points by blacklight86 6 years ago

What kind of free speech are we exactly advocating here? The freedom to spread cheap hate, fake news and bigotry against minorities? I'm sorry but moderating such offenses isn't a limitation to free speech. For the same reason why, if you start shouting nig or monkey to black people in a shopping mall, the police is likely to intervene and take you away - and I don't think that any sane person would argue that they're violating your freedom of speech. Popper taught us that we can't be tolerant towards intolerants, if we really want to protect our tolerant rule of law.

You can still have freedom of speech while implementing moderation to make sure that hate speech, bigotry and fake news don't spread - because if those things spread then they leak into the real world as death. 8chan has been shut down not only because it hosted hate communities, but because it refused to apply any moderation there.

However, the problem is not 8chan alone. It's good to shut down websites where hate speech proliferates without constraints, but a couple of days or weeks later new *chan websites are likely to pop up to replace them, or maybe they'd make a Telegram group. The root problem is Americans. And I'm honestly not sure of how to fix the problem with a whole population that has become so irrational, polarized, ignorant and sensitive to hate speech.

Lazare 6 years ago

> The freedom to spread cheap hate, fake news and bigotry against minorities? I'm sorry but moderating such offenses isn't a limitation to free speech. For the same reason why, if you start shouting nig or monkey to black people in a shopping mall, the police is likely to intervene and take you away - and I don't think that any sane person would argue that they're violating your freedom of speech. Popper taught us that we can't be tolerant towards intolerants, if we really want to protect our tolerant rule of law.

Everything you just said is essentially untrue when it comes to government censorship of speech in the US. Hate speech is certainly protected by the first amendment, with only a few narrow exceptions. Personally addressed, face-to-face insults, if deemed likely to start an imminent fight is not constitutionally protected.

(This is sometimes called the "fighting words" exception, and it's much narrower than you might think. The law is quite clear that just because the words might yield a violent reaction, they're still protected. Cantwell v. Connecticut involved anti-Catholic "hate speech", as we'd now term it, expressed in public in a neighbourhood that was 90% Catholic, enraged many listeners, and almost started some violence. Still protected.)

> You can still have freedom of speech while implementing moderation to make sure that hate speech, bigotry and fake news don't spread

Only if done, as here, by private organisations. Regulating bigotry on message boards is the precise thing type of things that the first amendment prevents.

There is no hate speech exception in the constitution. Hate speech is generally an example of what is most protected.

  • deegles 6 years ago

    What about hate speech spread by malicious foreign actors?

rlonn 6 years ago

I'm sorry, but how can anyone say "what kind" of free speech...? Don't you see that labeling or discriminating between "free speech of type A, allowed" and "free speech of type B, disallowed" defeats the whole notion of "free"? Somehow people tend to think that their own discrimination isn't, while others is.

  • ketzo 6 years ago
    • nextmemorandum 6 years ago

      That does not change the fact that people have the natural right of freedom of speech.

      • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

        That is your personal OPINION, not a fact!

        There is no such thing as a "natural right of freedom of speech". If one sovereign in the history of mankind decides to allow unrestricted freedom of speech in its constitution, it is just that: an episode in the history of legal systems established by humans. It can turn out as a bad idea, or a milestone for better societies. We will see. In no way is it a "natural right". Not even would it be a natural right, if it was mentioned in the bible as one of the 10 commandments from god (disregarding the FACT, that there are some serious restrictions of freedom of speech in that: "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour").

        • majewsky 6 years ago

          > There is no such thing as a "natural right of freedom of speech".

          In fact, there is no such thing as a natural right at all. Rights are derived from value systems, and the choice of value system is mostly based on aesthetics. There is no way to say whether the Western Christianity-based value system is "better" than, say, the Confucian value system, because the word "better" cannot be defined from first principles (without invoking a particular value system).

          • repolfx 6 years ago

            Yes, it can be done, but lots of people don't like that because it invariably concludes that some societies are better than others and the best ones are the western capitalist democracies.

            The most obvious first principle is that a better value system should keep you alive. Being alive is foundational.

            From that you can derive other principles, like value systems should result in the production of food, clean water, protection against wild animals and invaders, disease, etc.

            From that you can derive yet more principles, like the value of efficient resource allocation, stable governance and so on.

            And judged by basic things like "is this set of cultural values good at keeping people alive and healthy" you can quickly conclude that some are better than others, objectively so.

