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maeln · 5 months ago
Free speech is about the government, not whatever private social platform on the internet. Thank god we are allowed to moderate content, every "free speech" absolutist platform is 1. a lie (they regularly censor opinions against theirs) 2. instantly become a cesspool full of edgy people who find it extrimely funny and worth their time to pollute the whole plateform with slurs.
_Algernon_ · 5 months ago
You're talking about free speech in the narrow sense it is defined by the US first amendment to the constitution is. This is a pretty narrow definition, and people also use it in broader senses of the word. The UN Declaration on human rights[^1] writes the following for instance (making no limitation to governments):

>Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.

[1]: https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-huma...

maeln · 5 months ago
If you want to go this way, then the article 4,5 and 10 of the 1789 Déclaration des droits de l'homme et du citoyen is much more interesting.

But even by the U.N definition, the only part that could be of concern here is "receive and impart information and ideas through any media", but how exactly would that be put in place ? It is not like you can go to your local radio station and ask them to give you the mic since this is your right to impart information and ideas through any media.

wqaatwt · 5 months ago
On the other hand denying someone the right to express their opinion on your media platform etc. is also an expression of free speech.
r3trohack3r · 5 months ago
I do think we’ve entered a grey area of rights.

By centralizing communication like Facebook has, they’ve placed themselves in the funky place of being the arbiter for communication through their social graph. You don’t own your audience, they do. You don’t have direct to audience communication (even if your audience is just your friends and family!) - they do.

Facebook owns the content delivery channel. And so they control what is permitted to flow through that channel.

I honestly don’t think there is a role government has to play in this [1]. This isn’t a regulation thing IMO, it’s an architecture thing. I think the solution is to agree with you on your points and build platforms that allow people to communicate directly with their audience without having to go through any centralized gate keeper.

[1] other than stopping the laundering of 1st amendment violations they’ve committed through the loophole of separating censorship “requests” from enforcement.

no_wizard · 5 months ago
Well there is one legal avenue we could have which is around interoperability. We could pass regulations that force social media companies to provide interoperable access to data there by making the platforms independent
maeln · 5 months ago
> I do think we’ve entered a grey area of rights.

> By centralizing human communication like Facebook has, they’ve placed themselves in the funky place of being the arbiter for communication through their social graph. You don’t own your audience, they do. You don’t have direct to audience communication (even if your audience is just your friends and family!) - they do.

Respectfully mate, how is that any different than radio, TV and newspaper before ? If anything, it is far better now, you have at least many platform to choose from and you can host your own.

noqc · 5 months ago
https://constitution.congress.gov/browse/essay/amdt1-3-4-3/A...

The current state of jurisprudence on this is nearer than you think to the side of Youtube must not violate your first amendment rights. I think the original reasoning mostly holds, despite youtube not being an actual town.

cloogshicer · 5 months ago
I don't understand this position. Why do people want private companies to decide what's allowed and what isn't? Shouldn't lawmakers, and by extension the people (at least in democratic countries) decide what speech is allowed and what isn't?

The number of people using social media makes it the town square of the present. We should treat it as such.

dale_glass · 5 months ago
Because it works, and is a requirement to have a functional platform at all.

First, commercial speech is certainly speech. If you don't restrict anything at all, your platform will drown in a constant deluge of spam. So on that basis alone there's something you must remove if you want to have any kind of conversations happening, and therefore can't be an actual absolutist.

Second, there's illegal and just icky content. Posting pictures of poo isn't illegal. It can be "speech" after a fashion. That will also quickly result in people leaving.

Third, a free-for-all is only tolerable to a small segment of the population. HN for instance only works because it's moderated and curated. You can have something like r/worldpolitics which embodies the "no moderation" ideal. It's a subreddit where the moderators do the absolute minimum Reddit requires. Meaning it's mostly porn. And what's the point in having more than one of those? They're all more or less the same.

alextheparrot · 5 months ago
Quippy, but off the cuff: - I don’t go to my present town square(s) socially because it is full of a-social behavior. Same reason to avoid certain bars or clubs, prefer certain parks, or why some are wary of public transit.

