Apple should also remove WhatsApp and iMessages since they can be used by undesirable groups to coordinate their efforts.
Plus, definitely Jitsi, and Gmail too. All these apps are dangerous!
Actually, just removing the keyboard and microphone would be safest, it keeps any terrorist from inputting any dangerous message at all.
Here we go. Now that app stores and services have voluntarily collaborated in restricting speech, we can see more pressure campaigns to curb speech. First it’s violence, next it’s favorite targets then it’s non proscribed speech.
Stop going down this slope while you still can push back. If you give in, everyone who has an axe to grind will come with theirs.
First off, your sarcastic premonition is already happening in the UK. r/loicence is a treat.
However, to be more serious, your comparison makes no sense. The redefinition of hate speech by a certain political quadrant led us down this path. As soon as the standard changes from “inciting physical violence” to “saying things I don’t like,” then whoever wields the most power can censor at will. Strict standards of free speech are the only moral course of action, despite what the advocates of redefining language would have you think.
I mostly agree with you, but then the solution should not be a proper definiton of hate speech instead of letting it go? Also, I don’t see it misrepresented in actual laws, but only in non-law-related contexts.
If we trust juries with the proper application of not always clear laws (and we do just that currently), than I don’t see the point of the usual “slippery slope” argument.
Determining murder is (fairly) objective. You have a dead person and a guy with a knife who confesses that he stabbed him.
Determining hate speech isn’t usually (or ever?) objective. You have a living person and a guy with a chat bubble who confesses that he has a political opinion.
Sometimes you want that guy's speech.
Take the world of Star Wars, after the Empire has won. What is hate speech in their world? If you say that people who believe in the Sith religion are bad, that's "Hate Speech" and should be deplatformed.
That's a great analogy because it highlights an important point: we're living in the real world, not in a movie. In the real world, it's sometimes fairly obvious when someone should be forcibly shut up.
In the olden days, it meant leaving an establishment when some village idiot was rambling in there. Eventually, the owner of the establishment would stop letting the idiot in. That's what's happening in Twitter, nothing more. The scale is a lot larger, sure, but still.
> The phrase "I know it when I see it" is a colloquial expression by which a speaker attempts to categorize an observable fact or event, although the category is subjective or lacks clearly defined parameters. The phrase was used in 1964 by United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart to describe his threshold test for obscenity in Jacobellis v. Ohio.
A political opinion and hate speech are distinct. There's at least one law body you can look at to help you understand why and how that is, namely the German one.
Wrong analogy. A better one is that we’re trying to combat knife murders by restricting the sale of knives instead of prosecuting murderers. In order to have any real impact, you’re going to have to get pretty extreme.
Don’t make it a slippery slope then! Why dress up hate speech, harassment, threats of violence, doxxing as “not prescribed speech” like there is no possible way to separate them from all other forms of communication?
Arguments like this are the oil that makes the slope slippery. If you’ll be exactly as mad when someone “censors” harassment verses when they censor opinions they don’t like you send the message that they might as well just do that then.
In Saudi Arabia, it is illegal to be an atheist, because of the hatred you are spreading for the state religion.
It seems obvious to you what is and isn’t hate speech, and it seems obvious we should be able to outlaw it as a result, but I suspect you’ll find your definition and that of 100 random people off the internet will differ substantially. There will be some common ground, but there will be some fuzzy bits around the edges. Who do we give the power to decide which of those fuzzy bits to enforce end which not?
Trump won’t be in power for much longer in the US, but someone like him will probably be in power again. Is that the kind of person you want defining what is and isn’t hate speech? Or perhaps is should be Jeff Bezos who decides what is and isn’t hate speech?
What happens when someone in power decides that talking about the wrong god or the wrong kind of sexuality or the wrong kind of people is “hate speech”? What checks and balances will be in place to prevent that from happening? We have some recourse against a US president in the form of the constitution, but we have none against Amazon. Do we just trust that the tech giants will always have our best interest at heart?
It is hate speech in Saudi Arabia by definition of law (I guess, but I didn’t look up your claim).
In Germany there is a different law for hate speech with a proper definition, made by the government chosen by the people - which may or may not have been the case in the former case. I don’t see how a law on hate speech is any different from all the other laws. Separation of powers is a thing (and it should be the highest priority of the people to keep it separate), and there are already plenty of rules controlling every aspect of our lives. How is it different in the case of hate speech?
A theoretical case of a dictator rising would mean that a) he/she changes the definition of said hate speech to be more ambiguous b) infiltrate/corrupt the juries to remove people they deem dangerous to them.