            To deny this is to argue that wishing to be alive rather than dead is merely an aesthetic preference - an absurd starting point, lacking any intellectual merit.

            • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

              [...]The most obvious first principle is that a better value system should keep you alive. Being alive is foundational.[...]

              Is it?

              There are plenty of people that sacrify their lives for all sorts of principles. There exist quite some value systems that explicitely do not hold "being alive" for their foundational first principle!

              What about immortality, if it becomes a medical reality one day? A better value system by definition, just because we are staying alive for longer?

              I won't go into your derived principles, because it is not even possible to reach mutual consent about your axiomatic first principle.

              • repolfx 6 years ago

                Very very few people sacrifice their own life for any kind of principle unless forced to. That's why those who do are often lionised!

                But anyway, do you have a better first principle? If you don't care about staying alive why get out of bed at all, why not just starve to death? It's more work for sure.

                • majewsky 6 years ago

                  Your fallacy is assuming that if the first principle is not protection of life, it must be its opposite, extreme disregard of life. There are potentially infinite choices of first principles.

                  Furthermore, you present no argument for your particular first principle beyond aesthetics (aka "I prefer this one"). You build on the implicit assumption that human life is valuable (and apparently more so than other forms of life) for which you don't provide justification. Well, you do argue that it keeps people alive. But again, that's a circular argument. "My value system is the best one because it fulfills the goals of my value system."

                  • repolfx 6 years ago

                    It's a first principle - by definition it's unjustified logically. If it were to be justified, it wouldn't be a first principle, something else would!

                    I'd think the merits of being alive would be unarguable but this is HN after all :)

        • nextmemorandum 6 years ago

          It is not my opinion. It is a fact that the United States recognizes freedom of speech as a natural right.

          • antientropic 6 years ago

            The possibility that the US shares your opinion that something is a "natural right" does not change the fact that it is just an opinion.

            You're perfectly entitled to feel that certain rights should be universal and inalienable. It's also clear that nobody agrees on what those rights are, and that they get violated all the time.

  • iamnotacrook 6 years ago

    "Don't you see that labeling or discriminating between "free speech of type A, allowed" and "free speech of type B, disallowed" defeats the whole notion of "free"?"

    Yeah, why are you allowed to play tennis but you aren't allowed to kill people? Why can you say John's a good person but you can't say he molests children? Why can you shout "fore" on a golf course but not "fire" in a movie theatre?

    There's always a limit. Choosing to stop your for-profit web service from enabling bigotry and murder seems a pretty low bar here. Let me know when it's being used to prevent the discussion of ideas such as Marxism or veganism or solar power or whatever which might upset the current power structure.

    • nextmemorandum 6 years ago

      >Let me know when it's being used to prevent the discussion of ideas such as Marxism or veganism or solar power or whatever which might upset the current power structure.

      Discussion of all of those topics has taken place on cripplechan which MITMflare just terminated business with.

  • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

    There is a clear (and working) distinction between free speech of type A and of type B in other countries. In Germany, just as an example, you are free to express your OPINION (type A), but not to express false facts (type B). If you express false facts, knowingly, and those false facts have damaging effects you are fully liable for compensation.

    Simple example: if a person wrongly claims, that some local artisan's business is insolvent, and the artisan can prove that a potential customer withdrew an order for that reason, the person who spread the fake news has to pay for the artisan's loss. Entirely.

    Talking someone into commiting a crime is never treated as free speech, either.

    So, this is the legal construct in Germany:

    - you are free to have any opinion you like ("Meinungsfreiheit") and

    - you are free to express those opinions to the public ("Redefreiheit")

    Free speech, here, is limited to opinion. There is no such thing as "i am free to lie, blame, insult, taunt, threaten, defame, verbally harass, berate, incite etc..." with the excuse of free speech.

    In Germany, if you say: "The president of the United States suffers from narcissistic personality disorder", AND you cannot prove this as a fact, and the POTUS goes after you for that statement, you will have to compensate for the damages of that claim (this will become very expensive, if the POTUS can prove that he lost reelections because of that statement). If you say: "To my conviction (in my opinion/I believe), the president of the United States suffers from narcissistic personality disorder", this would be completely legal in Germany.

    And yes, the distinction matters!

    • dangxiaopin 6 years ago

      This reminds me of an actual Soviet joke:

      "Pres. Reagan: Mr. Brezhnev, in the USA we have free speech- anybody can say in public: President Reagan is a fool!"

