Cloudflare Removes Warrant Canary: Thoughtful Post Says It Can No Longer Say It Hasn't Removed A Site Due To Political Pressure
from the tough-calls dept
Late last week, Cloudflare put up a fascinating and thoughtful blog post discussing (among other things) a change to its warrant canary list. As you hopefully know, a warrant canary is when a service provider makes a proactive statement about something it has supposedly never done. The idea is that if that statement disappears at a later date, one might reasonably infer that the company had been forced to do the thing it claimed it had not ever done — and, additionally, that it had possibly been gagged from saying so. There are (somewhat reasonable) criticisms of warrant canaries, and to date, they’re probably more well known for false alarms than any actual report of gagged pressured malfeasance.
Still, Cloudflare’s public (so, not gagged) decision to delete a line from its warrant canary is interesting and worth thinking about. The original warrant canary from Cloudflare stated that the company hadn’t done any of the following:
- Cloudflare has never turned over our SSL keys or our customers SSL keys to anyone.
- Cloudflare has never installed any law enforcement software or equipment anywhere on our network.
- Cloudflare has never terminated a customer or taken down content due to political pressure.
- Cloudflare has never provided any law enforcement organization a feed of our customers’ content transiting our network.
Recently it added a few more and slightly modified the old ones, so that Cloudflare at the beginning of 2019 insisted that it had never done any of the following.
- Turned over our encryption or authentication keys or our customers’ encryption or authentication keys to anyone.
- Installed any law enforcement software or equipment anywhere on our network.
- Terminated a customer or taken down content due to political pressure*
- Provided any law enforcement organization a feed of our customers’ content transiting our network.
- Modified customer content at the request of law enforcement or another third party.
- Modified the intended destination of DNS responses at the request of law enforcement or another third party.
- Weakened, compromised, or subverted any of its encryption at the request of law enforcement or another third party.
Now, you might notice that at the end of number three, there’s an asterisk. That was done when Cloudflare kicked up quite a debate after it decided to remove Daily Stormer from its service. The asterisk was more or less a nod to the idea that things can be a bit more complicated than “political pressure.” Cloudflare kicked off Daily Stormer because its CEO got sick of a bunch of neo-Nazis laughing and joking about Cloudflare for protecting them and keeping them online. Is that political pressure? Seems pretty subjective. Even Cloudflare’s CEO, Matthew Prince, acknowledged this at the time, noting:
We’re going to have a long debate internally about whether we need to remove the bullet about not terminating a customer due to political pressure. It’s powerful to be able to say you’ve never done something. And, after today, make no mistake, it will be a little bit harder for us to argue against a government somewhere pressuring us into taking down a site they don’t like.
The solution that Cloudflare came up with was to keep the line in there with the asterisk and an explanation. And now it’s decided to remove the line entirely, as part of the decision earlier this year to remove 8chan from its service as well. However, it’s still not an easy call, and the company wants you to understand the thought process it went through:
In August 2019, Cloudflare terminated service to 8chan based on their failure to moderate their hate-filled platform in a way that inspired murderous acts. Although we don?t think removing cybersecurity services to force a site offline is the right public policy approach to the hate festering online, a site?s failure to take responsibility to prevent or mitigate the harm caused by its platform leaves service providers like us with few choices. We?ve come to recognize that the prolonged and persistent lawlessness of others might require action by those further down the technical stack. Although we?d prefer that governments recognize that need, and build mechanisms for due process, if they fail to act, infrastructure companies may be required to take action to prevent harm.
And that brings us back to our warrant canary. If we believe we might have an obligation to terminate customers, even in a limited number of cases, retaining a commitment that we will never terminate a customer ?due to political pressure? is untenable. We could, in theory, argue that terminating a lawless customer like 8chan was not a termination ?due to political pressure.? But that seems wrong. We shouldn?t be parsing specific words of our commitments to explain to people why we don?t believe we?ve violated the standard.
We remain committed to the principle that providing cybersecurity services to everyone, regardless of content, makes the Internet a better place. Although we?re removing the warrant canary from our website, we believe that to earn and maintain our users? trust, we must be transparent about the actions we take. We therefore commit to reporting on any action that we take to terminate a user that could be viewed as a termination ?due to political pressure.?
I think this was probably the right call, but I’m just as on the fence about it as Cloudflare itself seems to be. There are strong arguments in either direction. The one thing I will say, though, is that I appreciate Cloudflare’s willingness to be transparent in this way, and publicly discuss the tough calls its making on things like this. That’s something few other companies (especially those as large as Cloudflare) would do. Instead, they’d either hide the removal, or try to PR the issue to death with some vague and noncommittal explanation. This, on the other hand, is direct and quite understandable, even if you disagree with various parts of it.
Filed Under: infrastructure, political pressure, takedowns, warrant canary
Companies: cloudflare
Comments on “Cloudflare Removes Warrant Canary: Thoughtful Post Says It Can No Longer Say It Hasn't Removed A Site Due To Political Pressure”
Not so funny now is it?
Cloudflare kicked off Daily Stormer because its CEO got sick of a bunch of neo-Nazis laughing and joking about Cloudflare for protecting them and keeping them online.
Well that was a joke that didn’t age well…
Re:
With any luck, neither will those Nazis.
Re: Not so funny now is it?
The first amendment gives nazis the right to free speech.
But the problem is: nazis are too stupid to know how good they have it.
“Drops the banhammer”
Re: Re: Not so funny now is it?
Yeah! Nazi something something!
KABOOM!
Re: Not so funny now is it?
The problem being that as repugnant as the views of a nazi may be the reason Free Speech exists in the first place isn’t so the nazi can speak.
It’s so the rest of us can hear him and realize that people exist who think like that. Lest we forget.
Re: Re: Not so funny now is it?
No, the reason it exists is because there is no single entity that can be trusted for all eternity with power over what ideas people may express. Every time that power has existed, it has been abused.
Your suggestion empowers Nazis by giving them one more reason to defend their speech, while diempowering the rest of us by giving one more reason not to fight back. Stopping that speech IS the correct response, it’s just not a response that we can trust to be taken responsibly by the government.
Re: Re: Re: Not so funny now is it?
"Stopping that speech IS the correct response"
The correct response is to counter the bigoted speech with speech that identifies how said bigoted speech is not correct.
Re: Re: Re:2 Not so funny now is it?
All things in moderation…
A Nazi can create hundreds of accounts all calling for various forms of death to "others" to the point that any conversation drowns in off topic attempts to bring the downfall of some group.
The out group in this case may be already crushed by this that they simply do not care to respond anymore. Demoralization is a clear tactic that works and works well in this case. No additional speech will push back the hate speech, often every argument is debunked, but reposted anyway.
Point is motivated Vocal Minorities can crush unmotivated outgroups if you resolve your point of the only response to speech is more speech.
Re: Re: Re:3 Not so funny now is it?
"Point is motivated Vocal Minorities can crush unmotivated outgroups if you resolve your point of the only response to speech is more speech."
Re: Re: Re:2 Not so funny now is it?
That is one step to stopping the speech.
Not helping to spread it yourself (ie, not hosting it on your website) is another step.
Not helping to support those making the speech (ie, not buying products from them) is another step.
You need all of these. Handing over millions to someone while telling them that they’re factually incorrect isn’t really going to do much to stop them. Telling them personally that you think they’re wrong while helping spread their harmful ideas to millions more certainly isn’t helping anything either.
Re: Re: Re: Not so funny now is it?
"Your suggestion empowers Nazis by giving them one more reason to defend their speech, while diempowering the rest of us by giving one more reason not to fight back."
Bullshit.
20-30 years ago in Sweden the neo-nazis were still allowed to wear their swastikas and hold rallys where they trumpeted their message of hate. Citizens organized against them and several watchdog groups arose just to ensure the country as a whole was aware. They never managed to get a single foot into politics sideways because everyone knew damn well what they stood for.
Then we banned every public display of the nazi paraphernalia. Ten years after that people had forgotten they existed and 20 years after that the nazis achieved political representation – only that instead of "jews and muslims" they were "debating the disadvantage of multiculturalism".
Today they are in the top three of the political parties.
THAT is the price we pay for not having to put up with the odd skinhead walking down the streets singing "die fahne hoch". They can now be politically empowered nazis as long as they don’t heil in the streets and hide their agenda in convenient political bandwagons.
"Stopping that speech IS the correct response, it’s just not a response that we can trust to be taken responsibly by the government."
Which brings us to the same hymn sheet, really. As a private entity – corporate or private you have no need to give anyone the ability to speak on your platform. Your house, your rules.
But the second you let government decide whether something may be said or not, you lose.
Re: Re: Re:2 Not so funny now is it?
So, "your house, your rules", unless you want those rules to be no nazis, because in that case you have to let them speak anyway because kicking them out is a greater danger…?
Re: Re: Not so funny now is it?
That and let’s face it: the majority of speech “if not all of it” people on earth say could be grounds for hate speech litigation under the right circumstances depending on the ears.
That feeling of ambivalence
On one hand I’m glad that they terminated their service-agreement for Daily Stormer and 8chan, but I can’t shake the feeling that some people are going to use that as an excuse in effort to pressure Cloudflare into terminating their service-agreement with other sites in the future.
Re: That feeling of ambivalence
Yes, and the more countries in which they have servers, the more possible pressure points exist. Toronto has broken libel laws which treat their victims as guilty until proven innocent. Moscow has so little freedom of speech these days that it’s likely no longer lawful to hold a gay pride parade. How many other cities have Cloudflare infrastructure, and how badly is freedom of expression deteriorating in each? The chain is only as strong as its weakest link, after all.