Now, if they manage to do a, they can have an easier time removing said opponents, but only with some corruption on the juries’ side. And if that happens, they could do away with the change of law, since any law can be applied to the oppnents in this case.
I'll agree that censoring speech is probably one of the sharpest double edge swords to play with.
My counter to "who decides what hate speech is" - we need to actively figure it out. We can't sit back and say "it's too hard to decide" so we should tolerate all speech either by decision or inaction.
Not actively engaging is as dangerous as letting a specific group decide.
This is a bit like saying “who should we trust to be king sounds hard to figure out, but that doesn’t mean we should settle for democracy.”
> Not actively engaging is as dangerous as letting a specific group decide.
Having the government decide what people are and are not allowed to say sounds a lot more dangerous to me. That’s how you end up with an official state religion and all other beliefs are outlawed, or you you end up with not being allowed to talk about being gay in public without fear of being stoned to death.
While that's definitely an important concern, it is already true that there are things you're not allowed to say. Things that hurt people, like libel/slander, threats, blackmail, shouting "fire!" in a crowded theater.
So why is some speech that hurts people banned, while other speech that hurts people is allowed? This should be the test for what counts as hate speech. Can you call the press "the enemy of the people" if that leads to journalists getting hurt? Can you call certain demographic groups a threat to society if that leads people to take action against those groups? Is it only the people who stormed the Capitol who are guilty of that, or also the politicians and others who encouraged them?
There is always going to be some limit to free speech. The question is: is that line in the right place? Does it need to be moved one way or the other? Does it allow speech that endangers lives? Does it ban speech that doesn't? That has to be a constant evaluation.
(That said, I regret banning communication apps. I'd rather see people be held accountable for the things they say on those apps. By the law, not by corporations.)
There, the Court held that inflammatory speech--and even speech advocating violence by members of the Ku Klux Klan--is protected under the First Amendment, unless the speech "is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action"
Still supports my point: there are limits to free speech when it involves inciting violence (or other lawless action).
And there's still also libel laws which make lies illegal in some cases. Though I believe that's a civil rather than criminal issue.
It was only the other day I thought about the same problem. What if these group, or whatever it is Apple deemed unacceptable were using;
Email - Doing good old fashion email reading and writing it with Gmail.
RSS - spreading their thoughts via Feeds and read using Feedly or any other RSS Reader.
Phone Call - These people are actually communicating using Call Conference.
Will Apple forced Google to Moderate those Emails? Feedly to filter RSS? All ISP and Carriers to do similar?
I mean it is great we have many web forums, Apple themselves actively filter and purge all mention of Keyboard, Display issues, Stain gate threads on their user support forums. Normally they get spread out via other forum into Main stream media before Apple stops censoring it.
Not because I agree with Apple/Google/Amazon etc acting as speech restricting overlords, but because I think it has to get a lot worse before people realize the dangers of what's happening and demand changes that will put such matters out of corporations' hands.
I think you misunderstood my comment. I just think that it will take worse restrictions of speech & privacy issues for a complete change in a new direction. Big tech is already pressured to backdoor all encrypted communication (and frankly I think big tech themselves don't care for privacy, quite the opposite).
So since (IMHO) it'll take worse things to come for people to take a stand, let it get worse quicker so it gets better quicker.
edit to make my point clearer:
Letting corporations play the role of "benevolent" leaders on speech & privacy issues _is_ the problem. Trying to pressure them one way or the other _isn't_ the answer. So let them overreach even more, let them anger more people than the ones on Parler, let them show their true face. Let it become an issue for as many people as possible. For it is societies that should find answers collectively on what is tolerable for one to say/publish, how much privacy especially since the information age matters etc. The internet and the huge platforms that the capitalist system has helped create should belong to the people, and what happens there should be a decision for the people to make.
Creating laws are a few magnitudes easier than undoing them. This idea you have of "let the world burn so we can fix it quicker" is not realistic. The modern legal and political systems on Earth simply don't work this way.
I don't quite see how creating laws would provide real solutions. I don't think that the world should necessarily "burn", I just think that real change has to come from the changes in societies. People demanding change.
The last decades have created such dramatic changes that people have yet to realize and truly comprehend the magnitude of what's going on and how it affects their lives. My hope is that in the coming decades all the issues (free speech, privacy, etc) that the information age touches upon will be a core part of political discussion.
The existence of law doesn't necessarily solve the problem. Otherwise, the US wouldn't have a systemic problem of racism and discrimination, they certainly have laws against discrimination, and yet their police (and not just the police) do what they do.
Actually, just removing the keyboard and microphone would be safest, it keeps any terrorist from inputting any dangerous message at all.