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Electronic Frontier Foundation The Internet Technology

Did the Early Internet Activists Blow It? (slate.com) 128

Mike Godwin, the first staff counsel of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, writes in a column: Another thing we clearly got wrong is how large platforms would rise to dominate their markets -- even though they never received the kind of bespoke regulated-monopoly partnership with governments that, generations before, the telephone companies had received. In most of today's democracies, Google dominates search and Facebook dominates social media. In less-democratic nations, counterpart platforms -- like Baidu and Weibo in China or VK in Russia -- dominate their respective markets, but their relationships with the relevant governments are cozier, so their market-dominant status isn't surprising. We didn't see these monopolies and market-dominant players coming, although we should have. Back in the 1990s, we thought that a thousand website flowers would bloom and no single company would be dominant. We know better now, particularly because of the way social media and search engines can built large ecosystems that contain smaller communities -- Facebook's Groups is only the most prominent example. Market-dominant players face temptations that a gaggle of hungry, competitive startups and "long tail" services don't, and we'd have done better in the 1990s if we'd anticipated this kind of consolidation and thought about how we might respond to it as a matter of public policy. We should have -- the concern about monopolies, unfair competition, and market concentration is an old one in most developed countries -- but I have no reflexive reaction either for or against antitrust or other market-regulatory approaches to address this concern, so long as the remedies don't create more problems than they solve.

What's new and more troubling is the revival of the idea, after more than half a century of growing freedom-of-expression protections, that maybe there's just too much free speech. There's a lot to unpack here. In the 1990s, social conservatives wanted more censorship, particularly of sexual content. Progressive activists back then generally wanted less. Today, progressives frequently argue that social media platforms are too tolerant of vile, offensive, hurtful speech, while conservatives commonly insist that the platforms censor too much (or at least censor them too much). Both sides miss obvious points. Those who think there needs to be more top-down censorship from the tech companies imagine that when censorship efforts fail, it means the companies aren't trying hard enough to enforce their content policies. But the reality is that no matter how much money and manpower (plus less-than-perfect "artificial intelligence") Facebook throws at curating hateful or illegal content on its services, and no matter how well-meaning Facebook's intentions are, a user base edging toward 3 billion people is always going to generate hundreds of thousands, and perhaps millions, of false positives every year. On the flip side, those who want to restrict companies' ability to censor content haven't given adequate thought to the consequences of their demands. If Facebook or Twitter became what Sen. Ted Cruz calls a "neutral public forum," for example, they might become 8chan writ large. That's not very likely to make anyone happier with social media.

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Did the Early Internet Activists Blow It?

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  • I'm not too fond of where the EFF has gone or Slashdot for that matter.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      That probably says more about you, than either of those two things.

      I remember Slashdot 15 - 20 years ago, where comments were constant in condemning the politics of fear after 9/11 to push hate and unsavoury laws, condemning Sony for their root kitted music CDs, complete anger at Valve forcing you to register games via Steam rather than just being able to install a game and play it and so on.

      Nowadays there's not much else other than bootlickers supporting the politics of fear by parroting the usual lines ab

    • (Just a CC of my comment on the original website.)

      The google has been ramming this opinion piece at me for some days now. It would be nice to know why the google is trying to manipulate me into reading this piece, but that's not how the google rolls. Quite possibly yet another abuse of my privacy based on long forgotten records of discussions involving me and jm (one of Mike's handles) and others back in the '80s. Mike has made it quite clear in the years since then that he thinks we have nothing further to

  • All the stuff the EFF supposedly didn't see coming is rewriting history. There would've been no .com domain if we didn't know about commercial interests, there were social networks and chat groups from the very beginning (IRC) and commercializing them has been going on for decades.

    • As long as a) people voluntarily join these services, and b) it is not illegal to advise them against doing so, there is no problem.

      • The whole shtick against content providers is a poorly disguised call for censorship, to take our eyes off the real monopoly of service provision, where your entire connection is held hostage.

        • In my opinion, the Internet would have flourished if it had not been released from the NSFnet. Had the universities and libraries been the routers and providers through dial-up and later DSL technologies, there still would have been progress with the share of information. What would have been different however is that the NSF strictly forbade any commercial interest. That means no buying or selling, but we couldn't allow that in this consumerist society.

          So here comes Al Gore, the inventor of the Internet,

    • by I75BJC ( 4590021 )
      No one foresaw what the "internets" would become. Not even DARPA, the Knight that started http:/// [http] or anybody.