      "Secretary Brezhnev: Pres. Reagan, in the USSR, we also have free speech- anybody can say in public: President Reagan is a fool!"

    • fvdessen 6 years ago

      But that is not how it works universally in Europe. In France for example, you can be condemned for stating objective facts under hate speech laws. For example one journalist was condemned for saying that minorities were over-represented in jail, because they were over-represented in crime. The judge stated that although that was factually true, it would also have a discriminatory impact on the minorities, & the journalist was thus condemned.

      • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

        I did not talk for Europe, just Germany. And I do not approve the suppression of facts. Sorry for France.

        (Would be interesting to know the details of that lawcase. I investigated some of those incidents in Germany and in most cases they turned out to be quite different from the initial aggregations that I read in public).

        • cm2187 6 years ago

          I believe what the parent comment refers to is the condemnation of Eric Zemmour in 2011. The details are a bit different though substantially in the same spirit. Zemmour argued on TV that (a) the majority of drug dealers are either black or arab and therefore that (b) racial profiling by the police was justified. The court rejected the accusation of racial defamation for claiming (a) but argued that since (b) was discriminatory under French law, condoning racial profiling publicly was advocating for discrimination and he was sentenced for that. One of first results on google if you want to dig more:

          https://www.lepoint.fr/societe/eric-zemmour-condamne-pour-pr...

          • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

            (I do not speak french, so I am referring only to your post)

            The logical relation between (a) and (b) is the important detail here.

            If the majority of drug dealers are either black or arab, this does not logically conclude, that the majority of blacks and arabs are drug dealers!

            The only logical reasoning for racial profiling would be, if there was a significantly higher probability to catch a drug dealer if you randomly pick someone from that group.

            The math:

            Let's assume a population consisting of 20 percent group A and 80 percent group B. 0,1 percent of the population is drug dealers. 60 percent of the drug dealers belong to group A, 40 percent belong to group B. Group A therefore makes the majority of drug dealers.

            With the majority of drug dealers in group A and only 20 percent share of the population, there is a six times higher probability that a random pick of group A will be a positive hit. In absolute numbers: the chance to make a positive random hit in group A is 0,3 percent, in group B it is 0,05 percent.

            But: the likelihood to make a negative hit in group A is 99,7 percent (99,95 percent in group B), so even with a six times higher probability for a positive hit, the overall change for a positive hit - on a random basis - in both groups is still extremely small.

            The small chance to catch a drug dealer on a random pick out of a population (not regarding race) does not qualify for an effective police procedure – to begin with. The small difference in probability of 0,25 percent between the groups does not qualify for racial profiling either. Any other visible attribute of a person that correlates with drug dealing with a higher value than 0,25 percent (clothing, cars, peer groups, haircut, jewelry, behaviour, slang, provenance and and and) is a better qualifier for random picks than racial profiling.

            So, back to the case:

            - France has good reasons, to forbid racial profiling under its law. It IS discriminatory, because you cannot define 99,7 percent of a group by 0,3 percent of that group.

            - (b) does not conlude from (a), as it does not significantly rise the success rate, but at the same time feeds prejudices and harasses innocent people.

            - Insisting on (b) clearly shows the will to ignore data and a will to feed prejudices and having innocent people harassed, so government decides to stop this behaviour.

            Did they really sentence him for (b), or was he rather obliged not to repeat that statement?

            • cm2187 6 years ago

              I agree with your math, but I disagree with your conclusions. The difference may look small but it compounds very quickly. If you make 1000 controls of individuals from population B, the likelihood that you never make a bust is 61%. If you make 1000 controls of population A, the likelihood you never make a bust is only 5%. If you are a policeman, clearly you are going to opt for population A if you want to make a bust.

              In this case he was sentenced to a suspended fine of €1,000 and to damages of €9,000 to various pressure groups.

              I agree with your position on the moral implications of racial profiling and I am not advocating it. But whether one supports racial profiling or not, merely discussing the merits should not constitute an offense, I think this is clearly violating free speech. And if we cannot disagree publicly with existing laws, why do we even bother having a parliament to change those laws?

              • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

                [...]If you are a policeman, clearly you are going to opt for population A if you want to make a bust.[...]

                Whether I have to make 1000 controls for a 39 percent chance to catch one dealer, or 1000 controls for a 95 percent chance to catch one dealer – both are incredibly ineffective. This is exactly the problem.

