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redslazer | 5 years ago
One of the things FB is removing is “ Calls for protests — even peaceful ones — if they violate the curfew in DC”. Not many years ago we as lauded the ability of social media to galvanise protest against tyrannical regimes (eg the Arab Springs). Currently FB is removing calls to protests against decisions we agree with but what happens when we need to protest again things that we do not agree with? Does FB become the arbiter of what we are allowed to protest and what not?
gnicholas|5 years ago
Perhaps FB is not afraid of being defanged (pun intended) by Republicans, since they won’t control the House, Senate, or White House.
disgrunt|5 years ago
No, those Antifa protests mere months ago were rushing the White House. But that's OK because Trump. [0] [1] [2]
How is one supposed to process such brazen hypocrisy?
Edit: Since I've been flagged for this comment, I'm adding links to video of the violence and destruction in front of the White House seven months ago. Don't remember these people being called "insurgents".
[0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KeITz_JYQE [1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CERQjWhIIfY [2]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOl2nHMDO7E
adventured|5 years ago
Antifa and BLM protestors were attacking Federal property in DC. They were tearing down Federal statues and publicly threatening to stage attacks on monuments.
Facebook is openly taking political sides. They're doing it now because Trump is essentially out of office, so Zuckerberg can safely expire his pact with Trump for FB to attempt to remain neutral.
notatoad|5 years ago
no, they become the arbiter of what you are allowed to do on facebook. there exists a whole world outside of facebook, they only control their product.
um_ya|5 years ago
starkd|5 years ago
ethbr0|5 years ago
There's a pretty straight line for them to deliver value through it via crowd sourcing, in a way they're uniquely positioned to.
Instead, the current implementation is basically a Section 230 PR stunt to deflect public outrage ('Sure we have terrible things on our platform, but see, they have a warning!').
runarberg|5 years ago
I think we undervalue the amount of mobilization during the BLM protests that happened out side of social media, e.g. simple pamphlets, word of mouth, words on the radio, printed words, static ads and propaganda, etc.
drawfloat|5 years ago
We're pushing a decade from when these were now, and everything since then demonstrates malicious actors (be they state or private) quickly turned the tables and got the upper hand on the use of social media.
We need to stop holding up things that happened (and largely failed, but that's not the fault of social media) nearly a decade ago as evidence we shouldn't change things now. These networks are changing and developing fast, the Facebook of today is wildly different to the Facebook of 2011.
If the end result is Facebook is no longer an avenue for anyone to organise on, so be it. They've shown they're unable to properly moderate and handle that power.
eyelidlessness|5 years ago
vagrantJin|5 years ago
That's a can of worms.
raverbashing|5 years ago
chrismcb|5 years ago
themaninthedark|5 years ago
bpodgursky|5 years ago