alt-left Twitter purges many alt-right accounts

Razer rayzer at riseup.net
Sun Nov 20 06:41:38 PST 2016



On 11/20/2016 04:02 AM, Ben Tasker wrote:
>
>
> But, if every one of Razer's followers (as well as randoms who stumble
> over the tweet) retweet it (or generate completely new tweets),
> they'll then get new copies/notifications.
>
>

Yup. That how the rat-packing part of twitter 'bullying' happens. I've
had that occur on a small scale but I can only imagine a journo or other
public figure having a real problem with it.  You have to visit the
account's page to block (using tweetdeck makes it easier). It can be
very time consuming. My tactic has always been to block the first person
who @'s or RT'd me but if you're being bullied and getting hundreds of
them it cold take a while to even figure out who was first.


> So, to summarise the claim "Twitter is in fact a utility provider, so
> should be subject to a Universal Service Obligation, and as such
> cannot discriminate against users"

Reiterating  Ben in other words:

Twitter IS NOT a "utility provider", meaning a common carrier. That
requires an act of congress or the FCC just like the procedure cell
phone companies went through in the early mid 1990s when the phones were
still analog, and people were listening in with scanners on convos, and
the customers figured out the phones were really just glorified
walkie-talkies, and the providers went begging congress for protection
from eavesdropping and got it. But not without being required to be
subject to fines for excessive 'dropped calls' and the demand the
providers move to more 'secure' digital transmissions as quickly as
possible, which they were doing anyway for technical reasons.

Twitter is under no obligation whatsoever to provide the service, and if
Twitter simply disappeared tomorrow, tough darts. It can discriminate.
It IS private.... Popularity doesn't change that.

Ben: 
> "Ultimately, I think that lawsuit would probably be doomed from the
> outset.

Right. You can't force twitter to become a common carrier.