Re:
The CEO of Cloudflare openly questions how much power his company wields and how it can properly do so without going too far into censorship territory. I would bet that he has felt that feeling, too.
Re: Re: the rules
that’s natural.
Look at it like this:
Are your customers complete monsters who know what they are?
Do it for your sake.
Are your customers regularly abusing the fact that you are only letting them crash Out of the goodness/principle or your heart and they know this?
Throw them out
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Re: That feeling of ambivalence
Good. You shouldn’t be able to.
First they came for Daily Stormer, and I did not care because I was not a frothing at the mouth neo-nazi.
Then they came for 8chan, and I did not care because I was not a hate-filled weeb.
Then they came for me because I said something they disapproved of on the internet, and there was no-one left to care for me.
Congrats, you’re past the first two on the slippery slope of censorship. Of course the next section in there should read:
Then they came for youtubers, and I did not care because I don’t make material targeting children for advertisers.
but we don’t know whether or not anyone is actually going to care just yet, so I left it out.
TL;DR If you can’t shake that feeling, there’s a reason why. The walls are closing in, and you’ve been championing their advance the entire time.
Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
"They" didn’t come for anyone. Someone just said they can no longer in good conscience do business with someone else. No one was forcibly silenced.
Re: That feeling of ambivalence
"On one hand I’m glad that they terminated their service-agreement for Daily Stormer and 8chan…"
I’m not.
The only thing that happens when you block a minority of bigots and psychopaths from speaking is that you lull the majority into the sense that the repugnant views represented by that minority have somehow vanished.
No one could build a political platform based on xenophobia and bigotry when the neo-nazis of sweden were still allowed to wear their swastikas and make themselves a public spectacle. Then we banned the nazi paraphernalia. Twenty years later a party dedicated to fighting "multiculturalism" entered the swedish parliament and is currently among the top three parties.
When the bigot is motivated to hide their bigotry it doesn’t mean tey stop being bigoted. It only means they learn to dress it up.
Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
[Sad but True]
Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
Cloudflare didn’t block them from speaking, they just stopped doing business with them which is a vast difference.
Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
Stopping bigots from being bigots isn’t the point of it – it’s limiting their ability to metastatize by by not aiding them in contaminating others.
Re: Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
"Stopping bigots from being bigots isn’t the point of it – it’s limiting their ability to metastatize by by not aiding them in contaminating others."
Well, true enough. On the one hand it’s important not to choke the public "vaccination" against hateful and bigoted views by stoppering free speech.
On the other hand it’s equally important not to encourage radical views by silent and implicit consent.
I guess the important divisor must be that the state should never censor but private platforms should remain free to set their own rules. Something we see under increasing amounts of fire by all the trolls complaining about section 230.
Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
So, are you going to head down to your nearest Nazi meeting and help them hand out flyers? Are you going to stand on the street corner with a megaphone screaming their message for them? Because you seem to be saying that Cloudflare should do exactly that.
There’s a difference between actively censoring a message and just not helping to spread it further.
Re: Re: Re: That feeling of ambivalence
Government censorship is not the answer to anything – never will be.
Re: Re: Re:2 That feeling of ambivalence
So are you just posting irrelevant statements, or did Cloudflare become a government at some point and I missed it?
Re: Re: Re:3 That feeling of ambivalence
did Cloudflare become a government
never made that claim
use of the word censor implies government action
business moderation is not censoring
language, who needs it
Re: Re: Re:4 That feeling of ambivalence
Firstly, can you find any dictionary which agrees with that definition? Because dictionary.com and Merriam-Webster do not.
Secondly, if it’s not relevant to anything that was being discussed, then what exactly was the point of the comment?
Re: Re: Re:5 That feeling of ambivalence
I thought the correct present day terminology to use was "deplatform" – no?
Are you claiming that a private business performing moderation of their website constitutes censorship? Please state any case in which this determination was made.
Re: Re: Re:6 That feeling of ambivalence
Technically, yes, it does. A business removing content is, by definition, censorship of that content. I listed two sources for that statement already, not sure what more you want for "any case in which this determination was made"…
Re: Re: Re:7 That feeling of ambivalence
"any case in which this determination was made"…
As in a court case.
Re: That feeling of ambivalence
Slippery slope arguments are pure garbage. Cloudflare gets pressured all the time into doing this, and only pulled the trigger on these specific sites, because the slippery slope defense was of no use to them now that the actual nazis and fascists were basically saying cloudflare was on their side which is true they were until it started to become financially and politically untenable to do so.
Would be great for conservatives and liberals to honestly discuss that free speech can be used in a way that comes with material problems not just "hypotheticals", experienced by other groups of people. To say you hate <insert desired hated group here> is one thing to then promote, help coordinate attacks, and propagandize white nationalists terrorism in hopes others get inspired to do the same is a little different.
If free speech warriors grew a spine and actually tackled these issues as seriously as the "potential for gubment abuse" argument then I guess I would be more understanding. At this point all I see is people defending an ideal that has never worked as intended in practice and has largely created it’s own myth about how it operates in the U.S.
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HIER ES IST VERBOTTEN!
Quoting from Joseph Heller, “Free speech is a tribalcentric Catch 22 where we play both sides of the record at the same time, and slip through the dissonance like an oily fish slips through the net”
Just kidding, I made that up, after I read about how many Jews are actually masquerading as Nazis online in order to push the envelope described above:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Collin
Re: Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
I see you post links to stuff you don’t read and make conclusions from it which has no connection to reality, which makes me conclude that either you are stupid or just plain dishonest.. or perhaps it’s a combination of the two.
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Re: Re: Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
Nice try, Rocky. stop fucking your mom, and everything will make sense later, sweet pea(pants).
While its kind of adorable watching you, and other LGBTQEtc. people struggle to believe in a father figure, its also totally counter productive, and pathetic.
But I urge you to keep looking, if only to waste your own time, not mine.
SSigned-
Earnest Hemingway
Re: Re: Re: Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
Thank you for, once again, confirming you’re a bigot.
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Re: Re: Re:2 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
Bigotry is a two way street, and your crowds bigotry is on full display here, from beginning to end,starting with your selective fagging of incelibate nonsense.
So, ROGS Bingo, as the gay mafia and its flying monkeys mobilize like a Pacific Justice Institute prayer party.
There is no longer a substantive difference between the left and right anymore.
Re: Re: Re:3 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
"Bigotry is a two way street"
Please explain.
Re: Re: Re:4 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
"Please explain."
Wat’s there to explain? We’ve got someone with a hateboner for jews and LGBTQ who thinks it’s bigotry when everyone else calls bullshit on his conspiracy theories about the global jewish conspiracy.
That broken logic is still the only arguments the bigots are left with so you can’t blame them for waving it around.
Re: Re: Re:5 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
I wanted an explanation of how/why the poster thinks victims automatically victimize their attackers and therefore the two way street comment. Or is it a lame attempt at justification of their attacks – idk, guess there is no thought process there.
Re: Re: Re:6 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
"I wanted an explanation of how/why the poster thinks victims automatically victimize their attackers and therefore the two way street comment."
This requires an explanation?
It’s pretty much par for the course that racists and bigots, when confronted with the fact that the vast majority thinks their ideas are shit, will whine and cry about how bullied and oppressed they are, in the mistaken belief that a gang of nazis crying loudly enough can garner the same sympathy as an actually oppressed and persecuted minority.
The "two-way street" argument is basically the racist trying to convince you that if you oppose him when he dehumanizes others then YOU are the one being the bully.
"Or is it a lame attempt at justification of their attacks – idk, guess there is no thought process there."
Of course there’s a thought process – that being that the racist knows damn well he has no real argument so the one hope he has of carrying the debate is by trying to conflate the issue with bullshit, usually uttered in an angry and upset tone of voice.
Re: Re: Re:7 Trolls reading comprehension: Ze
Makes sense … I want the bigot to admit it.
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Re: Re: Re:8 Trolls reading comprehension
Well, pathnarcs like you take the Lacanian mirror way to far into adulthod, sister.
But about Te gays, Im totally fine with them, as long as they (whoever it is that you shitbas claim to be speaking for )ate ok with me.
As for Jews,who masquerade as,Nazis and other anti -semites,online, theres this guy (just that one, lol)
The Un -naming of a man:
Michael Kadar
Dual national American -Israeli, convicted of building a Golem, and a few thousand bomb threats
https://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-5411811,00.html
Re: Re: Re:9 Trolls reading comprehen
Narcissistic tendencies can led to conflicts with reality and those who suffer these ailments rarely realize their predicament, they flail about complaining and ranting causing all sorts of mayhem.
But you are completely sane aren’t you?
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Re: Re: Re:10 Trolls reading compr
syntax seems important in a discussion about spelling errors.
re:Narcissistic tendencies can led to
I think you meant to say that in YOUR case, “Narcissistic tendencies have led to…”similar, right? or
You did mean “led ”, right? Or…?
I empathize with you. Or, are you that other AC?
So many venomous ACs, it can make any person CRAZY.
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Re: Re: Re:10 Lacans asks the mirror about Batesons albatross
re: Narcissistic tendencies can led to
I think you meant to say that in your case, your Narcissistic tendencies have/had led to, or perhaps your Narcissistic tendencies can lead to *,” or someting similar, right?
While I cannot empathize with you, I sympathize with those who suffer syntax deficit disorder while putting themselves on stage as spelling authorities who moonlight as internet psychologists.