                If I am only capable of random controls with low chances, I have to control very, very many people to make a hit (and each control of an innocent person is something, that should be avoided if possible, because it is a form of harassment). Now by going from one low probability to a somewhat less lower probability by ignoring the group of the lower probability and putting all the burden of unjustified control to the other group you create a huge sense of frustration, stress, injustice and anger. For good reason! You make a 60:40 relation to a 100:0 relation with this approach. The problem is not with the dealers, but with the false positives. 600 innocent people of group A have to be harassed for one true positive, but 0 innocent people of group B get harassed and 0 people of group B get busted, because they are not even controlled anymore (as hits are less likely). And now, by making hits only in group A, the ratio of convicted drug dealers gets pushed even more into the direction of group A, allegedly confirming the efficiency of racial profiling. It is utterly wrong. Morally and mathematically. It is a pseudologic abuse of science to discriminate a group of people. And the desire for discrimination arises from hate. That is, why racial profiling is forbidden in modern democracies and it is not a matter of free speech, in my eyes.

                If you wish for a more efficient handling of your police with drug dealers, you really do not want them to perform random controls (whether racially biased or not)!

                • cm2187 6 years ago

                  Correct, but in reality, the police doesn't go do some random control in the streets of some randomly selected rural area. They will target locations where they are likely to find drug dealers, target behaviors that are likely to be drug dealers, etc. So the numbers aren't those from your theoretical example.

                  Though in reality, I mostly hear about racial profiling in France in the context of looking for illegal immigrants where the odds are even more skewed against a population than your example.

                  The moral argument is orthogonal from the efficiency argument, and I totally agree with the frustration generated by misguided checks (and am reminded of those every time I take a plane).

              • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

                [...]But whether one supports racial profiling or not, merely discussing the merits should not constitute an offense,[...]

                This is such a double-edged sword. In the first impulse, I would say, of course you can discuss the merits of racial profiling (as we did in this thread) and it should not constitute an offense. But you can wrap anything in a "discussion". We could also "discuss" the merits of eliminating religious minorities in concentration camps and I think this should constitute an offense. Free speech, all to often, is taken as an excuse.

                I have no idea how such a differentiation can be put into law in a fair way for everyone.

                For me personally, I have very clear criteria. Most importantly, I distinguish between discussion and discourse, in the sense, that discussion is just talking and discourse is a rational, sane exchange of arguments, following common sense and logic. I enjoyed very much the discourse with you about the merits of racial profiling, because it was not driven by prejudice, whinery or political agenda, we sticked to the facts, came to (not so much) contrary conclusions and this is absolutely fine.

                In the case of Eric Zemmour I do not like the semantic aggregation in the community:

                - he demanded something unconstitutional (racial profiling).

                - in his attempt to justify the demanded unconstitutional measurement, he quoted a fact, but failed to prove the causality between the fact and the demand (he did not even try. He mistook the fact as the causality - a common mistake).

                - he gets sentenced for demanding something unconstitutional.

                - His followers publish their aggregation in the form: although the fact was true, he was sentenced, therefore it is not possible to say the truth in France.

                This is not what happened.

                His case is not about "telling the truth gets you punished". His case is: "should our society accept, for the ideal of free speech, that someone demands unconstitutional measurements, like racial profiling or putting minorities in concentration camps". I absolutey agree, that this last question is debatable!! I have no final answer for myself! But this is not, how the causa Zemmour was laid on the table in this thread.

      • egeozcan 6 years ago

        You can also lie by stating cherry picked facts. Kathy Zhu lost her beauty queen title because she had written "Did you know the majority of black deaths are caused by other blacks? Fix problems within your own community first before blaming others." I don't think I need to explain what's wrong with this statement, especially to the HN audience. I'd definitely support companies taking a stance against such statements, but it also shouldn't be a crime IMHO.

      • ksangeelee 6 years ago

        On a purely technical note, it's factual to say a group is over-represented in prison, because there are records to back this up. However unless you know the entirety of crimes committed, you can't say that a group is over-represented in crime.

        It may be that certain groups are pursued more vigorously, less likely to mount a strong defence (therefore more likely to be convicted), or just more narrowly focused on.

    • miracle2k 6 years ago

      In the US, false statements are also not covered by the first amandment.

      The difference is that in Germany, "AlphaGeekZulu is an asshole", while clearly a statement of opinion, will allow you to go after me. Some restrictons to Meinungsfreiheit are right there in the constitution - protecting personal honor or protection the children.