      The "internets" is a great, big series of unintended consequences and collateral damage.
      Mixed in the "bad", is some inestimably, good, helpful and wonderful stuff! Lest we forget!
    • If you notice, this article focuses on the Web. Everyone conflates the Internet as equaling the Web, which is not true.
    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @06:55PM (#59737798) Journal
      Yeah, in 1995 you thought one search engine would get the vast majority of traffic (other than a small percentage who get pushed into Bing?) All through the 90s, I was pretty sure there would be a large collection of search engines to choose from, and certainly the market is large enough to support it.

      On top of that, did you also think that same company would own the largest advertising network, and the largest video collection, and the OS with the largest install base, and also be competing to be the top home automation company?

      Because I would have said that seems rather unlikely. Turns out it's not unlikely.
      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        I wish I had spotted this story earlier. Already on the edge of expiration.

        If your reference to "you" is to Godwin, then I can go back before 1995, when both of us were living in Austin and meeting with various other friends for meals and drinks... My main reaction is that Godwin doesn't seem to have learned much in all those years. He was always big on trivia, but never seemed able to see the forest for the trees.

        Then again, I'm living in the glass house, too, so I better stop with the stones. My problem i

  • we thought that a thousand website flowers would bloom and no single company would be dominant.

    Well! The ISPs thought differently, didn't they? If/when we get around them, and there will be a zillion *website flowers*, more like website weeds, but at least the system would be open to everybody on equal footing.

    • I think when AOL, the safe alternative to the internet didn't take off, people thought that kind of shit was over. But then facebook came along and got popular with folks who want to show baby pictures to each other. This happened at the same time it finally got easy enough for grandma to actually get on the internet, or at least onto facebook and see the pix.

      Then you add mega-profits from advertising and everyone wants to get in on the act.

      Why did YouTube get so big? Free postings from people that othe
      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        The Web exists for content. If you have a connection with no content, you don't have something useful.

        AOL failed because it was too slow. If they worked harder at trying to connect with content, rather than trying to monetize it, they'd have lasted longer. But the Internet moved and changed faster than AOL, so anyone on AOL was paying $25 a month for "free" email. People realized this and dropped AOL. AOL also didn't work on moving to DSL (outside a few major cities), so was stuck as "slow" dial-up.
  • Just like we saw with Windows, inertia in a market matters. Prior to Linux having inertia, Windows was largely it and MS used their weight. If someone wants to step into the game for anyone of these other players, they need to have the money, will power, a differentiated idea and time to spend supplanting Google, Facebook and others. Good luck finding funding for taking those companies on.

  • by Mr307 ( 49185 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @04:05PM (#59737256)

    Free speech advocates absolutely know the tradeoffs and overwhelmingly they support more freedom and less censorship.

    BECAUSE history has shown us every time where there is a framework for censorship for any spurious reason, someone who disagrees with YOU will use it to stop your speech when its convenient for them.

    Sooner or later someone who disagrees with you will have the power and will use this stupid idea to stop your speech.

    • BECAUSE history has shown us every time where there is a framework for censorship for any spurious reason, someone who disagrees with YOU will use it to stop your speech when its convenient for them.

      I was thinking the same thing, only probably not the same way you were. The term "internet activists" immediately draws parallels in my head with hacktivism, which I never thought was morally acceptable. Even on slashdot I debated with people who thought it was acceptable to DDoS walmart's website simply because you don't like them. A website, even if it allows commerce, is still a form of speech.

      Nonetheless, those same hactivists were the pioneers that showed what kind of effect a DDoS can have, and becaus

    • All of the worst totalitarian regimes started with or later included suppression of speech. It's one of the hallmark characteristics of a oppressive regime.

      It must be fought at every stage.

  • The Left are worse (Score:2, Insightful)

    by mi ( 197448 )

    There's a lot to unpack here. In the 1990s, social conservatives wanted more censorship, particularly of sexual content. Progressive activists back then generally wanted less. Today, progressives frequently argue that social media platforms are too tolerant of vile, offensive, hurtful speech

    Mr. Goodwin tries to present "both" sides as equally at fault, which they aren't.

    Because, the Conservatives' censorship effort was against porn itself, not the discussion of it (That they may well have had a point [bbc.com] is ano

    • shut even the discussion

      And that's free speech and free association too. That you won't be arrested for speaking doesn't mean that you have a right to compel people to listen to you, to have them treat your ideas with respect, to have them continue to employ you or do business with you or interact with you at all, or to not be shouted down by others who disagree with you.