Or was that the other venomous AC? Too many venomous,ACs can make anyone appear crazy online (iften by design of the Mighty Wurzweiler itself).
Re: Re: Re:
Y’know, but it’s a funny thing: Homophobic bigots think more about gay people and gay sex than even gay people do.
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Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Sooooo,lets see:
the flying monkeys and their associates at the International Justice Institute have now twisted my comment about incels directed at one person, into a Gayness Awareness Training Session and a false comparison to the asex’d to-get this-an attack on gay people with a side order of fascination with gay sex
I mean, beyond the yuck factoryour projections are clashing with your other projections like airplane exhaust at a hillbilly airshow which inevitably involves a plane crash.
But what else can you expect from some chubby midwestern boys who left home for Hollywood one day, and ended up all *Jane Doe drawing fake tits on Deviant Art after spinning out on the Blvd?
Stop doing crack now, kids! It really does NOT improve your artistic performances, or your troll-harder roup therapy sesdions.
Re: Re: Re:3
Did you get your heart broken on Grindr?
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Re: Re: Re:4 wuts Grindr?
I live in a sex-positive place, where virtually NO ONE cares who you are fucking, within the boundaries of two way adult consent.
That said, I wonder why Stonewall totally failed to liberate ALL sexualities, and in fact and practice the gay community has marginaluzed itself by becoming exactly what they rebelled against.
Left wing flag brigades are inseparable from right wing flag brigades of the IJM/ADL, et al. which is a win for the right every time.
Tactics….something something….fascism something something…..but open discourse?
You are united with your enemies in crushing it.
Re: Re: Re:5
Yes, yes, you want to recreate the Holocaust, we get it.
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Re: Re: Re:6 Re:
As you wage another #Holodmor or #Cambodia or #Laos cum #MiddleEast as a useful idiot, but actual useless eater.
Re: Re: Re:7
…you don’t even know what you’re saying any more, do you.
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Re: Re: Re:8 Re:
You got lost in all your projection; or maybe the guy who sidled up to you in your dark theater of the absurd actually is there for the movie.
Or, maybe move away from Skokie, and stop Nazifying so hard.
Re: Re: Re:9
…says the projectionist.
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Re: Re: Re:6 Re:
Absolutely not true.
But I would chuckle if you coincidentally died in a fire after posting shitty lies and slander like that.
Re: Re: Re:5 wuts Grindr?
“marginaluzed”
Well at least you spelled Grindr right bro.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
“roup therapy sesdions.”
I don’t usually make fun of other people spelling. But damn bro, there’s something real Freudian about misspelling two out of three of those words.
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Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
Yeah, its hard to type clearly using only one thumb on my smart device, while leaping tall buildings in a single bound, so I appreciate your efforts as my designated (unpaid ) efitor.
*if there,are/ there. any typos, you! have my permiffion to continue, two correct them
for me, ok? Thanks! *
(dodging some timing attacks now )
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Re: Re: Re:4 Re:I don’t usually make fun of other people(s ) spelli
Yeah? Please tell the good peeple what you read into it?
I hear that you are way better at Svengali mind reading and way smarter than any Rorschak test interpreter, EVER.
Exactly what do those spellin errors mean…?
Re: Re: Re:5
It means you need help, R/O/G/S.
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Re: Re: Re:6 Re:
“Stephen, youve really made great progress this week, and stay on your meds .
Now, lets put aside the assumptions that others make about you, as a sort of substanceless parrot, a vapid sadist and thread derailer.
What is your gut response to this paragraph?
Stephen: Well, doc, like I said over and over and over again, youre the problem. Your a racist, homophobic bigot! EXACTLY like my neighbor! And MASSAGINY! Peach is a sexist slur that makes hairy women feel body shamed! I haaaaaate you!
Stevie jumps up, and the therapist takes cover, as Stevie gargles out those words, slams door, and stomps out, desperate to retreat to his home dungeon, as therapist dials 911
JUST DO IT, you thread derailing old jackass.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
"I don’t usually make fun of other people spelling."
Just imagine if alcohol were involved.
Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
Imagining that now, actually
Yeah, crack and alcohol dont mix well with DeviantArt trolls and logic.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Actually, you and I totally agree on this extremely important point.
I probably hate gay bashers MORE than.you, for reasons you could never understand.
Re: Re: Re: Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
Case in point, it does seem you actually suffer from a combination of stupidity and dishonesty with a hefty dose of an extremely deep-seated bigotry mixed in.
Can’t be easy being a bigot I guess, probably why you rant impotently on the internet because of some imagined insult on your fragile masculinity.
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Re: Re: Re:2 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
None whatsoever.
The word bigot in this case is misapplied, and you deliberately distort its meaning as you cast it upon your idealized father figure, while self flagellating.
You are jousting at ghosts.
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Re: Re: Re:2 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
I see your True Colors Shining Through, Rocky.
Rocky…such a manly name!
Re: Re: Re:3
He’s not gonna fuck you, champ.
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Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
Scene Two:
ROGS gradually comes out of a stupor, that stupor having been induced after being Shanhai’d in an online forum, and then dragged into a neon-flickering bowery gay bar, full of people(?) like this guy over there↑
Meanwhile, back in reality….
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Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
Meanwhile, back in reality….ROGs is putting the finishing touches on the script for the gay porn movie starring him and 37 Mandingos.
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Re: Re: Re:6 Re:
That is such a racist thing to say, I think I will leave you to contemplate both your own stupidity, and you overt racism.
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Re: Re: Re:6 Re:Who will flag this racist AC?
Look what the noble “Techdirt community” allows to stand here, unflagged, because its one of TDs pet ACs :
ROGs is putting the finishing touches on the script for the gay porn movie starring him and 37 Mandingos.
Why not the Bantu, or the !Kung! people? Why not the Fulani, the Benadir, the Kikuyu or the Isaak? Navajo? 苗族?
You stupid armchair racist fucks.
ResearchOrganizedGangStalking to understand what a #faketivist dead end American left-right binaries, and their media mockingbirds are.
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Re: Re: Re:7 Re:Who will flag this racist AC?
This blatantly racist comment above about "Mandingoes”, and its subtext of rape has remained here at TD for a week, while posts critical about ADL deplatforming have been flagged off the forum.
How racist is that?
And, how telling of the “Techdirt community” actual priorities.
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Re: Re: Re:2 Trolls reading comprehension: Zero
Its not easy being a target of #ADLification either.
Or, a target of Jews who masquerade online as Nazis, and who wage bomb hoaxes and other mayem across the world, and blame it on others
Michael Kadar
https://forward.com/news/breaking-news/404278/israeli-man-convicted-for-serial-jcc-bomb-threats/
Re: HIER ES IST VERBOTTEN!
" I made that up, after I read about how many Jews are actually masquerading as Nazis online in order to push the envelope described above…"
So based on the writings of a bona fide nazi – who was even run out of that party over child molestation, proving too odious for even the nazis to stomach…
…you come to the conclusion that "Jews are pretending to be nazis online".
You’ll need a more credible source for anyone to accept that particular incarnation of Russel’s Teapot.
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Re: Re: HIER ES IST VERBOTTEN!
Here below is just one example out of hundreds which I have given you and other TD derailers and trolls repeatedly.
But you are devoid of substance, and never address substance, so I actually do this for other readers to see:
https://forward.com/news/breaking-news/404278/israeli-man-convicted-for-serial-jcc-bomb-threats/
First it is the websites not liked by many…then it will be the websites not liked by a few, till all that is left of the web is a Rickroll video.
Re: Re:
"…till all that is left of the web is a Rickroll video."
No…that one gets haxxored early. The last lonely video left will be a ten-hour youtube vid of drying paint.
Re: Re: Re:
Actually, no. You’re calling it wrong, guys. What we’ll actually have is government-approved content, all of which is deemed appropriate for the plebs and carefully crafted to keep them in line.
There will always be some kind of subversion and people playing fast and loose with the rules. Remember the Hays Code and how it affected film-making, etc.? People found ways around that and we still had great movies, etc. Now the brakes are off and anything goes, so understandably the Moral Majority types are swinging the pendulum back the other way.
As I have predicted, the Naughties (yes, I’ve deliberately spelled it that way) will give way to a more sedate couple of decades as we dial back on the rampant… everything (possibly in the name of morality/ the children, etc.) the world will swing right (it’s a little early for this but it’s happening now) until there’s a sudden big shift and we’ll find the straitjacket loosen, then pop. And around and around the loop will go. I think the internet is speeding this process up.
Things are going to get a lot more interesting, that’s for sure.
Re: Re: Re: The Hayes Code and the MPAA
The Hayes Code and the MPAA mostly did a horrible job rating movies (and the ESRB fell into the same paradigm regarding video games) in which explicit violence crept its way into the more family-friendly ratings where explicit nudity and sexuality got locked into tighter restraints.
Part of the problem came from an unwillingness of large theaters and companies to lock NC-17 and AO products, assuming they were only of prurient interest, which meant that anything that wasn’t porn was forced to negotiate back into the R-rated / M-rated category, and as such our ratings boards could exercise extremely tight control over minor aspects (such as women being portrayed as enjoying sex. The effrontery!)
Yes, we sometimes got good movies while those codes were in place. Spain got good movies while General Franco was still in office. But what was lost was all the good movies that were suppressed or turned into less-good movies based on the mores of the guardians. As such it ended up shaping culture into the misogynist and violent grotesquerie that we have today.
…One that, mind you, allows kids to see human mutilation, so long as they bleed pixels rather than blood.
