every single site and service has a terms of use. you accept it when you sign up to them. if i was banned from facebook messenger for posting racist memes in a white supremacist group, i'd only be able to say: fair enough, i clicked 'accept and agree' on your terms and conditions when i applied.
they haven't been banned for 'expressing opinions'. these groups were WARNED and WARNED many times, trump especially. how many average users do you think get the number of express warnings that trump's personal account got? he had special treatment for months, if not years. he's hardly been treated badly by twitter jack. he rode roughshod all over their established terms of use on any number of occasions. for the last three months they've had a team almost permanently tasked with flagging his posts as 'inaccurate' or 'unfounded' ffs. who the fuck else gets that treatment? again, this is his PERSONAL account, mind you, the TRUMP BRAND, not the official POTUS account. talk about special privileges. isn't everyone meant to be equal in a democracy too? uh hu!
nobody is banned for expressing opinions within the realms of free speech. all of these services are quite careful to distance themselves from illegal activities, though, like organizing terror. it's no different from a server host company wanting to keep child porn off its systems, or eBay wanting to kick off scammers.
any service is free to set-up whatever conditions its wants, within the bounds of the law and legal discrimination. if a dating site only wants rich middle-aged people, they can vet users. if a social network stipulates that they don't want hate groups congregating there to talk about 'pizza restaurant pedophiles' and 'raping AOC', they're in their rights to do that.
that the social networks have u-turned on their own frankenstein monster creation is a breakthrough. yes, it does have ramifications and yes some parts of it are worrying. the social networks are obviously, on one level, just trying to avoid being broken up by the government or dragged into another interminable run of senate hearings. they have aided and encouraged this sort of echo-chamber, febrile, champing-at-the-bit-type discussion. it is partly a monster of their own creation. but if they now want to start enforcing their own community guidelines, i say: good. zuckerberg similarly u-turned on their policy of moderating and fact-checking advertisements, after years of mendacious ad campaigns fed voters with lies. to which i can only also say: good, about time.
it's a private company cleaning up its act, not free speech in democracy dying a death.
Last edited by uziq (2021-01-13 02:28:24)