying to create unmediated marketplaces of ideas in the American tradition. On the other hand, they want to create well-ordered spaces for safety and civility in the European tradition.
The American tradition prioritizes free speech for democracy, not civility. It creates space to debate all values. Even civility norms can be debated. The European tradition favors dignity over liberty. It values civility over freedom. It censors racial and religious hatred even where there is no threat of violence.
The document quotes Kalev Leetaru, an American internet entrepreneur who writes about data and society. He says that we no longer think of censorship in terms of government. Now, private companies control whether your speech stays up or goes down.
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The briefing goes over reasons why this shift is taking place. One is to appease users and stop bad behavior. Another is in response to government regulations. A third reason is to protect advertisers from content they may not like.
This new position as moderator in chief has been coming for some time. Leetaru says the internet is evolving into a corporate-controlled moderated medium.
Franklin Foer, a staff writer at The Atlantic and , admits there is a problem. The former editor of the liberal flagship The New Republic says, We do know that journalism, activism and public debate are being silenced in the effort to stamp out extremist speech.
The briefing observes, The balancing act between free-for-all and civil-for-most is proving difficult. It ends with principles for finding the right amount of censorship. One is to justify global positions of agreeing to censorship in other countries. Another is to provide positive guidelines. The tech giants should give people positive guidance on how to behave on the platform not only tell them how not to act.
It may sound reasonable. But it suffers a big problem. Who decides what is abuse, harassment and hate speech? What one person considers conservative speech, another person may think abusive or hateful. This has taken place all too many times already.
The tech giants are beginning to control who can say what. Who elected the tech giants to decide what free speech is allowed?
If that doesn't convince you then there is just something plain wrong with you.
“If that doesn’t convince you then there is just something plain wrong with you.”
Translation: “Everyone who has a different opinion than me is defective!!!”
I was attempting to be polite. You are a duplicitous troll who encourages defeat by posting leftist and GOPe talking points. I wouldn’t piss in your mouth if you were dying of thirst. You are either a lying piece of s&@t or a stupid f%#k.
Now I feel better.
“Now I feel better.”
That’s good. You shouldn’t bottle up all that incoherent blathering and vitriol that is somehow inspired by people you don’t know disagreeing with your opinions on the internet.
Sphincter sez what?
Ah, yes, surely that’s a winning argument. It worked so well on the playground in 3rd grade.
Under President Trump and the Deplorables the Republican Party has rejected your philosophies and it is no longer 'the party of stupid' and now you are without an ideological home. Sod off and go post on the National Review comment section you NeverTrumper Uniparty quisling.
Sorry, goofball, but this isn’t your website, and you don’t get to decide who posts here, so you can’t “deplatform” me. Better luck next time.
You stopped defending ISP refusing to host websites. Why? Is it that you do not want to argue with Jim Robinson’s article post about the deplatforming of lifesitenews.com by its ISP provider for being pro-Christian and anti-abortion?
Like I said, your position on Internet censorship and deplatforming is indefensible and pathetic. The tech giants will be regulated like a public utility because they are abusing American’s free speech rights.
“You stopped defending ISP refusing to host websites. Why?”
There is no point in arguing with someone like you that has to result to childish insults because they can’t manage to carry on a conversation, that’s why.
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