Re: Re: Re:2 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
Ohai, Uriel. Hope you’re enjoying the holidays.
The Hayes Code and the MPAA mostly did a horrible job rating movies (and the ESRB fell into the same paradigm regarding video games) in which explicit violence crept its way into the more family-friendly ratings where explicit nudity and sexuality got locked into tighter restraints.
Indeed, as In Dublin’s Eamonn McCann pointed out, if you stick something into someone for their pleasure, that’s bad, but if you do so to inflict pain and/or death, that’s okay. I agree with him there.
Part of the problem came from an unwillingness of large theaters and companies to lock NC-17 and AO products, assuming they were only of prurient interest, which meant that anything that wasn’t porn was forced to negotiate back into the R-rated / M-rated category, and as such our ratings boards could exercise extremely tight control over minor aspects (such as women being portrayed as enjoying sex. The effrontery!)
The idea was to enforce patriarchal gender stereotypes, methinks. That being the case, violence meted out by manly men to protect cowering women, who would then reward them with affection, etc., was acceptable because it presented an idealised image of masculinity and feminity. I think those people would freak out over Sarah Connor or Ellen Ripley because they drove a tank over such notions.
Yes, we sometimes got good movies while those codes were in place. Spain got good movies while General Franco was still in office. But what was lost was all the good movies that were suppressed or turned into less-good movies based on the mores of the guardians. As such it ended up shaping culture into the misogynist and violent grotesquerie that we have today.
Sorry, I can only see parts of that, i.e. the part where the socially sanctioned violence of a man enables him to "get" the girl, or the part where cartoonish violence gets a pass whereas sexual activity is given a higher rating. I think there’s more to the creation of the the misogynist and violent grotesquerie that we have today than movies censored by the vicar so married couples were shown to have separate beds or one foot on the floor, etc.
…One that, mind you, allows kids to see human mutilation, so long as they bleed pixels rather than blood.
Were it up to me, all violence would be 12+. Kids should never get the impression that violence or killing is okay.
Re: Re: Re:3 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
*Indeed, as In Dublin’s Eamonn McCann pointed out, if you stick something into someone for their pleasure, that’s bad (per Hollywood), but if you do so to inflict pain and/or death, that’s okay (per Hollywood). That’s ridiculous! I agree with him there.
Re: Re: Re:3 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
Put age restrictions on cartoons, the mouse will will complain loudly.
Re: Re: Re:4 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
I’d do it just to hear the squeals!
Re: Re: Re:5 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
Think of the parents, as more than the mouse would be squealing.
Re: Re: Re:5 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
"I’d do it just to hear the squeals!"
You mean "Ah, the tears of children are delicious"? Robbing the poor pre-teen rugrats of their daily dose of cartoon ultraviolence? Tsk, tsk.
"Were it up to me, all violence would be 12+. Kids should never get the impression that violence or killing is okay."
I’d say that an exception should be made for documentaries and comedies. The truly awful part of most movie-depicted violence is that it gives children a pseudorealistically depicted impression that a knife to the gut is something you walk off well before the next action scene.
There’s a good reason why american movie ratings go after sex and nudity rather than violence, however. Who would you rather piss off if you lived in the US? An assorted bunch of enlightened civilized liberals or the NRA?
Re: Re: Re:6 The Hayes Code and the MPAA
Eh, I was talking about Disney execs. When I’m fantasizing about things that are highly unlikely to happen, I take a lot of licence.
I suppose I should have been more specific about violence; the idea that hitting people is funny or people being hurt is funny is the problem. Shouldn’t we be promoting empathy? That part about pseudorealistically depicted impressions can be applied to anyone for anything. The results of people actually believing this means they don’t realise concussion can kill. Wasn’t Houdini killed as a result of a gut punch bursting his already-inflamed appendix? It’s the same with guns: sanitizing the impacts of bullets hitting human flesh by not showing the bloody mess that would result leads people to think that guns aren’t that bad. Start showing more realistic scenes and that idea of a gun being your harmless little friend until you need it to be otherwise melts away. Remember Reservoir Dogs? We watched a man die in agony from a messy gunshot to the belly because it really does take about that long (and hurt that much) to die from such an injury.
As for the NRA, they’re awful. I don’t care in the least bit if they get offended about anything. Stuff ’em.
Re: Re: Re:
That’s muted because someone copyright-claimed the white-noise soundtrack.
Re: Re:
…at which point Cloudflare would go bankrupt and someone else would replace them. You realize that Cloudflare isn’t a government, right? Seems like a lot of people in this thread talking about free speech rights don’t seem to get that part. They aren’t locking people up at gunpoint, they’re just refusing to speak things that they don’t want to speak. They aren’t taking money at gunpoint to keep themselves in business either; if you don’t want to support them, then don’t.
Warrant canaries as contrapositives
As I understand the purpose of warrant canaries, they’re used to signal that a site has taken an action that they cannot (for legal or other reasons) explicitly acknowledge, as in the case of NSLs with gag orders.
At least as described in the article, Cloudflare doesn’t face any prohibition on explicitly acknowledging the actions they took w.r.t. Daily Stormer and 8chan, so it would seem that the warrant canary might not be the place to signal them. Seems like if their canary statement was "SILENTLY terminated a customer or taken down content due to political pressure" (or semantic equivalent – "silently" might not be the best locution), then it would serve the same purpose and wouldn’t have to be removed due to these two cases.
Of course, I probably have failed to grasp the full complexities of gag orders such as those in NSLs, and therefore this analysis could be off base.
Re: Warrant canaries as contrapositives
It falls more under the nuance of what the CEO said towards the end:
They don’t want to treat it like a work of law, or a tightly-bound contract. After all, there are thousands upon thousands of people who make very good livings by debating for years on end about what the specific words of laws and contracts mean or don’t mean. (And many more who debate for free for years on end in comment sections on web blogs.)
It’s easier for them to present and interpret it broadly than it is to push to keep it "technically true", and it makes it easier for others to understand what they’re saying and to accept it as truthful.
And, possibly, being less specific makes it easier for them to avoid potential retaliation from anyone who believes that by removing a clause, they’ve violated an NDA in which they agreed not to talk about doing whatever it is the clause said they’ve never done.
Re: Re: Warrant canaries as contrapositives
Well it is good that CF makes a statement on the issue, but using the warrant canary to do so completely ruins any effectiveness and potential future information which could have been provided by the warrant canary. Now we will never know if a government uses political pressure to force them to do something. That fuse is blown and not being replaced.
So are we, as liberals, supposed to tolerate the very people who are actively trying to kill us?
Re: Re:
I’m pretty sure the paradox of tolersnce is a thing.
Re: Re: Re:
That does sound better than the mantra of "Be tolerant of everyone…that we approve of."
Re: Re: Re: Re:
There is a significant difference between speech and action. It is possible to argue that you should be tolerant of objectionable speech, but intolerant of objectionable action.
When speech incites action, the lines get blurry.
There’s also a difference between voluntary action and coerced action. In the case of Cloudflare, there’s a difference between Cloudflare themselves deciding to stop providing service to the Daily Stormer and 8Chan due to those entities’ actions being ones that Cloudflare felt they could no longer condone, and Cloudflare being forced to (by, for example, a government) to stop providing service.
It’s also possible to argue that there are different definitions of tolerance in play. Does tolerance only mean that we allow the speech, or does it mean that we allow it and remain silent in the face of it? For me, it’s the former – I will not prevent objectionable speech (in a public area, mind), but I won’t force myself to remain silent, either.
Re: Re: Re:2
Slight correction: You can/should be tolerant of the legal rights of people to say objectionable things. I have to tolerate a bigot’s right to say racial slurs. I don’t have to tolerate them saying those things in my presence.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
I did say "possible to argue" as opposed to "we should" – also, check last paragraph:
It’s also possible to argue that there are different definitions of tolerance in play. Does tolerance only mean that we allow the speech, or does it mean that we allow it and remain silent in the face of it? For me, it’s the former – I will not prevent objectionable speech (in a public area, mind), but I won’t force myself to remain silent, either.
Re: Re: Re:4
Fair points. ????
Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
Gentlemen, there’s also the fact that the proliferation of hate speech tends to have a chilling effect on the speech of target groups. Pushing back against a firehose of misinformation when all you have is a water pistol is exhausting. Unless we have a plan for actively pushing back against the victimisation of target groups, perhaps we should welcome the slow-down of the torrents of hate.
Re: Re: Re:6 Re:
"Pushing back against a firehose of misinformation when all you have is a water pistol is exhausting. Unless we have a plan for actively pushing back against the victimisation of target groups, perhaps we should welcome the slow-down of the torrents of hate."
How about "keeping the public debate going"?
Currently major platforms are kicking out the bigots and the hateful left, right and center. Leaving the neo-nazis and the KKK to rant and rave in echo chambers like Stormfront and the Breitbart comment pages. By and large we see sites like infowars relegated to the "conspiracy theory" section of the public space – that place in the corner where glue-sniffing outcasts assemble to spew incoherent prophecies of bile and venom at one another.
The main issue with being TOO welcoming at private platforms blocking out what is considered hateful is twofold – first, that private platform is a corporation, not our friend. Google, Facebook and Blizzard still sold themselves to China for profit even if they ALSO ban racists from their forums.
And secondly, unfortunately all too many politicians conflate the public and private space, and those politicians all have their own little list of what they’d like not to be said in public.
Debating like we do here whenever a private platform blocks or stumbles is healthy. It’s when the scrutiny stops that things go to shit in a hurry.