      • AlphaGeekZulu 6 years ago

        "In the US, false statements are also not covered by the first amandment."[...]

        So you are talking to the wrong person. You should reply to user "rlonn" who does not believe that there are (or should be) types A and B in free speech.

        [...]"AlphaGeekZulu is an asshole", while clearly a statement of opinion, will allow you to go after me.[...]

        Yes - diatribe exception. In that case, unfortunately, it is also not enough to transform it into "In my opinion, AlphaGeekZulu is an asshole". Granted, it is so much more complicated than free hate speech ;-)

      • whenchamenia 6 years ago

        This is untrue. False statements are protected, wven yours.

    • jevgeni 6 years ago

      On top of that, German (and I think European, code law) practice has a weighted view of human rights. If two rights come into conflict, one must prevail. For example, if somebody promotes the idea that people should start a "holy war" or go against groups of people, then nobody will be like "Oh yeah, that's their freedom of speech right there". No, this kind of behavior will be considered as violating the primary human right to life and human dignity.

  • ticktocktack 6 years ago

    It is my understanding that, currently, the following speech is of "type B, disallowed" in the US:

    * Shouting fire in a crowded theatre

    * False advertisement

    * Medical or legal advice (allowed, heavily regulated by the Government)

    * Advocacy of force or criminal activity

    And I assume, many others that I do not know of.

    Unless you are arguing that there is no such thing as free speech in the US, then it must be that you can have "free speech" while still having some limitations.

    • drenvuk 6 years ago

      The shouting fire in a crowded theater example for precedent was overturned. Stop using it.

      • ticktocktack2 6 years ago

        I did not know. Still, the other cases apply.

    • mcv 6 years ago

      Some other ones:

      * threats of violence

      * blackmail

      These may be entirely verbal, and yet are considered serious crimes.

      • Biganon 6 years ago

        There is a cardinal difference in the US between speech related to public interest, such as anything that has to do with politics, religion, military actions, and speech that's only about private matters, such as whether or not your neighbor has a perverted sexuality. The second category is not nearly as protected as people usually think it is.

austhrow743 6 years ago

>The freedom to spread cheap hate, fake news and bigotry against minorities?

Yes. If the speech isn't terrible it doesn't really need advocating for or protecting does it? Arguing for free speech is inextricably linked to arguing for people to be able to say despicable things.

  • ForHackernews 6 years ago

    So by this logic, filtering spam is violating freedom of speech?

    • austhrow743 6 years ago

      You don't need to listen to the terrible things they're saying.

      • ForHackernews 6 years ago

        You don't need to read all the spam that would show up in your inbox if not for those censorious filters!

        • jpd- 6 years ago

          There's a difference between filtering incoming information and preventing someone from sending it in the first place.

    • bena 6 years ago

      Your rights stop where mine begin.

      So you are free to send spam. I'm free to refuse it. I'm not required to transport your junk if I don't want to.

      • ForHackernews 6 years ago

        But Cloudflare should be required to transport 8chan's junk? What exactly are you arguing?

raxxorrax 6 years ago

We have enough examples of information declared as fake news that turned out to be true in the end that the concept of content classification you are proposing just isn't feasible.

edanm 6 years ago

> The root problem is Americans. And I'm honestly not sure of how to fix the problem with a whole population that has become so irrational, polarized, ignorant and sensitive to hate speech.

That is a baseless and offensive statement. Very unhappily, this kind of irrational hatred (and polarization) is on the rise in many parts of the West. It is not a problem with Americans.

baybal2 6 years ago

Can you tell what country do you live in?

I live in China, a textbook totalitarian state.

What you say is awfully similar to what CPC puts as their justification of censorship.

The prevailing narrative among the "dotcom" community in the West, and what you have said wrote is very similar to their position.

  • arrrg 6 years ago

    That is why context is important.

    The dream of the perfect context free golden rule does not exist. We have to pay attention and make hard decisions. None of this is simple.

    • _r2gl 6 years ago

      The golden rule does exist, freedom of speech.

      • majewsky 6 years ago

        In your value system. Not in mine.

        • raxxorrax 6 years ago

          This is a far more likely explanation why we are in danger of getting fascism back in Europe. Strong-arming bad opinions like this one.