      The right is worse because they seek to compel people to speak or not speak as the powerful command, using the apparatus of government. The left is simply speak

      • by mi ( 197448 )

        That you won't be arrested for speaking

        Ah, but you can be — if not now, then soon [washingtonpost.com].

        And what's, perhaps, worse is that your employer can already be compelled to fire you — because, if they don't, the government will gleefully help the offended coworker sue the employer for "failing to address hostile work-environment [hracuity.com]" or some such B.S.

        The right is worse because they seek to compel people to speak or not speak as the powerful command

        No, they don't.

        using the apparatus of government

        Nope, with the pos

        • by cpt kangarooski ( 3773 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @11:41PM (#59738374) Homepage

          Nope, with the possible exception of the actual pornography, this has never happened

          In the late 18th century there were federal laws against sedition.
          In the early 19th century, the US Mail would not carry abolitionist content to the South.
          In the early 20th century federal laws against sedition came back as well as laws against speaking and teaching German. There was also widespread censorship of films by various government bodies; depicting things like pregnant women, or smoking, were known to be banned in some areas.
          In the mid-20th century there were federal laws against advocating for the overthrow of the government.
          The Nixon administration famously tried to engage in prior restraint of newspapers.

          And of course let's not forget about laws against blasphemy and the old days when truth was not a defense to libel; what mattered was simply whether you had besmirched the reputation of your betters.

          You may wish to do something about your ignorance before attempting to press forward with your ill-thought out claim.

          No, that's your kind's trait -- what you like ought to be mandatory, what you hate ought to be illegal.

          And what, precisely, is my 'kind'? And where did I advocate for making any speech illegal?

          You did convince me of one thing: You are an asshole -- I've no more need to couch it with 'may.'

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @04:13PM (#59737294)

    ... that maybe there's just too much free speech ...

    There has always been a sh*t-ton of crackpot BS or political fabrications. Absolutely nothing new here.

    What is different is that there is too little critical thinking. People judging something by the kind heart or good intentions behind it, or that if its aligned with their politics regardless of the "speech's" validity, or the it sounds nice, or that the person who said something was cute. Basically its that people are far more gullible today, even more easily tricked.

    Again, its not like cons didn't exist in the past. Its just that they are easier to sell today.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by LordAba ( 5378725 )

      ... that maybe there's just too much free speech ...

      There has always been a sh*t-ton of crackpot BS or political fabrications. Absolutely nothing new here.

      The major difference is that it is easier than ever to enter a bubble. Which is both good and bad, as most things are. Trans community? Great! Meet someone who accepts you for that. Questioning if you are trans? Have an issue about biological men in women's sports? Wondering if there are an scientific indicators for trans behaviors? Good luck getting anything meaningful out of the same community.

    • people are far more gullible today

      Nawh. The term "snake oil salesman" goes back to late 1800's. And you can ferret out swindles and stupid concepts all the way back in written history. One of the Babylonian tablets is a complaint from one man writing about being cheated. Major gullible concepts go back even further.

      • by drnb ( 2434720 )

        people are far more gullible today

        Nawh. The term "snake oil salesman" goes back to late 1800's. And you can ferret out swindles and stupid concepts all the way back in written history. One of the Babylonian tablets is a complaint from one man writing about being cheated. Major gullible concepts go back even further.

        You are conflating gullibility's historical existence with today's level of gullibility. Its not that it is new, its that it is at a record level.

        The term "snake oil salesman" is alluding to the suspicions, doubts, of past generations. I'm not sure how that counters the notion that today's denizens of the digital world have less suspicion and doubt than past generations.

  • I can only speak for the US, but the fact that the legislature hasn't passed any meaning legislation regarding regulation of these tech/internet giants is the real issue here. They still willfully ignore tax loop holes, haven't codified free speech online, repealed net neutrality, no comprehensive privacy laws, no anti-trust action, no minimum wage reform, no contract worker reform, etc.
    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Why do you need legislation for any of that? The first amendment regulates free speech, net neutrality was called common carrier - until Obama regulated what a common carrier can not get in trouble for, we have privacy laws - the 4th amendment, what does minimum wage have to do with the Internet and why regulate contract workers - they enter into a contract, government has no business or rights there.