Re: Re: Re:7 Re:
How about "keeping the public debate going"?
What public debate? You’re assuming equal access to the public square and an equally listening audience carefully weighing the case on its merits. This emphatically doesn’t happen. In any case, how can you debate if you’re in a small minority with the world and his wife at your throat? Better to hide yourself until its over, saying nothing that might provoke another flurry of attacks.
Having been on the end of a campaign of lies that ultimately saw me pushed out of an entire community some years ago, I call nonsense. There’s no debate when you have a horde of trolls on one side while your jittery "friends" jump ship instead of pushing back. In my experience, it’s a popularity contest. If you’re not popular, you’re stuffed. To be a target is to be alone — unless you’re in a "protected group" and can get some nice, well-meaning social justice warrior types on side to fight your corner. Good luck with that. There are certain words I’m still afraid to type in case the trolls come flooding back into my online spaces, insisting I continue to debate their stupid, pointless, oft-debunked drama points.
On the political front, I see the firehose effect drowning out the voices of those who care for the truth, for protecting the vulnerable, and for standing up for the environment. How the hell do you debate that without a keyboard army of your own?
Currently major platforms are kicking out the bigots and the hateful…
Good. Relegating them to echo chambers does a great deal to blunt the force of the firehose. This makes counter-speech more effective since it is no longer being drowned out. In my case, had the admins of the various sites where I posted just followed their own TOS the situation would never have broken down the way it did.
The main issue with being TOO welcoming at private platforms blocking out what is considered hateful is twofold – first, that private platform is a corporation, not our friend. Google, Facebook and Blizzard still sold themselves to China for profit even if they ALSO ban racists from their forums.
Yes they did. It’s costly to do what is right but it’s ultimately worth it. I’m massively disappointed in Google and Facebook.
And secondly, unfortunately all too many politicians conflate the public and private space, and those politicians all have their own little list of what they’d like not to be said in public.
Yes they do. Thankfully, the First Amendment means they can’t actually stop people saying things they don’t like.
Debating like we do here whenever a private platform blocks or stumbles is healthy. It’s when the scrutiny stops that things go to shit in a hurry.
I can actually debate here. Decent, reasonable people like yourself and the other regulars give me food for thought. As I work to defend my positions, I find I often have to justify them, and this has to be plausible. You make me think, and that is good. However, the rest of the online world is not as civilised as TD. We should definitely scrutinise speech that may cause harm down the line, but I think you can do that without normalising it.
Re: Re: Re:2
That is a very good take on the definition of tolerance.
My beliefs on the matter are fairly similar.
If you are doing something I disagree with, but nobody is harmed as a consequence, I should not attempt to prevent you from doing it. That is tolerance.
If you are doing something I tolerate, but it would not harm you if you refrained from doing it, I have the right to ask you to stop, or to offer you another course of action. As long as I will still accept a negative response from you, that is still tolerance.
I can take any actions of my own in response, even ones that interfere with the effectiveness of your actions, so long as I neither bring anyone harm myself, nor do I prevent you from taking your actions with reasonably the same ease as if I had not acted. That’s still tolerance.
But if your actions lead to harm for someone, I feel no obligation to allow you to continue.
The tricky part, of course, is defining what is "harm." There can be negative actions that do not bring about harm. There can be positive actions that do bring about harm. Harm can include mental harm, such as fear or loathing (and not just in Las Vegas). And actions that could be harmful in the presence of one person could be perfectly benign in the presence of another. Not to mention that I might think someone else is being harmed even though they do not feel that way. Where lies the boundary between actual harm, and merely disagreement?
That part is the primary reason why people have disagreements about what should be tolerated, even after they acknowledge the difference between "tolerance", "acceptance", and "support".
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
"The tricky part, of course, is defining what is "harm." There can be negative actions that do not bring about harm. There can be positive actions that do bring about harm. Harm can include mental harm, such as fear or loathing (and not just in Las Vegas). And actions that could be harmful in the presence of one person could be perfectly benign in the presence of another. Not to mention that I might think someone else is being harmed even though they do not feel that way. Where lies the boundary between actual harm, and merely disagreement?"
That is indeed the difficulty…and I would add one other consideration, as in addition to people being harmed even though they don’t feel that way, there are plenty of people who will argue that they are being harmed even when they are not.
Although…I suppose it could also be argued that the mere fact that you are considering taking some action in response implies that you are being harmed in some way. Is being annoyed "harm"? Certainly not physically, but mentally? How do we draw that line?
I think a better question would be: "Is it harming me more than it is helping them?" But even that is tricky, and I think it ought to be weighted so that it is closer to "Would it harm a reasonable person more than it is helping them?". If you work night shift, you’re the one outside of the average and it is more reasonable for you to invest in earplugs than to ask all of your neighbors to not mow their lawns during the day, regardless of how unnecessary that lawn mowing might ultimately be. Unless they’re running that mower for hours every day.
But then there must be a strong component of "what is typical in this society"…but unfortunately then you get into race/class/ethnicity issues, as what is normal for you may not be normal for the family next door…and what is no big deal to you might be a significant harm to them.
There is no rule which can be applied, there is no algorithm which can determine the solution…what is required is a good dose of compassion and empathy. You need to understand both sides of the issue, not only your own.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
A very good definition.
It could be summed up with "Your right to wave your fist ends where my face begins".
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Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
So, like it’s okay to promote pedophilia so long as you don’t practice it?
Re: Re: Re:3
otherwording (or in-other-wordsing) — noun — summarizing a point of argument in a way that distorts the point into saying something it does not and attributes the false interpretation to the person who raised the original point; a blatant attempt to make winning an argument easier for someone who is out of their depth in said argument
Example: You will often find the phrases “in other words” or “so you’re saying” at the beginning of an instance of otherwording.
See also: strawman; your post
Re: Re: Re:3 Reading comprehension declining
You do know the difference between objectionable speech and promoting a crime, right?
If you don’t, get off the internet until you understand the difference.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
I refer you to this line:
When speech incites action, the lines get blurry.
I also refer you to this line:
Does tolerance only mean that we allow the speech, or does it mean that we allow it and remain silent in the face of it? For me, it’s the former – I will not prevent objectionable speech (in a public area, mind), but I won’t force myself to remain silent, either.
Even your specific example brought into a discussion on generalities falls into stuff I already said.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
Hell, no. Never. It’s a crime to promote it, after all.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
"Hell, no. Never. It’s a crime to promote it, after all."
Actually, it’s not. Anyone is free to say "we should have more of this" even if the "this" referred to is war crimes, ethnic cleansing, mass murder or, yes, pedophilia.
What is usually forbidden, for good and valid reason, is the sort of preparation to commit a crime which usually falls under "conspiracy".
Re: Re: Re:5 Re:
Methought there was an anti-cheerleading law, such as the one cited in the film, The Accused.
Re:
Nobody should, or must, tolerate intolerance and hate — no matter what the assholes who would benefit from infinite tolerance say. But even those assholes have rights, one of which is the right to free speech and expression. That, we must tolerate.
Both 8chan and the Daily Stormer suck. I would feel satisfied if we never saw nor heard from them again, all things considered. But with the exception of “illegal” (read: legally punishable) speech, the people who posted on those sites have every right to spew their bile on any platform that will have them.
“Deplatforming” a user from a site like Twitter is one thing; booting the entire platform from a service like Cloudflare is an entirely different ballgame. That leads into the broader question being asked here: At what point does a decision from a company like Cloudflare to boot a site like 8chan from the company’s service become legitimate censorship?
Re: Re: Re:
Therein lies the problem. "Hate" is subjective and the act of removing 8chan and the nazis could be interpreted as acting out of hate for those groups. Just because you and I agree with those actions doesn’t change whether it was a "hate act". And it was clearly an act of intolerance no matter which side of the debate you support. Should the nazis tolerate that intolerance?
It’s easy to say these things should not be tolerated. But which side you’re on dictates what "these things" really are.
An entire Sociology 210 course could be derived from your quote above alone.
Re: Re: Re:
Three things.
You mean like how American Christian evangelicals — who are part of the largest and most powerful religious demographic in the United States — routinely whine about the separation of church and state getting in the way of things like teacher-led prayers and losing the right to exclusively perform invocations before government meetings as if they’re a persecuted minority?
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Hate is a very subjective thing. Tolerance is more easily made objective.
Did you take an action to prevent somebody from doing something, solely because you disagreed with something they did? That means you did not tolerate them doing that.
Cloudflare prevented 8chan from using their services solely because they disagreed with the speech being posted on 8chan and the actions taken by 8chan regarding that speech. It was not done because 8chan objectively violated any laws that governed them, or rules that they had agreed to follow.
Thus, Cloudflare were not tolerant of that speech and those actions. Removing their access was, objectively, an intolerant act.
This does not mean it was a legally wrong act, a morally wrong act, or that it was equivalent to any of the intolerant speech and actions taking place at 8chan. It is merely a statement of fact, a definition.
(And to make sure this is clear, it certainly doesn’t mean that I tolerate such behavior any more than Cloudflare did. Personally, if I were in Cloudflare’s shoes, I doubt I would have stayed neutral anywhere near as long as they did before shutting off such vitriolic communities.)
It is just to point out that intolerance, if not also hate, is something that cannot be covered with simple blanket statements of black and white (no innuendo intended), because at the very least you wind up in paradoxes you cannot escape without hypocrisy.
There are many other actions that could be seen as intolerant yet are less universally despised.