- I don’t feel a right to decide the vibe of how a business curates its space. My bakery, coffee shop, local library, etc. all curate a space with an opinion. I don’t feel I have standing to assert that my preferences should dominate their choices.

As an aside, businesses are also an extension of the people, the best ones tend to just not be mode collapsed

CamperBob2 · 5 months ago
In case you haven't noticed, the people running the government now shouldn't be trusted to run a McDonald's franchise, much less decide what speech is allowed and what isn't. Ditto for the voters who elected said government.
maeln · 5 months ago
> The number of people using social media makes it the town square of the present. We should treat it as such.

Then try yelling racial slurs in your local town square and see how that goes for ya.

> I don't understand this position. Why do people want private companies to decide what's allowed and what isn't? Shouldn't lawmakers, and by extension the people (at least in democratic countries) decide what speech is allowed and what isn't?

Why shouldn't I be allowed to police what can be said on my private property ? If you are in my home yelling racist stuff, I will ask you to leave, and make you leave if you refuse. I don't see why I shouldn't be able to do the same on my plateform. If you want to yell racial slurs, you can go to truth social or whatever.

throwaway48476 · 5 months ago
In the case where the platform is a monopoly then yes, the government should play a role. Small forums should be left alone.
seydor · 5 months ago
i believe there is a general understanding that public spaces should allow free expression up to a point, but definitely not silence for political reasons. Facebook can be considered broadly a public space because it is so widely popular and monopolistic in a way that previous media have never been. There is a limit to calling something private when it is being used by so many , and it is separate from its private company ownership. If it were a niche site nobody cares. BTW "we" don't moderate anything, the people who run those websites do
maeln · 5 months ago
Facebook is not a public space. You can make your own website and platform if you want to say thing that they don't want you saying over there. You cannot make your own government on the other hand, hence why it is important to point out the difference.
scarface_74 · 5 months ago
Facebook is in no legal framework a “public space”. It’s a private entity.
holmesworcester · 5 months ago
Free speech is a about whether a society values and protects free speech or not.

If a society values and protects free speech, we would observe institutions, businesses, and individuals being very permissive and polite to speech they find objectionable.

If it doesn't, we would observe that its government doesn't care much about free speech either.

Free speech involves making sometimes uncomfortable sacrifices for a principle. Why would anyone support a government making such sacrifices if they don't believe in making such sacrifices at an individual level?

maeln · 5 months ago
> Free speech is a about whether a society values and protects free speech or not.

That is a recursive and meaningless definition. Free speech is widely understood, and codified, as being able to say stuff without having the government send you to jail for it. That is a pretty basic requirement for a functional democracy. Altough, depending on where you live, even free speech does not mean fully free. In the U.S it is mostly limited by libel/defamation, but in a lot of country hate speech is not allowed. Whether you think it is a good thing or not that is up to you, but this is actual free speech.

cpitman · 5 months ago
Yes, the First Amendment is about the government.

Freedom of speech, in the other hand, is part of a moral code that believes in inalienable rights, that humans implicitly have the right to express themselves. The government does not grant the right to freedom of speech, because we already have it. The first amendment says that the government must respect that right, but creating the right.

freejazz · 5 months ago
> Free speech is a about whether a society values and protects free speech or not.

That's a bit vague. Nothing about this statement on its face would preclude some speech regulations so it reads more like an empty platitude to me.

ty6853 · 5 months ago
Perhaps but it's because you two are talking past each other. The free speech some people refer to are that devised under the concept of classical liberalism which spawned the bill of rights, under which the right to free speech is a right to not have your speech interfered with by government. Not a right to compel others to display your speech, as under that system you would be violating their right to free speech by making them say that was actually what was just your speech.
code_for_monkey · 5 months ago
I dont know why anyone wouldnt be. Why would people, at this point, not approach the things Zuck, or Musk, say without extreme caution? They want to be rich god kings, they dont care about free speech. They say stuff they think will move the needle that direction.
9283409232 · 5 months ago
I honestly believe people aspire to be rich assholes so they don't want to demonize the rich assholes because they want that to be them one day.
danaris · 5 months ago
I think there's another explanation that works just as well to explain the observed behavior:

A large percentage of people genuinely buy into the "just world" fallacy, regardless of whether they consciously recognize this. They believe that if someone is in a position of power, they deserve to have that power.

