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Comment by cmrdporcupine

2 years ago

Right? Mass random firings of employees in multiple incompetent waves, blocking and expelling journalists and activists, re-enabling known hate-speech accounts, walking out of press conferences when questioned, spreading QAnon adjacent conspiracy theories... none of this annoyed Paul Graham enough to leave.. and in fact he defended the guy...

But blocking links to Mastodon? That makes him leave? Like, uh, fine, but... maybe he could have not mocked us for pointing out the dysfunction weeks and weeks ago?

Between all the crypto implosions happening and this, wealthy Silicon Valley investor types and their hanger-ons are really having a "moment" these past few months. Sheesh.

This was the straw that broke the camel's back. that doesn't mean he adores the other changes.

None of those things incurred opportunity cost. I don't know who invests in what, but a cynical, logical explanation is on the table.

In a free country there's this thing called the first amendment and freedom of speech; because someone doesn't like a certain opinion doesn't make it hate speech.

However, blocking links to a competitor is pretty clear-cut anticompetitive behavior. Imagine AT&T refusing to serve Verizon's websites.

> re-enabling known hate-speech accounts

“Hate speech” is left-wing code for “someone with an opposing point of view”.

Having those accounts unbanned, if nothing else, is a healthy sign.

What this thread is about though (banning outbound links to other platforms), not so much. That plain reeks of desperation.

  • That seems to be a real boon for advertising revenue there at twitter. Just what advertisers dream of, their ad next to a post by some antisemitism/racism/lgbt hate.

    You just lost a large group of potential customers. Brilliant marketing strategy.

    Maybe if you sell flags that go on oversized pickups. About everyone else is a miss in that sort of stupidity.

  • No, it's not code in this case. Many of the accounts he re-enabled were full-on white supremacists. That's not an "opposing point of view" it's beyond the pale of civilized society and we literally fought wars to defeat it last century.

    And the list of accounts he banned were from a list left-wing/anarchist accounts given to him by known self-proclaimed fascists.

    If you think that's healthy, you have problems.

  • Conversely, "an opposing point of view" is right-wing code used to mask hate speech, when it occurs.

    Does hate speech exist? Yes. Are we in danger of overusing the term? Yes.