Re: Re: Re:
"’Deplatforming’ a user from a site like Twitter is one thing; booting the entire platform from a service like Cloudflare is an entirely different ballgame. That leads into the broader question being asked here: At what point does a decision from a company like Cloudflare to boot a site like 8chan from the company’s service become legitimate censorship?"
You have that exactly backwards IMO.
There’s a LOT of people I never talked to again once I dropped Facebook. That’s the only platform they use, and if I’m not on that platform, I have no way to communicate with the people who are. It’s a closed ecosystem.
But booting someone off Cloudflare? No big deal. Basically the entire goal of Cloudflare is that the end user can’t tell if you’re using it or not, the website just works. Build a website, then go Cloudflare, then get booted from Cloudflare, self-host for a little while, then migrate to another cloud provider…to your users, your site might get a bit faster or a bit slower through those transitions, but it will still work, it will still be accessible, they can still read your speech without doing anything different. If you do it well, they won’t notice a single thing changing. A website getting booted from a CDN like Cloudflare is far less damaging then getting booted off a quasi-public platform like Twitter or Facebook. You get booted from Facebook or Twitter…your page is gone, your user connections are gone, your historical data is gone, everything gets purged and you aren’t even allowed to start over.
Re: Re: Re:
Reminder: You’re not entitled to use platforms like Facebook, and they’re not obliged — legally, morally, and ethically — to let you keep using it even after you break the rules. If getting booted means you lose the social circle that you’d built up…well, it is what it is. Don’t blame Facebook for your lack of foresight vis-á-vis forging a social circle in a silo.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Agreed. If you’re using any social media platform to send a message, etc., have several accounts on different ones and a website of your own. I have a blog and use Twitter to post links to my posts. The rest of the time I’m interacting with others or retweeting other people’s posts.
Generally speaking, if you’re not out to cause trouble or pick on any particular individual or group, you shouldn’t have any trouble with expressing your views. If, however, you want to be a jerk to other people, you only have yourself to blame if they pull the plug. There is no "both sides" to the Nazi (or other hate group) story; they want to encourage hate. Stuff ’em.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Right, neither one has an obligation to carry anything, and I never claimed they did. My point was merely that getting booted from Facebook would likely be more harmful to the average business or organization than getting booted from Cloudflare, and it’s therefore rather silly to argue that Cloudflare ought to be treated as some kind of government utility that is required to host any and all content solely because of the "harm" caused by getting booted.
In case you missed it, the first paragraph of my previous post was a quote that I was arguing against…
Re: Re:
"So are we, as liberals, supposed to tolerate the very people who are actively trying to kill us?"
We more or less have to tolerate them saying exactly that, for our own sake.
The alternative is that they still want to kill us but we never hear the threats.
THAT is the "why" on Free Speech.
Re: Re: Re:
Good point.
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Re: that one guy
Never Again!
https://forward.com/news/breaking-news/404278/israeli-man-convicted-for-serial-jcc-bomb-threats/
Our community is under constant and ever present threat so we must
threatenthemFIRST!
“A 19-year-old American-Israeli man was convicted of making hundreds of bomb threats to Jewish community centers and Jewish schools in the United States, and airlines.
Michael Kadar, who holds dual U.S.-Israeli citizenship and whose name is barred from publication in Israel, was convicted Thursday in Tel Aviv District Court on several counts including extortion, conspiracy to commit a crime, money laundering and assaulting a police officer, after the judge said he was competent to stand trial, saying that he understood that his actions were improper, despite the claims of defense psychologists that he is autistic and incompetent.
The hoax threats to the JCCs and other Jewish institutions in the first three months of 2017 forced widespread evacuations and raised fears of a resurgence in anti-Semitism”
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Re: Re:
Never Again!
Lets hate FIRST! Hate with Pride!
Be the first to hate, be the first to hit, let the next genocide be the one that WE liberals wage on “the Other! ”
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Re: Re:
YEAH, RIGHT?
Kill them, maim them, stalk THEM, hunt THEM FIRST.
you are so righteous, Ed. Mein Fuhrer!
ZiggunernachtAgain!
YOU are our leader!
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Re: Re:
Never Again!
Hate FIRST! Hit FIRST! Hate them MORE!®
As long as you hate, youre ok with me.
ADL♥ JDL 4EVER
Its a great business model.
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Re: Re: Re:
Yeah, but you cant infer a pattern, from just that one guy.
https://forward.com/news/breaking-news/404278/israeli-man-convicted-for-serial-jcc-bomb-threats/
A 19-year-old American-Israeli man was convicted of making hundreds of bomb threats to Jewish community centers and Jewish schools in the United States, and airlines.
Michael Kadar, who holds dual U.S.-Israeli citizenship and whose name is barred from publication in Israel….
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More lugenpresse
If you’d bothered to dig – which you didn’t because you hate anything right wing with a fanaticism usually reserved for suicide bombers – you’d find out that the "manifesto" which Cloudflare used as a pretense to deplatform 8chan was only online for about 7 minutes before it was removed by moderators.
Attempts to repost it were also stymied with deletions and bans.
The naked truth is that left wing lunatics are perfectly okay ignoring murder along as it is committed either by left wing operatives (antifa) or "minorities" such as blacks and hispanics (interesting to note, whites are only 8% of the world population. "majority" my ass)
Meanwhile you’ll use any excuse you can dream up to censor your opposition, while ignoring that 90% of mass murders are committed by either blacks or Muslims, and calling anyone who points out these facts racist or extremist.
You’re pathetic.
Re:
A few things.
Re: Re: Re:
Regarding 4, 73% of domestic terrorist acts in the USA for the last 10 years where perpetrated by white supremacists and other far right-wing groups.
The whole facts-alternative universe many conservatives and republicans live in today can be traced back to William F. Buckley Jr’s book God and Man at Yale, where he reasoned that "trying to reach the truth by constructing arguments out of facts – the premise of the Enlightenment; was a worse superstition than the Dark Age traditions the Enlightenment tried to root out" and "that consensus flew in the face of God’s laws" which led to his conclusion that "it was imperative to stop arguing based on facts, and simply promote a ‘Conservative’ view of the world by whatever means necessary", ie tell lies that fit the narrative.
It’s no wonder many conservatives can’t really connect with people who actually believe in doing due diligence when being presented with "facts".
Re: Re: Re: Re:
The whole facts-alternative universe many conservatives and republicans live in today can be traced back to William F. Buckley Jr’s book God and Man at Yale, where he reasoned that "trying to reach the truth by constructing arguments out of facts – the premise of the Enlightenment; was a worse superstition than the Dark Age traditions the Enlightenment tried to root out" and "that consensus flew in the face of God’s laws" which led to his conclusion that "it was imperative to stop arguing based on facts, and simply promote a ‘Conservative’ view of the world by whatever means necessary", ie tell lies that fit the narrative.
It’s no wonder many conservatives can’t really connect with people who actually believe in doing due diligence when being presented with "facts".
You’ve just explained why @RadioFreeTom blocked me for standing up for Greta Thunberg when his mad gang was slagging her off. You’ve also explained why David French complained about noted liar Kevin D. Williamson (who likes to pretend the UK’s NHS is a monopoly and there are no alternatives thereto, and who wants to restrict healthcare to the wealthy, who deserve it because they can afford it) being sacked from the National Review and why the National Review wouldn’t correct Williamson’s article despite the many times I pointed out the errors therein. As I’ve said many times I identify as conservative but the aversion many of them show to reality or facts that contradict their worldview is very off-putting.
For all their avowed insistence that they’re all about God and the Bible, I find it profoundly disturbing that at no point do any of them have a big mad moral panic over lying and mendacity in general. Nope, nothing to see here, move along. Sigh!
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
The reaction you got is not surprising at all, it’s an established fact that a majority of right-wing media/forums tend to punish people who tells the truth which doesn’t adhere to the current narrative.
Some right-wingers and conservatives will use the above statement to say that lefties/liberals do the same to right-wingers/conservatives who speak up. The problem with that is that when someone say things that are verifiable not true or taken entirely out of context and that person refuses to acknowledge that it’s not very surprising they are punished in one way or another by people who actually look for the truth.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
The reaction you got is not surprising at all, it’s an established fact that a majority of right-wing media/forums tend to punish people who tells the truth which doesn’t adhere to the current narrative.
And that’s a shame. If you can’t critique your own position (I’m forever having to do so with my own as new information comes in), it’s like you’re in a cult, or something. It’s creepy. That’s the issue I have with any True Believer type.
Some right-wingers and conservatives will use the above statement to say that lefties/liberals do the same to right-wingers/conservatives who speak up.
The socialist Dan Kervick has been retweeting outright blood libel against the Uighur people (they’ve supposedly been teaching kids to steal, Fagin-style) because his True Believer Actual left-wing good buddies think China is Da Bomb, or something — despite the fact that it’s actually more fascist than left wing these days, having fallen in love with Western capitalism. But… four legs good, or something. Amirite? So Danny toes the Actual Far Left line without comment. Honestly, for all the guff I’ve heard from the right about the so-called Radical Left, they don’t seem to know about this.
The problem with that is that when someone say things that are verifiabl[y] not true or taken entirely out of context and that person refuses to acknowledge that it’s not very surprising they are punished in one way or another by people who actually look for the truth.
Unless they’re in some kind of echo chamber that’s basically a mirror image of the right wing ones. They do exist, but on the actual Far Left, not the imaginary far left, which the rest of the world would consider the middle ground. As I said Dan Kervick’s feed is a classic example of this and I call the lies out where I see them. True Believer types aren’t interested in the truth, they just want to push their narrative.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
"For all their avowed insistence that they’re all about God and the Bible, I find it profoundly disturbing that at no point do any of them have a big mad moral panic over lying and mendacity in general. Nope, nothing to see here, move along. Sigh!"