  • by xack ( 5304745 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @04:19PM (#59737320)
    Look at Wikipedia, the largest “open” website on the web. It has a central control structure of a few hundred admins who revert and block people who disagree with them and they censor information as “not-notable”. Even on smaller wikis with less restrictive notability policies I notice they tend to be got bought up by companies like Wikia aka Fandom to monetize and extract private data. Also I hate the increasing reliance of the internet on sites like Reddit and Quora which are both trying to get you off the open web and into a closed app environment. Even on non apped sites the web browsers themselves are under attack with a Blink/Gecko duopoly and forks like Waterfox getting bought up for monetization. The fact Microsoft of Internet Explorer fame doesn’t develop their own independent engine anymore is the most troubling of all.

    We need a new revolution on the internet, but people would rather get obese on Google-aid instead of drinking healthy web sites.
  • The early Internet didn't allow commercial activities. You couldn't buy and sell things.

      It was for education and research (and fun)

    Once commercial access to the Internet was "allowed", the future became quite predictable, quite quickly. "There's gold in them there wires!"

  • NAT is cancer (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nyet ( 19118 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @04:31PM (#59737374) Homepage

    > Back in the 1990s, we thought that a thousand website flowers would bloom

    NAT/IPMasqm, the cost of static IPs, and asymmetrical bandwidth from ISPs put the nail in this coffin.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Hosting has never been cheaper. Free for most content.

      Running a site from home was never a good option. Low availablity and slow response times, easy to Slashdot.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It is lucky that any free Internet lasted for as long as it did. It was just sheer luck that ISPs won the race, otherwise we would be doing "internet" stuff on cable set-top boxes, paying for E-mail "stamps", and paying for online hours used, with little to no advancements.

    It was also luck that the CDA got stuck down. The original drafts of that document were Draconian, where if someone sent a message with curse words passed through your network, the sender, receiver, and everyone in between could go to U

  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @04:43PM (#59737416)
    The level playing field of the Internet is that anyone can purchase hosting and a domain name relatively cheaply, and put together a site offering some sort of service. The thing is, 99.9% of people are too lazy to do this, and would rather use a site someone else has put together rather than build one of their own for other people to use.

    Likewise, there was nothing stopping sites on the .edu or .org domain from coming up with a good, easy-to-use, free social media service like Facebook. In face Facebook started off as a service on a .edu site. The difference was 99.9% of people who were capable of putting together a Facebook-like service, were too lazy to do it, and would rather use one that someone else built. There was a story (on Wired I think?) way back in the day about how Shawn Fanning made Napster. File distribution was done on a client-server model back then. He was hit with the inspiration of peer-to-peer file sharing. But unlike 99.9% of people who get hit with such inspiration and don't act on it, he stayed up for several days straight coding it. He was paranoid that someone else would come up with the same idea and beat him to it. That fear allowed him to overcome the innate laziness in all of us.

    Google, Facebook, Apple, etc. exploit our laziness, offering us easy-to-use stuff, then data-mining it or charging us up the wazoo for it. Open source advocates could've done the same, except based on my observation, their laziness is with dealing with users and accepting their feedback into their products. OSS prefers to noble/serf model, where the coders can do whatever they want, and serfs are merely people who exist to worship them and whose opinions are unworthy of consideration. Compare this to the commercial model where the coders' paychecks depends on satisfying the users, so the users actually hot the sway over the coders (albeit insulated by several layers of management).

    In the 1990s, social conservatives wanted more censorship, particularly of sexual content. Progressive activists back then generally wanted less. Today, progressives frequently argue that social media platforms are too tolerant of vile, offensive, hurtful speech, while conservatives commonly insist that the platforms censor too much (or at least censor them too much).

    Your error is in trying to break it down into conservative vs progressive.

    PEOPLE want more censorship of ideas they disagree with, less censorship of ideas they disagree with. This is why one of the tenets of freedom of speech in the 20th century (which sadly seems to have been lost among people who grew up in the 21st century) was "I disagree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." It signified how the concept of Freedom of Speech was orthogonal to personal beliefs. The principle is that people always have the right to speak their mind without fear of reprisal (sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me), it's only when they act upon disagreeable speech that we take steps to counter them.