          • bart_spoon 6 years ago

            I can't speak for Europe, but rising fascism movements in the US are entirely riding a wave of anti-PC, fake news, and grassroots social networks, all under the guise of free-speech. I won't argue that these mean free speech must be restricted necessarily, but its absolutely clear that free-speech is enabling these particular movements.

            • raxxorrax 6 years ago

              You hear less from Europe than the US but I think the situation is similar. We are dealing with reactionaries here. I am well aware that they don't really mean to defend freedom of speech or any form of freedom really. But they certainly saw a weakness in their political opponents in relation to the topic and nailed them on their position.

              You cannot win anything if you position yourself against freedom of speech and fascism. It is just not a winning strategy and the problems will slowly escalate from there.

              Any civil right can and will be abused. Be that freedom of speech or just general social security services. That are the disadvantages you have to accept. If you restrict peoples ability to express themselves, you just handed your political opposition exactly what they wanted.

              Yes, they are allowed to spread their message because they are allowed to. And that they did. 5 years ago even anime weaboos made fun of them for it. It never spread further than a few bad threads.

              Now we have this fucked up situation where liberal political parties argue against civil rights. Worse, they do it in the name of minorities, which is just plain ridiculous. They elevated people nobody would have taken seriously to something more.

              Not saying that being the victim of trolls is not embarrassing. But it is time to get over it. There are also parties that have a certain interest in shutting down platforms that are free from governmental control. I still think that is a very bad thing as it would undo a lot of achievements we won with the inception of the net.

vmurthy 6 years ago

> The root problem is Americans. And I'm honestly not sure of how to fix the problem with a whole population that has become so irrational, polarized, ignorant and sensitive to hate speech.

I doubt that only Americans are the problem in this case. I think what has happened is that hate speech and other undesirable (subjective word but bear with me) content is a hack into human psychology and a small percent of human beings regardless of nationality will always be influenced by hate speech and caste-ism and what not. The problem is that as the internet has reached the masses, the lone fanatic has a very large soapbox to shout and a very loud speaker to listen from.

importantbrian 6 years ago

> The root problem is Americans. And I'm honestly not sure of how to fix the problem with a whole population that has become so irrational, polarized, ignorant and sensitive to hate speech.

That's an incredibly offensive and hateful comment. Fortunately for you, in America the first amendment protects your right to say it. Maybe you can see where allowing the government to decide what is and isn't acceptable speech might be problematic.

mLuby 6 years ago

I get the gut reaction toward moderation at the corporate level, but United States law already covers these situations: hate speech, criminal conspiracy, and murder. The issue is lack of law enforcement.

  • Lazare 6 years ago

    There is no law against hate speech, and any such law would be unconstitutional. Many attempts at passing such laws have been struck down.

    It's an oddly pervasive delusion that hate speech is not protected by the first amendment.

PunchTornado 6 years ago

I don't agree. I think people should be free to say their opionions online and offline, no matter how bad those opinions are. I disagree with cloudfare's decision.

  • boomlinde 6 years ago

    > I think people should be free to say their opionions online and offline, no matter how bad those opinions are.

    So do I, but outside essential utility monopolies, I also believe that no one should be forced to facilitate those opinions. That Cloudflare choose not to do so is ultimately an expression of their own opinions and values.

    • raxxorrax 6 years ago

      Or they were "convinced" from outside from people that think their opinions to be worth a damn.

      • boomlinde 6 years ago

        It's still an expression of their opinions and values, even if their opinions and values are simply that they should maintain a favorable public image or that they should retain customers who would otherwise boycott them.

        Oh, and you ever thought that Cloudflare should stop providing their services to 8chan, and that your opinion was worth a damn, guess what—your opinion was worth a damn.

        • raxxorrax 6 years ago

          > your opinion was worth a damn

          It can have consequences while not being worth anything.

          • boomlinde 6 years ago

            If you want to go down the road of ignoring idiomatic phrases, sure, of course. I'd go as far as to argue that nothing has inherent worth, but I'd much rather stick to the topic and hear what your response to anything that actually pertains to the discussion is.

        • bena 6 years ago

          I think that's what some people miss.

          The First Amendment protects three rights: Speech, Religion, and Assembly

          Cloudfare used its right of assembly and chose not to associate with 8chan any longer.