There’s a cheap shot to be taken here about how the religious specifically are the low-hanging fruit when it comes to hypocrisy. When you spend so very much time denying factual reality in favor of faith-based explanations you have acquired all the mental tools required to reconcile what anyone else would call hypocrisy without ever encountering a single bout of cognitive dissonance on the way.
It’s why I consider the concept of "faith" to be one of the most harmful mental processes to be found.
Re: Re: Re:3 Re:
When you spend so very much time denying factual reality in favor of faith-based explanations you have acquired all the mental tools required to reconcile what anyone else would call hypocrisy without ever encountering a single bout of cognitive dissonance on the way.
I thought that meant "cognitive dissonance."
I don’t approve of denying factual reality in favour of faith-based explanations. I leave the faith-based explanations to those matters outside of established fact. So basically, I’m on board with climate change activists, etc. The way I see it, if you have to deny reality itself in order to promote a narrative based on a set of principles, you’re a liar and your principles are wrong. Get back to the drawing board, come up with principles that work in practice, and tell the truth.
Re: Re: Re:4 Re:
I leave the faith-based explanations to those matters outside of established fact
Any examples you might care to use to give us heathens and non-faithfuls a clue what that even means?
Like, that one time Bigfoots fur was tested against the fuzziness of the film that it was shot on, and then compared to the shroud of Turin where it was determined that these all matched at four points
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
You are spot on!
Those white terrorists need your keen observation!
Ich,Du, NOW!
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Re: Re: Re:
Fun fact: since 1970 antifa members have killed about a dozen people. The KKK has killed zero. That makes antifa more evil than the KKK. Feel good about yourself yet, pinko?
Re: Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Just shaddup with the
White Peeple Sheit
Your kind are not wanted here, until you give up that crazy shit about whiteness. We are all part Neanderthal, part Cromagnon, etc .
Start there with your race -based analysis, then move on to species, and then lets talk.
Re: More lugenpresse
"You’re pathetic"
Why do vampires not see themselves in a mirror?
Re: Re:
Because they don’t want to reflect on their bad decisions.
Re: Re: Re:
…I did not spend five seconds thinking up that awful pun to get an Insightful badge for it. ????
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
Fine, fine, have a "funny" vote.
Sheesh. Picky, picky, picky…
Re: More lugenpresse
“You’re pathetic.”
Why is it bro that you RWNJs are always basic bitch projectionists?
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Re: Re: More lugenpresse
I said – correctly – that you’re pathetic because none of you – not the author, nor you, nor AC@1:31 nor Stephen T Stone nor Rocky could actually argue with the substance of my post.
If you could, you would have – instead of (in one case) quibbling minutiae and in the other cases just calling me names without including any substantial points. (Namecalling is fine, if you couple it with actual fucking rebuttals or logic).
You can only repeat what you’re programmed to think. You can’t read, reason, or think for yourself. You have never done any amount of critical analysis of yourself or anything else. You are, in words other than mine, the useful idiots of the system.
Calling you an NPC is too generous: NPCs serve a constructive purpose. You just waste oxygen.
Re: Re: Re:
Bold of you to assume your post had any substance, but go off I guess.
Re: Re: Re:2 Re:
The mad racism is a massive turnoff.
Re: Re: Re: More lugenpresse
Poor little triggered baby. You got your ass handed you you ages ago bro. Right now we are just working out the tune details of exactly how much of a racist piece of shit you are. Also NPC really? That insult was lame six months go bro. But hey that for overusing the most overused RWNJ insult of the year you sad little hack.
Re: Re: Re: More lugenpresse
"You can only repeat what you’re programmed to think. You can’t read, reason, or think for yourself."
A refusal to accept an incarnation of Russel’s Teapot on a basis of bad arguments, outright falsehoods, and racist ideology is NOT programming.
And your problem seems to be precisely that we read, reason, and think for ourselves rather than allow someone like you to convince us of the plight of the poor benighted white folks living in ghettos under the constant oppression of the vast black fat cat majority.
I know that racists aren’t imaginative – it’s been proven time and time again – but surely by now you guys should at least have realized that most people won’t fall for Trump-style "pants-on-fire" rhetoric.
Re: Re: Re: More lugenpresse
They never address substance in any form. ever.
You can add Cockroft, Paul T., Scary Monastery, and so many shut ins, misanthropes, Aspies and others here.
This forum is an echo chamber for the gate keepers of the coming dark ages of free speech, courtesy of of the TD Do-nothing Party.
Re: More lugenpresse
If you’d bothered to dig – which you didn’t because you hate anything right wing with a fanaticism usually reserved for suicide bombers – you’d find out that the "manifesto" which Cloudflare used as a pretense to deplatform 8chan was only online for about 7 minutes before it was removed by moderators.
What does any of that have to do with the points of this post?
Attempts to repost it were also stymied with deletions and bans.
What does any of that have to do with the points of this post?
You seem mad that Cloudflare banned 8chan. That’s an opinion you are free to have. Yet the points you are raising are over that debate. Nothing in this post is about that debate.
The rest of your comment is just ignorant bigoted nutjob nonsense.
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Re: Re: More lugenpresse
first, let’s clarify some terms:
"bigoted" n. fails to show sufficient white guilt; shows any trace of race realism or critical thinking
"nutjob" n. hard hitting leftist term to discredit content they don’t like but can’t actually argue against
You ask what my post had to do with your article:
there is an old story that if you get a quote that it’s raining and a quote that it’s clear, you don’t print both – you open the fucking window and check which is the case.
You reprinted Cloudflare’s PR without any digging for the "dirt" so emblazoned on your site’s very apellation. If you were a responsible journalist, you would have done a deep dive into the /pol/ community – of which I am not a part – and learned some obvious things: first, they tend to treat people who advocate violence poorly – usually calling them "glowniggers" (3 letter agent provocateurs); second, they treat manifestos and the like with contempt; third, they tend to argue against violence in general as counterproductive.
While you could make the argument that 8ch was a "hateful" platform, the same could be said about twitter, who fails to ban or moderate posts openly calling for e.g. white genocide. Since you are supposedly a journalist, I will leave it as an exercise for your vaunted personage to research this matter – they aren’t difficult to find. In fact, the speech that is unmoderated on Twitter is far more violent and hateful than the speech that WAS moderated on 8ch. Yet nobody – cloudflare included – considers the idea of deplatforming Twitter.
This has two obvious ramifications: first, that the deplatforming of 8ch was completely political, and in no way motivated by "hate" or "violence".
Second, that Cloudflare is perfectly okay with hateful or violent speech so long as it aligns with their own values.
If you had wanted to conduct actual jouralism, you would have done your very best to understand both the subject and object of your story, their mutual positions and motivations, and what possible reasons could or could not have potentially underlaid Cloudflare’s decision – regardless of what they publicly stated.
The resulting article might not have been able to make specific allegations, but it could have, at the least, drawn a spotlight onto Cloudflare’s hypocrisy and the validity of their publicly averred reasons for censoring their ideological opposition.
You did none of that.
So far as my other commentary – that was because far, far more whites are killed on the basis of their race, every year, than all the politically motivated mass shooters have killed in history combined. It’s to highlight the incredbly irrelevant nature of the crime being used as a pretext to silence the right wing.
Not only that, but far more "minorities" kill EACH OTHER every month in the US than any mass shooter has killed in history combined – so even your concern about human safety and well being was exclusively limited to non whites, there would be vastly more productive avenues to pursue in upholding or preserving the sanctity of human life.
In other words, it was to demonstrate that your article had no redeeming features either as journalism, as analysis, or in a humanitarian capacity.
And thus the conclusion I posted as the final sentence.
Re: Re: Re: More lugenpresse
AC, did it occur to you that minorities killing each other as you state, are doing so because they lack other social opportunities; or that the USA and its western allies economies are based upon slavery, and servitude?
That their rebellions, like your own, are romper-stompered by a bigger collusion (and no, its not some Jewish conspiracy)?
While I disagree with much of what you say, its possible there is a better explanation than the one you are working from, so, if you are are still around, I would like to talk to you, offline.
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Re: Re: More lugenpresse
PS.
I am angry about 8ch being deplatformed, but not for the reasons you think: having 8/pol/ be semi accessible allowed it to be continually diluted by an influx of almost normal people who managed to keep the debate from spiralling too far out of control.
That self regulation mechanism is no longer present.
I fear for what will come of this – not for my sake, but for yours.
Warrant canary pages
Wouldn’t it be plausible, if not probable, that a judge issuing a warrant, or a government entity requesting one, include verbiage to the platform "<platform> shall not alter any public facing pages to indicate that this warrant has been issued". (Or something to that effect)
I’m sure that attorneys are aware of warrant canary pages and could possibly include that in their request, no?
Re: Warrant canary pages
1st Ammendment.
Everyone needs to reparse what Cloudflare is saying, and not saying.
The new canaries , 5,6,7 mention third party.
Note that third party was not applied to canaries 2 and 4.
There are likely third parties involved with regards to canaries 2 and 4, and legally, Cloudflare could not change canaries 2 and 4 to exclude third parties.
Re: Re: Warrant canary pages
There are obviously third parties involved in 2 and 4. Cloudflare is not a manufacturer nor does it do much (if any) hardware design, substantially all hardware installed on its network is third party. And while Cloudflare does produce some software, it would be fairly insane to expect that it wrote new software for every device it operates.