    But the current PC trend of shaming and silencing opponents has completely thrown those concepts out, and ushered in a second age of McCarthyism. Where mere association with unpopular ideas (Communism back then) was enough to get you fired, blacklisted from jobs, friends to stop associating with you. Popularity shouldn't matter. Free speech is only free speech if it applies to everyone and to all ideas regardless of how popular or mainstream they are.

    • It hails back to when people didn't worry about TL;DR responses and actually thought out their arguments.

      I also agree with the concept 100%. The "natural man" in all of us want to feel good about what others are saying and have to put in as little effort as possible thinking about it.

      Free speech is only free speech if it applies to everyone and to all ideas regardless of how popular or mainstream they are.

      That requires effort - so why even bother to listen to it when a simple swipe makes the dissonant op

    • The principle is that people always have the right to speak their mind without fear of reprisal

      People should definitely have the right to speak their mind without fear of reprisal from the government. But people who speak their mind and the people who hear it have equal amounts of freedom: freedom to speak out against the person speaking and their views, even to the extent of shouting them down; freedom to refuse to assist in spreading speech by deplatforming them; freedom to refuse to listen; freedom to refuse to associate with people they dislike or disagree with by blackballing and boycotting th

      • "shouting them down" = preventing someone's free speech. Yeah, no. Piss on that.
        • It's not. It's talking while they're talking, and talking louder. There's no rule that says free speech requires taking turns, or being polite. It's nice to be polite, but never mandatory and sometimes not a good plan.

          • by Zak3056 ( 69287 )

            Then there came a moment when the first shock had worn off and when, in spite of everything-in spite of their terror of the dogs, and of the habit, developed through long years, of never complaining, never criticising, no matter what happened-they might have uttered some word of protest. But just at that moment, as though at a signal, all the sheep burst out into a tremendous bleating of- "Four legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better! Four legs good, two legs better!" It went on for five

    • by jeremyp ( 130771 )

      Likewise, there was nothing stopping sites on the .edu or .org domain from coming up with a good, easy-to-use, free social media service like Facebook

      You mean apart from the enormous cost of the server hardware, bandwidth and programming time?

    • The level playing field of the Internet is that anyone can purchase hosting and a domain name relatively cheaply, and put together a site offering some sort of service. The thing is, 99.9% of people are too lazy to do this, and would rather use a site someone else has put together rather than build one of their own for other people to use.

      This is a little disingenuous, and unnecessarily pejorative.

      First of all, "anyone" can't. Sure, Joe Blow physically could register a domain name, get some hosting, and put WordPress on it, but actually getting all the pieces together and understanding enough to make it work isn't going to happen for most people.

      Could a lot of people though? Sure, but most of them have better things to do. You can call that "laziness", but we all make choices. I probably intellectually could learn some Mandarin, but I don'

  • Find the archives for this early online group Com-Priv. I don't remember this story's assertion squaring blame against the activist pioneers framed the way the author has assigned it so matter of factly.

    The real start of the Internet, bandwidth to the belly button and debate was whether data was content to be metered and charged like cable OR infrastructure plumbing charging only access to the pipe.

    It was an amazing moment to see capitalism at work in a whole new medium surrounded by a democracy.

  • by bistromath007 ( 1253428 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @05:00PM (#59737494)

    Good.

    An important fact about chans is that their reputation is mostly bullshit. Illegal activity happens on them at about the same rate and for the same reason as it does on Facebook: it's literally impossible to consistently police.

    It needs to be understood that social media is inherently unhealthy, and the toxic content is far from the main reason. There is no more powerful tool for organizing real-world events, but if you're not doing that, the best case scenario is that you're commiserating with a bubble of people with the same flavor of crazy as you. With this in mind, the toxic content is actually a vital form of harm reduction. The people who say awful things need a place to do that so they aren't isolated in their own bullshit to the point of violence, and the people who don't want to read awful things need a constant reminder to log the fuck off.

  • TPC grew to be an out-sized, dominant behemoth well before government regulation entered the picture. Regulation restrained further cancerous growth. That regulation was the result of the deal TPC cut to be allowed to continue to exist as a monolith.

    What we're seeing is the same old scenario playing out all over again.

  • People today are too damn soft.

    At the least little disappointment or opposition, they begin weeping and their whole world becomes an unending tragedy.

    Someone says something you don't like?
    Ignore them or critique them.

    Someone does something you don't like?
    Ignore them or critique them.

    There's 7+ BILLION people on this planet.
    The chances everyone on the planet will agree 100% of the time is basically non-existent.
    And we HAVE to live along side one another.

