For me I would hold the social media companies more to account when it comes to hate speech and harassment online and force social media companies to do more to stop online harassment and hate speech.

  • SomeoneSomewhere@lemmy.nz
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    11 months ago

    Hate speech and cancel culture are usually considered somewhat opposites - cancelling is usually a ‘weapon in the toolkit’ against hate speech or whatever else you don’t like.

    • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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      11 months ago

      It is.

      I hate hate speech, but i love free speech, so I have to live with opinions I don’t like or share.

      • blight [any]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        Not everything you disagree with is hate speech. I think eg Germany has pretty strict limitations on specifically hate speech, but there are still plenty of people voicing opposing views.

        • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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          11 months ago

          That was my point. Free speech to me is FREE speech. Not "free speech unless ". I might hate what i hear but i would fight for the right for others to voice that shit. And yes we have strict limitation. And i dislike it. Even though nothing there would restrict me.

          • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            That only really works if the government is preventing you from saying it, and it’s not something like slander or causing panic. If your lemmy instance banned talking about Pickles, it’s not a free speech issue. It’s a private instance who can have their own rules.

            • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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              11 months ago

              Correct. If i own a platform, i decide it’s laws. Still doesn’t make unfree speech free 😊 I personally prefer spaces where everyone can voice any shit. Censorship is for lazy minds and a dull audience. IMHO.

              • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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                11 months ago

                You better be ready to own the consequences of that stance, which I assume you’ve been privileged not to need to. You can look up any number of mass shooters or terrorists who only got there due to online radicalization.

              • darq@kbin.social
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                11 months ago

                I personally prefer spaces where everyone can voice any shit. Censorship is for lazy minds and a dull audience. IMHO.

                I always find this take to be remarkably short-sighted.

                Because if you actually want to hear diverse opinions, you have to cultivate a space where diverse people, with diverse experiences, feel free to speak.

                Pretty much every space that tolerates open bigotry becomes deeply unpleasant for the targets of that bigotry. Which means those people tend to leave.

                Which in turn means that those spaces soon turn into the dullest echo chamber, populated only by people unaffected the bigotry. Sure no views were censored. You just harass everybody different off the platform. The net effect is the same.

          • AnCuRuadh :verified_trans:@awwter.online
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            11 months ago

            @Dyskolos I would like my speech to be free from transphobes sending me death threats and creepy, perverted sexual fantasies. Is there a reason why you don’t want my speech to be free of such harassment? Is it, perhaps, because you want me silenced?

            @blight

      • Flyberius [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        11 months ago

        An opinion is one thing. Speech that has the intention of hurting others and/or inciting violence against others is another thing entirely.

        • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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          11 months ago

          Yeah and who draws the line? You? Is free speech only free as long as it is in consensus with the majority?

          • Flyberius [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            11 months ago

            You see on one extreme you have people stifling legitimate opinion, and then on the other you have people advocating lynchings. There isn’t a simple answer, but the answer certainly isn’t to smugly sit in the middle and pretend you have it all sussed just because you have no skin in the game. Ultimately all you are doing is advertising that you are ok with lynchings or whatever other forms of bigotted violence because it doesn’t effect you.

            • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
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              11 months ago

              It does affect me. I am for the free speech of e. G. nazis. Even though it will affect me and all of us.

              But that’s not the point. Free means free. It might be dangerous, it might be far away from my views. But who am I to tell others when they mustn’t voice their opinion? Free speech stops with the very first restriction and rarely stops there.

              You said it’s no easy answer. But to restrict “free” speech is an answer. And it draws a subjective line. Cool if you share the opinion,not so cool if you happen to be the opressed.

              Not a long time ago (or today in other countries) women had no rights to dare voice an opinion. Or blacks. Or gays. Or trans. Or or or or.

              We germans e.g. Aren’t allowed by law to question the holocaust. While i agree it surely happened, forbidding discussion is plain stupid. Question it, and be allowed to be convinced otherwise. That’s rational and mature. Just outlawing the question seems like bad parenting on a law level.

  • VHS [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    Hate speech is an actual problem for online entities to deal with. “Cancel culture” is a slightly vague term that usually refers to applying social pressure to disassociate from someone. This can obviously be good or bad depending on what it’s about, but the term is typically only used by right-wingers when said pressure is applied to them.

  • the w@beehaw.org
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    11 months ago

    I believe that that “cancel culture” is really just “consequence culture.” At one point users could hold powerful entities to account. The flattening of the public sphere twitter provided was a feature.

    Absolutely there have been people who got targeted who did not deserve it - regular folks who posted a shit take that caught the mobs attention. But I think one of the motivations for Elon acquiring twitter and threads’ non-chronological feed is to clamp down on this kind of of organizing and centralize power.

    As for hate speech, the problem that is that any solution at scale means AI and that reveals the biases of those who wrote it. These solutions can’t serve everyone.

    And outrage fuels engagement - these companies are incentived to allow that.

    So basically I think large networks can’t solve the problem. What’s needed is a decentralized approach with small interoperable communities vetting their members. Even if you get a hate filled instance it can be locked off so it can’t spread. Hate-motivated jerks have always existed, they just had no real access to the discourse until the internet. I really think the answer is the fediverse of tomorrow - if we make it that far.