Re: Warrant canary pages
They could. However, the likelihood that the government compelling a private entity to lie would pass first amendment muster is vanishingly small, and when the "benefit" of the lie accrues entirely to the government (and is infinitesimal even to them) it would take such a monumental shift in first amendment jurisprudence that we might as well be talking about a completely different legal system.
Requiring specific true statements is also a very high bar: a handful of such requirements exist for the benefit of public health (warnings on health risks of certain products, allergy information on foods, an extremely limited number of requirements for medical practitioners). There are some other examples in different areas, but many of these tend to be less "you are required to say this in all circumstances" and more "if you don’t say this, then you have greater liability if your customer sues you in civil court."
Re: Re: Warrant canary pages
It seems to me, if a judge puts a gag order in, the canary would be null and void. The judge could look at the removal of a canary as breaking the gag order. If not, you could predict if a judge might issue a gag order in a case and create a canary for it ahead of time.
Speech removal as speech.
IANAL but I coulda been.
Re: Re: Re: Warrant canary pages
Canary ideally works because you say the same message every day. Today I said "I have never been told by the government to remove content" tomorrow I say "No Comment".
To simplify things every time I call your web server is a new invocation of speech independent of the last call. So when the phrase is removed from the page, you can parse that the government has told me to do something and if asked I would respond with "No Comment" as per my gag order.
I could just as easily tweet the message daily, post time stamped webpages or anything else. The gag order only prevents me from saying something, not the absence of a statement.
Re: Re: Re:2 Saying it every day.
A company can datestamp your warrant canary page, as of 2019-12-29 this page is current.
And then cease updating as soon as they got a gag order.
Then, either the page gets stale, or the page’s disclosures are edited to suit the new situation, or the court has to command the company to lie on its warrant canary website.
Given that several states require abortion providers to lie to their patients before engaging in certain procedures, I assume we’ve already established states can force persons to lie.
Kudos to Cloudflare for thinking hard about this.
I think the best solution here is transparency:
"We have never:
.
.
.
.
[] Except for the following: [explicit list]"
I don’t see anything wrong with taking down sites (a) at the whim of the provider (they’re a private firm, they don’t owe service to anybody), or (b) due to political pressure, if that pressure is in accordance with law. Obeying the law is obeying political pressure, after all. You can’t take the stand that you’re going to disobey the law no matter what (not and expect to get away with it).
But you can make it transparent what you’ve done (and ideally, why). That should give their customers the confidence they need to do business with them.
If/when they get a NSL or equivalent that doesn’t allow them to say they’ve done something, then is the time to take down the canary altogether.
BTW – a major typo in Cloudflare’s statement:
"In August 2019, Cloudflare terminated service to 8chan based on their failure to moderate their hate-filled platform in a way that inspired murderous acts. "
I think they mean they did it because 8chan DID moderate their platform that way (not because they failed to).
Borrowing a page from polygraph testing
These are the incidents in which we took down content for what might have been due to political pressure
<list>
Other than these specific incidents, this business has never terminated a customer or taken down content due to political pressure as of its incorporation on 1941-12-07.
This still works as a canary since a new incident would require either a new report or the canary being taken down.
Warrant canary pages
1st Ammendment.
Everyone needs to reparse what Cloudflare is saying, and not saying.
The new canaries , 5,6,7 mention third party.
Note that third party was not applied to canaries 2 and 4.
There are likely third parties involved with regards to canaries 2 and 4, and legally, Cloudflare could not change canaries 2 and 4 to exclude third parties.
Cloudflare abandons Switter due to FOSTA-Does that kill a canary
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I despise Cloudflare and wish them dead ....
If/when I can block them and never use them again – will happen near instantly. For now at least, must rely on Tor to outline who is using their service.
Use Cloudflare – no business from here…….
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Deplatforming is evil ......
Your bullshit justifications are nonsense.
Remember that scene from "Falling Down"?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLmuF-0P4tk
Re:
I have a question aimed at the root of your “deplatforming is evil” statement: At what point does indifference (i.e., ignoring a platform you host that exists only to spread hate and harm) turn into malice (i.e., active aid for that platform and its mission)?
Re: Re: Re:
Moreover, at what point is it reasonable for someone to decide that being made the butt of jokes by a group of repulsive bigots laughing at how said target of mockery is supporting them by inaction simply isn’t worth it?
If someone’s all but daring you to do something they don’t get to expect to be taken seriously when they then start whining that you called their bluff and did the action in question.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Your argument is nearly identical to every lynching that ever happened in America:
Emmet Till wuz askin fer it!
Signed –
ResearchOrganizedGangStalking
for the win
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
I dare you to jump off a cliff.
Your argument is nearly identical to every lynching that ever happened in America, to whit:
Emmet Till wuz askin fer it!
Signed –
ResearchOrganizedGangStalking
for the win
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Make my case for me.
I love it when your types become my servants.
Signed,
Golem
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Re: Re: Re: Re:slippery logic that enables online mobs
This, right here:
someone’s all but daring you to do something they don’t get to expect to be taken seriously when they then start whining
The good news, though, is that I finally got a bullet proof monument that even Techdirts K4 online mob of flaggers and derailers cant shoot through.
Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
"Deplatforming is evil"
How so, and what magnitude?
How does this evil compare to other more well known evils?
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Re: Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
Never Again! ….
Shall we lose control of our lockup on Techdirts discussion forum!
ROGS Bingo:
1-an actual online mob
2-patently false allegations and slander
3- ritual defamation
4- the un -naming of a man
5-etc.
ADLLUVS❤JDL4EVER
https://www.catholicamericanthinker.com/Rabbi-Meir-Kahane-Open-Letter.html
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Re: Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
Argumentum ad false binary
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Re: Re: Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
I think this guy needs even MORE online harassment:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Ryne_Goldberg
….oh, never mind.
The other good guys and gallies got there first *
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Re: Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
EXACTLY!
Holodmor
UselssEaters
AntiShemitististicismiclsims!
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Ryne_Goldberg
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Re: Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
other, more well known evils?
[Citation Missing ]
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Re: Re: Re: Deplatforming is evil ......
Why does one need a citation in order to ask a question?
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Re: Re: Re:2 Deplatforming is evil ......
Read TD more often AC, cuz over half of the commentators routinely ask for citations -and then, flag and flamebait and derail anything that hurtz their feelz, or challenges their #fakeleft establishment mantras.
So, yeah, um, can you guess which tragedy is somehow more hurtzfeelz than the ongoing genocides of Native Americans
and other indigenous populations, or depleted uranium dropped on kids playgrounds in the ME?
https://www.history.com/news/native-americans-genocide-united-states
Hint: tribal-ethnic-religious white supremacy is involved
Feeds
I do note "Provided any law enforcement organization a feed of our customers’ content transiting our network" does not include a feed of requests for customer content.
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Re: Feeds
It also does not address the fact that ALL raw data passing through the USA is handed over directly to Israel via the NSA.
Wut? ! The sky IS falling, and I am watching it, and doing nothing about it, SOON!
(thinking to myself: those bastards have me on videotape in my fucking bathroom…. )
Re: Re:
[desperately seeking citation]
(Also please get help, R/O/G/S.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Are you dead yet?
Just DO it
Go kill yourself already.
You are garbage. No one likes you.
DO IT
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You are not just an actual liar, but an obvious coward.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/11/nsa-americans-personal-data-israel-documents
The National Security Agency routinely shares raw intelligence data with Israel without first sifting it to remove information about US citizens, a top-secret document provided to the Guardian by…
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Yeah, but deplatform something something, just that one guy through the cracks, s /th s /th
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joshua_Ryne_Goldberg
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FLAG HARDER! DERAIL MORE! ©
NEVER AGAIN SHALL THE PEOPLE CONNECT THE DOTS!
https://in.reuters.com/article/usa-security-snowden-israel/nsa-passes-unsifted-intelligence-to-israel-british-paper-idINDEE98B06J20130912
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RE: Techdirt crybullies and Squad 8200
Well, that whole “Qanon ” conspiracy theory, and who it is behind #deplatforming
…meh. Mr. Eichenwald was doing research when he met a young boy in distress:
http://www.generationq.net/articles/Justin-Berry-Sex-Lies-and-Videotape.html
CrybullyHarder
GoSquad 8200!
NeverAgain
will the Kahanists lose control of Techdirts comment forum!
whoever they are.
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KEPRT: Lsten, I think that Squad 8200 and the Kahanists are doing a great job here, we dont have to do a thing
Kurt: If I could only make it make it back into the big time again!
KERPT: Well, you could crybully harder…or maybe attack a teenager from the Parkland shooting?
Influence Operations Manager: You know, this might be risky, but Kurt, you could just come clean about this here:…
Kurt Eichenwald Pays Young Boy In Advance on a Great Fakescoop
http://www.generationq.net/articles/Justin-Berry-Sex-Lies-and-Videotape.html
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Techdirt online mobbing
Did someone ask for data about the NSA sending raw, unfilered data about Americans to Israel, who then target and harass online speakers?
Here, this should be helpful:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/11/nsa-americans-personal-data-israel-documents
The National Security Agency routinely shares raw intelligence data with Israel without first sifting it to remove information about US citizens, a top-secret document provided to the Guardian by…
You have no idea how much I cry everynight, when I ssee my image reposted online, over, and over.
When I was young, everyone called me a star, but then Kurt Eichenwald dragged me before Congress (after paying me a few grand ) and then, everyone called me an asterisk wutever that means