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If porn and stripping are free speech issues then Alex Jones is a free speech issue.
If porn and stripping are free speech issues then Alex Jones is a free speech issue.
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Well, I think it pretty clearly is a free speech issue (though not, for the obvious reason, a First Amendment issue). Labeling it thus does not mean Facebook et al are in the wrong; free speech is not an absolute value, and we accept limitations on it all the time. I think there is a good argument to block Jones, but I think it does have to be placed within the free speech debate.I am always worried when speech is limited (anywhere) in response to pressure from emotionally charged majorities. In a country that has historically placed the highest value on free speech, I think we have to be prepared to err on the side of too much rather than too little. Again, that does not mean it is wrong to ban Jones on FB - a good argument can be made that his poison nonsense is clearly over the line of what is acceptable.The problem for me is that the line being used here is not clearly defined. I reject the notion that the line is whatever the loudest majority feels it to be at the current moment. I would prefer some set of concrete criteria be provided that users of social media could consider in advance. I would prefer that rather than banning Jones in toto, specific instances in which he has violated those criteria in the past are banned, and he (and everyone else) are given maybe 3 strikes in the future before they are permanently banned going forward.What are the criteria? I am not sure - and that is what makes me nervous about this situation. Should we man all “hate speech”? I don’t even know what that is. I hate Donald Trump - having posted that on this corner of social media, should I now be banned? Use of the “N-Word” to express threat and devaluation is anathema to me, but no, I do not want to see Richard Pryor or rap music banned. Anti-semitism is appalling and disgusting, but, again, no, I do not want to see Shakespeare banned.Probably no set of criteria would ever be perfect - but any set would be better than a vague sense of “most of us really don’t like that shit.” Expression which is harmful or incites serious harm towards others is probably a good place to start, though that already is plenty ambiguous. Expression which is non-transparent (where the real source/funding is hidden or distorted) might also be part of useful criteria - although, for someone who signs his posts on this site as “PGage” that might seem a bit hypocritical - and at least underlines the difficulty.Questions with easy answers:1. Is Alex Jones reprehensible? (Yes)2. Does Facebook have the right to ban Alex Jones? (Yes)A question with more difficulty answers:3. How do we protect not just the right of but the access to free expression of very unpopular people?I think anytime anyone’s ability to express themselvs is limited (even when justified) we have to spend a lot of time thinking long and seriously about answers to question #3.
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Right - so this is a very cogent and helpful analysis showing why this is a high stakes discussion. I think you do not emphasize enough the role of teaching consumers of this new media how to evaluate the quality and credibility of a source than I think is warranted. When I was a kid there was a lot of “fake news” in school books and encyclopedias about, say Thomas Jefferson and his relationship to slaves, or Andrew Jackson and his relationship to Indians. The solution was not to ban purveyors of that false information, but to teach people how to read more critically, and to fight the bad information with better information. Still, it is probably true that the internet makes information so easily available that a smaller percentage of those who read the information are motivated and competent enough to evaluate it.But, even granting almost all of your point, that does not really address my point. I am not arguing for free speech absolutism after all. Given the extra power (and danger) of information on the internet, which makes regulating the most dangerous forms of information more important, we still have the problem of determining the characteristics that make certain kinds of information so dangerous that they should be prohibited (or, to recognize your point, less easily accessible)? As I say, I am very prepared to conclude that Jones is in the Red Zone - but I also know that even if he were just in the Yellow Zone I disagree with him so much that I might be in danger of voting to ban him anyway. What I need to be more comfortable with banning (or at least discriminating against) a particular information source that I don’t like is some criteria that I am convinced can be used fairly with all potential sources of information - including those I agree with.
I admit that I am overheated and my lungs are full of smoke and my head aches, but I still need you to explain to me how Jones’ free speech rights have been denied him? He still streams, he still has an app (why iTunes didn’t ban that, God only knows), he still has Twitter (posted today, Jack’s reasoning for that one lacks all logic), and even if you stripped him of all access to technology, he’d still be breathing scampi in somebody’s ear whether they wanted to listen to him or not.Free speech is an issue when somebody is denied the same access as everybody else. He wasn’t denied access; he was given it and abused it, violating the respective TOS of several media outlets who banned him. You can argue that suspensions due to TOS violations tend to be almost arbitrary if not capricious in nature, but Jones wasn’t banned for trivial reasons, and even if he was, if those reasons fell within the parameters of TOS violations, that’s that. It still doesn’t strip him of any rights. Jones does not have the right to a Facebook account; nobody does. Same with YouTube. And most people need to be dragged kicking and screaming to Pinterest, so his removal from that one doesn’t seem to be worthy of the ACLU stepping in.The question is one of access (both in who is allowed to post media and how many people could potentially view the media), but I don’t think there is a clause in the first amendment guaranteeing private businesses must grant access to all. Nevertheless, social media did grant Jones access, but they took it away. Again, did they do so due to mounting public pressure or merely as part of their much hyped sweep of “fake news”? Debate that all you want; I’m not seeing a slippery slope here.To Tom’s point, there is also nothing legally forcing digital media to coherently organize media or label it as BS or verified or whatever... it does seem as though that is what the public wants, so some sort of (I hesitate to use the phrase) ratings system will probably be utilized at some point, as well as modifications or restrictions to the algorithms determining “similar” media. But Alphabet and the others have to tread lightly, because once they are more directly in charge of the oversight of content posted on their digital media, issues of corporate liability are raised; such changes will occur slowly, and I suspect much of it will lack transparency.
Sorry...my mail reader broke this topic up into several different threads, and I missed the majority of well thought out back-and-forth that many of you have posted in the last 24 hours. If I'd read those first, my response would've been a lot more reasoned and nuanced, and a lot less simplistic and flippant.
My bad.
Doug Fields
Tampa, FL
The interesting things is that these companies tend to be quite at good at keeping some things off their sites - notably porn. Sure they also end up banning Renaissance paintings, iconic photographs from the Vietnam war, and mothers feeding their babies. But the algorithms seem reasonably good at identifying bare skin.
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Free speech pretty much requires an audience.
This reminded me that the Oscar-nominated "The Big Sick" was available on Pornhub for a time, according to co-writer/star Kumail Nanjiani.This was late last year, so it may no longer be there. (FWIW, Nanjiani said during a Conan interview that Pornhub asked if Nanjiani wanted it removed. He declined to have it taken down, but others involved with the film may have stepped in)
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Alex Jones' depositions are online. He doesn't seem to know what he believes.
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He'll go into bankruptcy first...
Steve Timko, to moi, Jan 1st 2020:Alex Jones, Infowars ordered to pa Sandy Hook parents $100,000
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