  • CannotSleep420@lemmygrad.ml
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    11 months ago

    Censor them and ban offending accounts. If the account uses their real name, the state should arrest them and forcibly reeducate them.

  • Semperverus@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Can you elaborate on how exactly we would hold them accountable? What mechanisms precisely would you use without violating reasonable expectations of privacy (and no, posting online doesn’t mean you should have your real identity tracked or exposed just because the post is publicly facing like on Twitter, YouTube comments, reddit, and especially Lemmy.)

    • miss_brainfart@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      Realistically, the law forcing platforms themselves to moderate better is probably our best bet, but even that is a sloooow drag.

      Look at Twitter. In Germany alone there are hundreds of cases of hate speech (probably beyond a thousand now) that the courts could use to really, and I mean really hammer down on Twitter.

      All of these cases combined could amount to fines in the billions, making one single country capable of destroying that platform.

      That’s old news by now, and nothing happened. So… yeah.

    • GreyTechnician@lemm.eeOP
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      11 months ago

      As in banning the accounts that are constantly being used to harass people and perhaps maybe ip banning them if they continue to try doing this.

      • SomeoneSomewhere@lemmy.nz
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        11 months ago

        IP bans usually don’t work well on the modern internet. Many ISPs use CG-NAT with very rapidly changing IPs shared by many users. Places like college dorms are the worst.

        Looking up which accounts stem from which IP is also a moderate invasion of privacy.

        The usual issues with “banning the accounts that are constantly being used to harass people” are:

        • Clearly defining harassment vs legitimate discussion

        • Figuring out who’s actually being unreasonable - is one party being baited into responding, then that response is reported?

        • Having enough staffing

        • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          Looking up which accounts stem from which IP is also a moderate invasion of privacy.

          Not really. You can store the IP only when you actually have ban-worthy content from an account and then compare that to the IP for subsequent requests to enforce the ban. The IPs of everyone communicating with your service are required for that very communication so they will be on your system anyway and you are only really required to store it for the person who already demonstrated ban-worthy behaviour in which case this is the minimal step you can take as far as privacy invasion goes (as opposed to e.g. trying to figure out their identity from their IP) if you want to enforce the ban at all.

          I agree that IP bans just aren’t effective any more though due to CGNAT and IPv6 Privacy Extensions among other things.

    • Kissaki@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      They said hold the platform accountable, they didn’t mention holding the poster accountable.

      without violating reasonable expectations of privacy

      I don’t see what needs to or is implied to change regarding privacy merely from increased accountability - and especially not the platforms as a whole.

  • ArumiOrnaught@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    Internet websites aren’t the government.

    Hate speech is bad for business. It only makes sense for corporations to ban hate speech.

    You can make a nazi website, for nazis, by nazis. Those already exist.

    I see one chud and I’ll block them. If the site is nothing but chuds I won’t use it.

    If a website sucks, use a different one. Your attention is monetized, and if you want to say nazis are good to be around then give them space to exist. If not then do something about it. The website owners are not restricted by freedom of speech.

    I personally feel like large enough public forms should be held to a higher standard, and if people said half the things they do online irl they’d get beaten and thrown in jail.

  • Night Monkey@sh.itjust.works
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    11 months ago

    Your version of hate speech is different from other people’s versions of hate speech.

    “Hate speech” is protected speech. At least it is in the USA.

    People really need to realize how to use block/mute buttons.

    • dom@lemmy.ca
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      11 months ago

      Protected by the government. Doesn’t mean businesses can’t ban you from their platform.

      • Night Monkey@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        Yeah.

        I hate censorship of all kinds. I try not to give my business to shitty censorship happy company’s and businesses

        • dom@lemmy.ca
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          11 months ago

          Cool. I hate bigots and assholes and would rather hang out in a place that doesn’t have any.

          There’s a fine distinction between censoring someone’s ideas, and censoring someone being an asshole.

  • Damaskox@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    Might depend on the platform/environment.

    The combination of users being able to block users so they don’t see their input and general moderation are the first things that come to my mind.
    Free speech is good as long as you’re out there to discuss even your opinions that are against other opinions in the civilized way, without the purpose of harming other people involved in the conversation.

    .

    Respect is key. (Generally, not just in hate speech) Even if you feel that someone is dumb beyond measure, or disagrees with you, you can always try to reason in a polite way and if the conversation jams there, then just drop it. No need to name-call or otherwise trying to make someone’s day worse. And if someone crosses the line of harming others just for the sake of it, report that person.

  • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I think its dialectical formats/platforms like Lemmy. We do a decent job of keeping each other from totally going bonkers and I legit feel it later when I get involved in a discussion or topic I shouldn’t to the extent I feel embarassed even tho its all sort of anonymous.

    But folks need to be able to anonymously sort and sift through ideas without having their name stamped or attached to it. In this way, evolution and elaboration can naturally take place and leave their imprint

  • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I think its dialectical formats/platforms like Lemmy. We do a decent job of keeping each other from totally going bonkers and I legit feel it later when I get involved in a discussion or topic I shouldn’t to the extent I feel embarassed even tho its all sort of anonymous.

    But folks need to be able to anonymously sort and sift through ideas without having their name stamped or attached to it. In this way, evolution and elaboration can naturally take place and leave their imprint