    So there's a LOT of growing up to do. For everyone inv

  • by AK Marc ( 707885 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @05:17PM (#59737546)
    The Internet was "good" before Eternal September. The downfall was The Telecommunications Act of 1996.

    Before 1996, the internet access was by one or two companies in every place, with dial-up to compete. To open up regulation, the Bells were deregulated, and were forced to CLEC ISPs into their exchanges.

    The result was that the dial-ups moved into the exchanges, and it was "trivial" for an ISP to compete directly with the Bells. But, the deregulation still favored the ILEC such that Bell bought AT&T. Consolidation crushed the growth.

    The death of the Internet was 1996. In 1996, UUNET was growing its backbone at $1M per day. After MCI bought them, that all stopped, and MCI crushed everything that made the largest ISP in the world great. MCI killed the Internet by buying something it didn't understand, and destroying it. Had MCI not bought UUNET, the "bubble" wouldn't have happened. The "old" companies were linear. UUNET would have continued to grow at a large but sustainable rate, and Global Crossing and the other upstarts that bought bandwidth, bought customers by selling at a loss then sold out to BT and the like adding no value and only enriching vulture capitalists couldn't have competed. A solid base, grown responsibly would have prevented much of the boom/bust. Sure, the server/service boom bust would have still been there, but it would have been a much smaller cycle without all the ISP boom/bust on top of it.

    The capitalists bought out and killed the socialist Internet. The Internet was always a network of peers. Then the core of peers was accessed by users who paid to get on. The commoditization of the access and the loss of a core of peers made the whole system collapse to where Comcast extorts Netflix
  • The way the PC industry squashed everything in its path was a standout example of how free-markets always go to a monopoly. And the freer it is the faster that monopoly forms.

  • When 'Freedom of Speech' meant being able to step up onto a soap box and address a crowd of people in a public place, your 'Freedom' to do so was limited by how far your voice would carry.
    Then there were newspapers, and your 'voice', in print, would still be limited by how far it would 'carry' -- in this instance, as far as the paperboy could carry it, or as far as someone buying a copy from the newsstand could carry it.
    Somewhere in there, your 'Freedom of Speech' extended to as far as the telegraph lines
    • When 'Freedom of Speech' meant ... Then there were newspapers

      Nope. [localhistories.org] Newspapers came first.

      in print, would still be limited by how far it would 'carry

      To the opposite side of the globe? The rest is really just talking about speed of delivery. Until...

      I really do think that there needs to be some ground rules

      Fine. As long as I get to set them.

    • You are using your freedom of speech to advocate for the abolition of freedom of speech. Under the principle of repressive tolerance, you must be censored, for the good of the whole world.
  • Legal monopoly or not, businesses will figure out ways to stifle competition and make money. Business will always be one step ahead of the government. This is by design, government is, and must be, reactionary, when it comes to abuses. There is no way to predict what abuses will be invented, and trying to do so will only make criminals out of good people and direct business priorities elsewhere.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Monday February 17, 2020 @07:53PM (#59737922) Homepage

    You can post pretty much whatever you want on your own Web site, and like-minded groups can do the same. The problem is getting people to come to your site. Most regular people aren't attracted to strident, opinionated sites that lean one way or another. These are the ones being left out, for the most part.

    If you want people in droves to come to your site, you have to produce and host content that people want, and avoid hosting content that repulses the majority.

    • You can only assure that if you own your own site equipment. Any host can (and have) refuse to do business with you and then your site evaporates.
      • You can always find a provider, perhaps in another country, that will host your content. This is one of the beauties of the Internet: National borders don't mean much. This means that if your own country is oppressive or takes down your content, you can host it somewhere else that is more friendly.

  • In the US thats a protected freedom that any gov cannot remove.
    The right to publish, be the press, read, comment, speak.
  • understood what the Internet was they never would have let it happen. Always remember that.
  • I read the following in a 2nd Amendment debate thread elsewhere, It struck a chord, and I think it applies here as well: We anticipate and accept a certain amount of chaos as part of a free society. There will always be the misbehaved, and those that take advantage, but we realized long ago that the alternative is far too repugnant.

    We (I'm pretty centrist) roll our eyes at the Nazi/etc. websites and rallies, but recognize that it could all too easily be ours or someone's grey area opinions about, I don't

  • If all internet users are forced to use their real identity, they would be much less likely to behave like assholes.

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