Mark Zuckerberg may be a mediocre sociopath with criminally stupid theories of human interaction that he imposes on 2.6 billion people, but he is an unerring bellwether for policies that will enhance Facebook's monopoly power.
Pay attention whenever Zuck proposes a "solution" to the problems he caused (not just because creating a problem in no way qualifies you to solve that problem) - the only "problem" he wants to solve is, "How do I monopolize all human interaction?"
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CDA230 is among the only good technology laws the US Congress ever adopted, and without it, no one would ever host your complaint about a business, your #MeToo whistleblowing, your negative reviews or your images of official corruption or police violence.
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The GOP hates 230 because it lets online platforms delete disinformation and hate speech without obliging them to have a "fairness doctrine" rebuttal (e.g. deleting both Trump's exhortations to inject bleach AND messages from doctors saying *don't inject bleach!*).
The right hates 230 because their 40 year program to create unlimited corporate power by nerfing antitrust law has created...unlimited corporate power, which is sometimes wielded against them.
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Rather than limiting corporate power, they wanna make it possible for plutes to sue Big Tech platforms for shadowbanning them. This is standard cognitive dissonance nonsense, and par for the course for Reagan's brainchildren.
But in a weird reversal, progressives have picked up on this, joining hands across the aisle to demand the right to sue platforms for things users say, despite the fact that this is a gift to giant corporations and ruthless plutes who want to silence their critics.
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Seriously. CDA230 is 26 words long. It's not hard to understand. if you think abolishing CDA230 will hurt Facebook, you've been fooled. Just read this:
If that doesn't convince you, consider this: Zuck wants to get rid of CDA230, too.
Zuck does not propose rules that hurt Zuck.
Zuck is an unreliable narrator, but his regulatory proposals for Facebook are unswervingly perfect indicators of "Things that benefit Facebook."
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Here's Zuck's proposal: CDA230 should only apply to platforms that use "best practices" to eliminate bad speech. What's a "best practice?" It's what the "industry leaders" do. Who's an "industry leader?"
Facebook.
Zuck's proposal then, is, "To solve the problems Facebook creates, we should mandate that everyone do what Facebook is doing."
There's two big problems with this.
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First, Facebook sucks. The "AI filters" and army of moderators its uses to moderate content are tuna nets that catch entire pods of dolphins.
Consider three sentences:
I. Shut up, you [racial epithet]!
II. Then he told me, "shut up, you [racial epithet!" and,
III. "The candidate is his campaign because it was reported that he told a message-board user, 'shut up, you [racial epithet]!"
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No filter can decide which of these to block. Indeed, human moderators often get this wrong.
https://pluralistic.net/2021/01/09/the-old-crow-is-getting-slow/#deplatforming
If you hate Facebook's moderation, I invite you to consider that the problem isn't that FB isn't trying hard enough - it's that making speech judgments about the discourse of 2.6b people in 150 countries speaking hundreds of languages is an impossible job.
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This is such a shameless piece of self-serving bullshit, it should be comic. But it's not. It's terrifying. It's exactly the kind of "solution" that low-information lawmakers love - something that lets them "get tough on a bad actor" without risking campaign contributions.
Don't be bamboozled. Please. The answer to Facebook will not come from Facebook. You can't fix something from the inside that shouldn't exist in the first place.
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Facebook doesn't have a "Nazi problem" or a "disinformation problem." It has a *Facebook problem*.
The answer to Facebook is giving the public technological self-determination. Use interoperability so FB can't hold our friends hostage anymore. Force breakups so FB can't use predatory acquisitions to deprive us of choice. Block mergers.
https://www.eff.org/wp/interoperability-and-privacy
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But don't address Big Tech by making Bigness a requirement to simply operate online.
Image: Brian Solis (modified):
https://www.flickr.com/photos/briansolis/2696198607
CC BY:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
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@pluralistic Is there an uninterrupted version f this somplace? I sympathize with the amount of your thought, but Twitter/-Mastodo-style text limits also interrupt the thought of the reader eventually. Thanx in advance.
@jayrope Cory usually summarizes his Twittter/Masto threads later at https://pluralistic.net. The website is Tracker Free!™️ @pluralistic
@FerdiZ @pluralistic Thanx Ferdi, i know the site, but didn't, why the posting isn't there yet. Now i do :)
@jayrope Cory hasn't made a summary yet at Pluralistic; but he has compiled this thread though, on his personal Tumblr:
https://mostlysignssomeportents.tumblr.com/post/646561864002781184/zuckerpunch
A Pluralistic summary will come later in the day, I'd imagine.
@pluralistic
In the meantime... perhaps just stop using Facebook.
@pluralistic Right there is the reason.
Today, Zuckerberg is testifying about his monopoly power to Congress. Hours before he went on air, he released a proposal to "fix Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act."
https://www.theverge.com/2021/3/24/22348238/zuckerberg-dorsey-pichai-section-230-hearing-misinformation
CDA230 is the rule that says that the people who publish unlawful speech should be accountable for it - not the service providers that hosted the speech (but it *does* allow online services to moderate speech it finds offensive).
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