Rr


> On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 9:07 PM, Zenaan Harkness <zen at freedbms.net
> <mailto:zen at freedbms.net>> wrote:
>
>     On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 11:25:19AM +0000, Ben Tasker wrote:
>     > On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 6:43 AM, Zenaan Harkness
>     <zen at freedbms.net <mailto:zen at freedbms.net>> wrote:
>     > > At what userbase level would you consider a communication
>     platform to
>     > > have crossed the line into "service provider"?
>     > >
>     > > 100 million? More? Less?
>     >
>     > I think, to an extent, it depends as much on how the provider
>     behaves as it
>     > does on userbase level. Although actual function would need to
>     come into it
>     > too.
>     >
>     > The platform that twitter provides is one that lets you "reach"
>     millions of
>     > people. In some ways, it's almost unrivalled, in the sense that
>     it's (IMO)
>     > far easier to stumble across someone new on Twitter than it is
>     on FB etc.
>     >
>     > Whether that's an essential service, obviously, is up for debate.
>
>     Please try to avoid shifting ground, or further twisting my words.
>
>
>
> Sorry, that wasn't my intention. I was hung over and trying to
> interpret what exactly you actually meant by "service provider", as I
> wasn't entirely clear whether you were viewing it as a utility or an
> essential service, so I expounded a little on my thinking which has
> obviously made it less clear.
>
>  
>
>     "Essential service" would be something like water, or electricity (for
>     cooking). Internet access is not an 'essential service', yet ISPs are
>     "service providers", Internet Service Providers to be precise. Like a
>     telephone.
>
>     I'm sure it called be argued that Twittering on Twitter makes one a
>     Twit, but it's also easy to say that once any communication platform
>     reaches a 100,000,000 user base, it has become a utility, a service
>     provider, albeit not an essential utility.
>
>
> For a utility? That number seems reasonable to me
>
>  
>
>     Arguing otherwise is arguing -for- a feudal corporatist world,
>     ESPECIALLY given that these corporations (in particular in this
>     instance
>     the one you're spruiking for) build themselves to such heights with
>     statutory corporate and monopolistic protections, defended by
>     government
>     and the courts. Zuckerberg is protected from personal legal attack by
>     the corporate veil of protection(ism) provided by the 100% artificial
>     corporation entity. "Twitter" in the "communications domain" at least
>     but possibly "all domains" is (presumably) a "protected" (for
>     exclusive
>     use of Twitter Inc) trademark.
>
>
> They almost certainly are, yes.
>
>  
>
>     > > Do you agree that "Twitter" has become a communication platform/
>     > > conduit?
>     >
>     > To some extent, yes.
>
>     Would be difficult to argue otherwise.
>
>     > > And do you agree that no one is obliged to "follow" anyone else?
>     >
>     > Yes. But, not following you doesn't mean that you can't dump
>     stuff into my
>     > notifications by simply including an @. If you've got many
>     hundreds of
>     > people doing that, are you going to sit and block all of them?
>
>     OK, so Twitter does have an "email" type of targetting function. I
>     didn't
>     know that.
>
>     Sounds like the technology is flawed - it's centralised, and a walled
>     garden - at least you can set up your own email server.
>
>
> Yes, and with email you at least have the ability to set up some very
> strict filters to try and limit what you receive. Until recently,
> Twitter lacked even the beginnings of that - they've recently added
> the ability to "mute" tweets based on keyword. Not tried it though so
> it might be crap.
>
> I _think_ it's probably fair to say that the tools Twitter provide
> were probably reasonable for how they envisioned the platform being
> used. Whether through simple growth or lack of imagination, though, it
> is fairly flawed if your aim is to filter things getting sent to you
> directly
>  
>
>     > But I can still include you in mentions which'll end up in your
>     > notification area. As an added "bonus" those mentions are
>     visible to anyone
>     > who is following you, so they can reply to them (which'll also
>     ping me). A
>     > DM would, at least, be hidden from your followers
>     >
>     > If you look at Razers tweet earlier, you'll probably find he's not
>     > following any of those
>
>     His ability to create such "non-following" is perhaps above the
>     ability
>     of "the average Twitter user"?
>
>
> In the case of Razer's tweet, we actually need to look at the reverse
> (so I mis-stated it a bit).
>
> Razer sent an unsolicited tweet to three people, all of whom are
> unlikely to be following him. They'll have received a notification of
> the tweet.
>
> If they don't like it, it's fairly simple, they just click to block Razer.
>
> But, if every one of Razer's followers (as well as randoms who stumble
> over the tweet) retweet it (or generate completely new tweets),
> they'll then get new copies/notifications.
>
> I can't actually remember for sure whether blocking on twitter does
> anything with retweets. If you've blocked Razer and I retweet his
> tweet, it's possible Twitter will see who the originator is and block
> it, but I've a feeling that isn't the case.
>
> "mentioning" a user like that is fairly routine on Twitter though, and
> if you're replying to a tweet (that you've stumbled over by looking at
> trending keywords, or whatever) the interface even drops a mention in
> for anyone involved in that thread. So it's well within the ability of
> the average user
>
>  
>
>
>     > > > The TL:DR is, there isn't a good answer that works in the
>     world we
>     > > > currently live in. Those that were banned (or at least those
>     I've
>     > > > bothered to look up) were assholes. Not because of their
>     speech, but
>     > > > of their actions.
>     > >
>     > > So now "speech == actions".
>     >
>     > At what point, in the online world, would you consider something
>     becomes
>     > analogous to a real-world action?
>
>     When either:
>      a) it has criminal consequences
>      b) it falls subject to civil claim of damages
>
>     Other than that, Rayzer's (personal) approach seems reasonable.
>
>     ISTM that Twitter Inc perhaps ought make it easy for "common folk" to
>     ban individuals or groups algorithmicly, sort of how Razer does this.