Of course, many of them also believe that, variously, the world is inherently just, people are inherently good, or the world's structure is ordained by a loving God. Therefore, these people deserving power isn't just Fated, it's also because they're better people. Smarter, better leaders, possessed of the qualities that fit one to rule.

Therefore, "the people in power are smart, have the best interests of the many at heart, and are worth listening to" is effectively axiomatic for a great many people in our society.

code_for_monkey · 5 months ago
"elon musk cares about free speech" yeah and your dad is coming back with those cigarettes any day now
dmonitor · 5 months ago
Not too difficult to realize what they mean is "please feel comfortable posting your most radical opinions and we'll signal boost the ones that help our agenda"
2OEH8eoCRo0 · 5 months ago
Sounds like curation which sounds like a form of speech except in this instance (due to Section 230) they aren't liable for it.

Dangerous loophole!

milesrout · 5 months ago
I think what they mean is what they say unless proven otherwise. Attributing dishonesty to someone without any evidence is passé.
dymk · 5 months ago
The last 10 years of how Facebook operates show how naive a view this is to take of Zucc
code_for_monkey · 5 months ago
I think Lucy is going to let Charlie Brown kick the football this time
smallmancontrov · 5 months ago
If you don't see heaps of evidence you haven't been paying attention. Not for a long time.
digdugdirk · 5 months ago
You should really only get one pass for human rights violations before skepticism is the default response. Facebook already used theirs on genocide. After something like that, why should the public give them any benefit of the doubt?
freejazz · 5 months ago
Taking Zuckerberg at his word is beyond naive, it is moronic.
agentultra · 5 months ago
Zuckerberg is committed to Zuckerberg. If it makes Meta profitable and raises the value of his estate, he’ll do that. If that’s allowing alternative health nuts sell their ancient cancer healing remedies on Facebook, he’ll do that. If that’s selling user profile data to DOGE for a big juicy contract, he’ll do it.

Regulation and enforcement has to come from somewhere and it won’t be Meta.

yodsanklai · 5 months ago
Neither Meta nor any big public corporations. Their mission is to make profit for shareholders.
agentultra · 5 months ago
Profits over people, every time.
nradov · 5 months ago
Citizens are skeptical of lawmakers' commitment to free speech.

https://netchoice.org/democrat-leaders-dont-like-the-first-a...

no_wizard · 5 months ago
Considering the big donors and membership[0] of this organization its definitely not an unbiased take and is trying to frame any discussion over regulating hate speech as a radical anti-first amendment stance and makes an unsubstantiated claim that one Republican house member using their chairman position to "investigate" Lina Khan[1] as if the Republican house committee had no ulterior motive seeing as their donor class was very critical of FTC regulations under her leadership, never mind that nothing the committee claimed was substantiated.

[0]: https://netchoice.org/about/#our-mission

[1]: https://oversight.house.gov/release/comer-probes-ftc-chair-k...

WesolyKubeczek · 5 months ago
It's still very easy to get a moderation strike because your post or comment contained a word that maybe in certain contexts (not necessarily one in your post) could maybe probably offend a group of people. It's almost as if Facebook had remote villages that didn't get the memo from their overlord.
throwaway48476 · 5 months ago
Facebook put itself in a monopoly position by buying out the competition and tried to push an 'internet' where only their products were accessible. They did everything possible to attempt to monopolize but now don't want to be treated as a monopoly.
bentt · 5 months ago
The problem is not whether Zuck allows free speech on his platforms. The problem is that his platforms are so powerful that it matters whether he does or not.