          Cloudfare is not required to host anything.

makomk 6 years ago

Define "fake news". For instance, the Guardian ran an article last week "Facebook says it was 'not our role' to remove fake news during Australian election"[1] criticising Facebook for not removing claims that the Labor party would introduce a "death tax" they said they wouldn't. If you click through to the previous article[2], the supposed "misinformation" included posts quoting their statements that they wouldn't introduce a "death tax" and then arguing that they couldn't be trusted not to do it anyway. Should tech companies be expected to supress the idea that certain political parties can't be trusted to do what they promise (not all of them, obviously - I can't imagine this is meant to apply to Republicans or any of the Australian right-wing parties)? Because that is definitely something that's being pushed for in the name of fighting "fake news".

[1] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/jul/31/facebook-...

[2] https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/jun/08/it-fe...

rjf72 6 years ago

Why do you think it might have been that the founding fathers were such advocates for freedom of speech? Do you think they were unaware that it would lead to the normalization of unpleasant things being said? These questions can be answered quite succinctly by asking one other question. In a nation without freedom of speech, who gets to determine what can and cannot be said?

The Treason Felony Act 1848 [1] is something that is still technically a part of the law in the United Kingdom even if not actively enforced. In 2001 The Guardian made a legal effort to finally have it officially removed from the books, and failed [2]. The act makes it illegal to call for the abolition of the monarchy within the United Kingdom, even "imagining" such is sufficient to conviction. The max penalty is life imprisonment -- quite progressive as it used to be death. This is a stark reminder of why and where the desire for free free speech came from. Imagine our past without freedom of speech. There undoubtedly would have been numerous states that would have made the mere advocacy for abolition illegal, others that would have made advocating for suffrage of various groups also illegal, and so on.

You may think it simple to demarcate a line between 'reasonable' and 'unreasonable' speech but it's not so easy and ultimately the individuals that get to decide as such are those with the most power in society. The lines end up being drawn as fairly and reasonably as our states draw the lines laying out their voting districts. Laws against free speech invariably end up being exploited to help entrench whatever political ideology happens to get a grip on power within a nation, as the UK laws past and present are a reminder of.

Such laws can even be used to enforced bigoted views. For instance in the UK in 2017 a 19 year old lady was arrested and convicted, forced to wear a ankle monitoring device, abide a curfew, etc for "sending a grossly offensive message by means of a public electronic communications network." Her crime? Quoting lyrics from a Snoop Dog song on Instagram. That conviction was overturned a couple of years later. In another case (again in the UK) a Christian preacher was arrested for stating that, while he was not homophobic, he believed that the Bible taught homosexuality was a sin. Again it was overturned, yet being arrested, let alone convicted, for such "offenses" is hardly a society any should thrive to emulate.

Ultimately, I think people only see things they disagree with as being affected. In reality once free speech goes it will also include some of your views you find in no way unacceptable. In Germany until 2018 it was illegal to publicly insult any head of state. It was revoked only when it became inconvenient to the powers that be. Following a comedian reading an obscene poem about Turkish president Erdoğan, Turkey demanded and lawfully received prosecution which ultimately led to the law's removal. Laws which make it illegal to "defame" the President of the German Federal Republic remain on the books.

[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treason_Felony_Act_1848

[2] - https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2013/dec/13/calling-abol...

  • KaiserPro 6 years ago

    There are a few things that need to be distinguished here.

    1) In UK law, there is no right to freedom of speech. The only people who are allowed that privilege are MPs in the house of commons.

    2) The communications act expressly disallows "grossly offensive, indecent, obscene or false" However, the definition of what grossly offensive is based on precedent, and is therefore not fixed.

    3) libel

    Libel needs reform. It needs to be modified sensibly to allow for quick, cheap & legally binding judgements, in the same vein as the small claims court.

    The point still remains, even in the USA, there is no such thing as freedom of speech. You are not allowed to say whatever, whenever. The problem comes when trying devise a set of rules that allows a society to operate freely, but not get derailed by ne'er-do-wells

vast 6 years ago

You are simplifying. Google shopping for example doesn't list WWII products in germany. Without any exception. Without decision between right wing propaganda and historical teaching material it is an attempt to deny the holocaust. And that's as simple as it is.

HyperTalk2 6 years ago

What's wrong with hate, exactly? Last I checked, hate is the emotion that one experiences in response to the realization that someone else is doing horrible things to them or the people they love. This then compels one to protect themselves and those they love from the hated individuals, which is good.

  • danso 6 years ago

    That’s not the connotation of “hate” when used in the term, “hate speech”.