kingofsheeba
Senior Member
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Should Facebook still be the Wild West? Or should users take accountability and accept their punishments for violating Facebook’s policies and standards?
Okay. So, how about non-murder related items? Would you be okay with Facebook banning you for something that you posted ten years ago? It was innocent then but problematic now?Social media platforms can't be the wild west and be consistent with the limitations of the First Amendment. I can't host a site where someone advocates for murder and expect the rules to be any different than in the real world. Social media sites have the flexibility to moderate questionable content, that's how they protect themselves and if they don't they should be held liable. If that is too vague, well too bad.
My (unsympathetic) point was that social media are actually private entities not public accommodations
cannot be used to break the law
let foreign actors undermine our democracy
if they ultimately cannot stop people then they cannot exist.
The user must understand that your personal First Amendment protections largely don't apply on a privately owned site like Facebook. You can't compel others to give you a soapbox
The burden is on them so they better figure it out.
if a user can't follow the rules his only option is to start his own site and assume the liability if others post there.
"Cyberspace" is real life and can be used against you. A good example is that what people have said or posted is being used to prosecute those responsible for January 6th.
Are you confronting my ignorance or agreeing with me? I honestly can't tell
My friend was recently given a thirty day ban on Facebook because he told his roommate that “he was gonna kill him if he cranked the heat up to 72 degrees.” Now, knowing my homie, that wouldn’t happen. He’s too scrawny to Jill someone. Plus, he’s also not actually going to kill his roommate. But try telling that to the Facebook poo poo.
What about inciting violence? What you're describing only prevents the action of one individual, the person issuing the threat. What happens if they influence others to commit violent acts? Being a person of Asian descent, hearing violence committed to people that look like me because of misinformation and telling me to accept it is, well, not acceptable. Do we have to arm ourselves and meet violence with violence because their bigotry matters more than people's lives?As we are seeing on this board, nobody will have the same exact opinion as anyone else. As long as we aren’t threatening actual violence towards one another, we shouldn’t be banned because someone was offended.
The broader problem is that it's impossible to create standards of what is and isn't acceptable content and conduct that will please everybody, and it's also effectively impossible to moderate well at mega-scale (even where the rules themselves aren't at issue). Accepting those facts and working to optimize the rules and the processes to produce the best results while acknowledging that perfection is impossible is, at least to me, a good idea. Any of the sundry attention-hungry-politicians' schemes for imposing some set of rules seems to me to be a.) doomed to failure because of the above and b.) corrosive to democracy and offensive to constitutional principles of free speech, so I tend to look askance at such ideas, while (usually) understanding the motivations of those honestly interested in dealing with some of the crappiest cesspools of social media.
We have to combat hatred and misinformation with better reasoning skills. Something that is lacking in today’s society. That’s the paradox of free speech. It allows even the most ignorant and hateful people to get up on their soapbox.What about inciting violence? What you're describing only prevents the action of one individual, the person issuing the threat. What happens if they influence others to commit violent acts? Being a person of Asian descent, hearing violence committed to people that look like me because of misinformation and telling me to accept it is, well, not acceptable. Do we have to arm ourselves and meet violence with violence because their bigotry matters more than people's lives?
Wait? My biological father is 50% Syrian/Lebanese. Why am I just now getting this AIDS memo?I mean, I don't think the problem with social media is one of acceptability or not. If neo-nazis in Ohio want to create a Facebook group where they plan non-violent, white supremacism events then let them. The problem is false information and its spread. A lot of people don't bother to cross-reference information that they see on social media, and that can be dangerous. If the same neo-nazi group mentioned earlier made a public post saying that the Lebanese had created AIDS and it gets 1.1k likes, then now we have a problem.
I mean, I don't think the problem with social media is one of acceptability or not. If neo-nazis in Ohio want to create a Facebook group where they plan non-violent, white supremacism events then let them.
The problem is false information and its spread. A lot of people don't bother to cross-reference information that they see on social media, and that can be dangerous. If the same neo-nazi group mentioned earlier made a public post saying that the Lebanese had created AIDS and it gets 1.1k likes, then now we have a problem.
The issue is vigilantism and different interpretations of morality. Give a person who grew up with a nativism background a gun and you'll have someone that can justify their act of violence on immigrants. Victims are then justified to respond and victims of victims are then justified to respond. Society will devolved into essentially gangs carrying out revenge killing. I do agree that the solution is to combat hatred and misinformation but there hasn't been any solution that can effectively make an impact at a large scale and I totally get that, like all things, things aren't black and white.We have to combat hatred and misinformation with better reasoning skills. Something that is lacking in today’s society. That’s the paradox of free speech. It allows even the most ignorant and hateful people to get up on their soapbox.
We should be arming ourselves no matter what. I’m pretty liberal on many issues that you guys are except when it comes to guns. Everyone needs to take up arms after they turn eighteen. Train and teach gun safety. You’re also teaching intelligence and critical thinking with gun use.
And unfortunately society is collapsing and none of us have the easy answer. There’s no silver bullet, but think back to Judah and the Black Messiah. Or as simplistic as Malcom X. By any means necessary.The issue is vigilantism and different interpretations of morality. Give a person who grew up with a nativism background a gun and you'll have someone that can justify their act of violence on immigrants. Victims are then justified to respond and victims of victims are then justified to respond. Society will devolved into essentially gangs carrying out revenge killing. I do agree that the solution is to combat hatred and misinformation but there hasn't been any solution that can effectively make an impact at a large scale and I totally get that, like all things, things aren't black and white.
I probably should have been clearer. In the context "acceptable" in "acceptable content" meant "acceptable to the platform", as I was noting that it's impossible for platforms to come up with moderation policies regarding what conduct/content is acceptable to them on their platform that will please everyone.
You're not wrong that we have a problem with misinformation. Unfortunately sifting out misinformation is easier said than done, given the scale that we're talking about. That said, do I think that certain platforms (cough*Facebook*cough) could definitely do more about the problem than they have? Yes, and their head-in-the-sand response (historically, at any rate) is both perfectly legal and morally irresponsible.
It seems like you like social media so much you are willing to overlook or excuse people breaking the law