>
>
> Yes, I think that'd probably be a good idea. Blocking by "person" also
> comes with the downside that the persistent will create and cycle new
> profiles, being able top block based on some kind of algorithm would
> be good. From a quick scan, it looks like the new muting ability goes
> some way towards that - https://support.twitter.com/articles/20175032
>
> Course, it does mean that (in effect) you'll be the only person not to
> see the tweets as they'll still be publicly available. That's
> obviously different to dropping email at the edge, but it seems
> reasonable as it's not that dissimilar to if those comments had been
> published on a blog.
>
>  
>
>     But for Twitter Inc to get into the business of completely banning
>     individuals for using a communications platform, when that platform is
>     essentially a walled garden, is not acceptable.
>
>
> As I said before, for them it was probably a commercial decision, and
> at a commercial level it makes sense.
>
> At a technical level, they've not kept pace with demand in terms of
> creating tools so that people can effectively filter what they're
> receiving, so it's possible that they felt - in the short term - that
> there wasn't any other way.
>
> Corporations exist as a part of a capitalist society, a rightly or
> wrongly, a good proportion of that society see the bans as acceptable.
> Course, that's easy to attain when a good proportion of society sees
> the speech being blocked as distasteful, but my point is, from
> Twitters PoV they probably see that the majority of the users either
> support it or are ambivalent.
>
> I'm not saying that's an ideal place for society to be... 
>
>  
>
>     This could also expose Twitter Inc to a class action lawsuit if there
>     are some motivated bunnies around - as others have been saying, the
>     "statutory privileges" that corporations have, give rise to certain
>     obligations to the rest of society, in particular when those
>     corporations become large and dominant, or extremely dominant, in
>     their
>     particular "market" (and yes, even if they are the original creator of
>     that market) - you cannot ethically have the protectionist benefits of
>     being "a corporation", with no consequential obligations and duties to
>     the wider society commensurate to those protections.
>
>     Thus, class action lawsuit against Twitter Inc.
>
>
> Ethically speaking you're correct, but, let's follow this through a
> bit, as the idea is semi-intriguing. To start with I'm going to pull
> in some of what you've said previously (as that's interesting too)
>
> So, to summarise the claim "Twitter is in fact a utility provider, so
> should be subject to a Universal Service Obligation, and as such
> cannot discriminate against users"
>
> Twitter are in the US, so the laws are already stacked against the
> claimants. I'm also not in the US so will probably make a few errors here
>
> First hurdle is going to be actually showing that Twitter qualify as
> the sort of Communications Provider that would fall under the
> necessary regulations (that is, that they should be subject to FCC
> oversight). Given the ramifications for Twitter, they'd resist that
> *very* strongly. I'm not 100% sure there's a case to be made here, at
> least under the laws as they stand, especially when you consider
> similar providers (FB et all) would probably file ex parte's in
> support of Twitter (as a decision in the wrong way might hit their
> profits/responisibilities too)
>
> But, assuming you get past that, the next thing is to try and and
> enforce those obligations. Given how hard some of the actual ISPs
> (Comcast in particular) have fought, ducked and weaved, in order to
> avoid living up to those obligations, I'd imagine Twitter (with their
> smaller US userbase) would probably put up some pretty meaningful
> resistance here too.
>
> Ultimately, I think that lawsuit would probably be doomed from the outset.
>
>
> Going back to what you actually just said though - that the privileges
> corporations have give rise to obligations to the rest of society.
>
> At a point, that is something that's semi-reflected in law. If you
> look at the anti-trust stuff, once a provider reaches a monopoly share
> on the market, there are additional responsibilities that are enforced
> (though I'd argue that actually, most of them seem to be obligations
> to "the market" rather than to the user-base as such - they're
> predicated on the fundamental idea that the free market solves all,
> which doesn't work so well when the players are all bent in one way or
> another).
>
> So there is a kind of precedence.
>
> There are other obligations as well (like not dumping chemical waste
> in the water supply), but IMO they're currently viewed more as rules
> imposed than actual responsibilities (i.e. they seem to be dodged any
> time there's an opportunity).
>
> What they all seem to run up against is this myth that corporations
> have an overwhelming responsibility to their share holders. It gets
> used as an excuse to let common decency be overridden by the profit
> imperative. Without finally putting that to rest (somehow), I don't
> think it matters what responsibilities society says it expects from
> the corporations, they'll simply be ignored when it suits.
>
> Given that lawsuits are predicated on what the law says, if those
> ethics aren't reflected in law, lawsuits aren't going to prevail.
> Seems to be the case, at the moment, that even when they are, the
> punishment doesn't always cost the corp more than they made from the
> breach.
>
> No idea how we fix that though, the lawmaking structure is broken, and
> even if it wasn't the laws that already exist get ignored or willfully
> misinterpreted in pursuit of the next dime.
>
>
>  
>
>
>     > Their action was that they verbally attacked someone (and
>     encouraged others
>     > to do so) - obviously doing that requires speech but the two are
>     not the
>     > same thing.
>
>     The same can happen with email. Or telephone. Or text messages. Or
>     Facebook "friends".
>
>
> True, and you just named several "platforms" that those banned _could_
> use instead of Twitter.
>
> In the context of it being like an action though, I'd say encouraging
> the same flood of abuse would be more or less the same on all of
> those. The tooling for dealing with it on each of those differs
> though, and I think Twitter's probably at the bottom of the list in
> terms of means of stopping it (assuming we accept that all-together
> leaving the service isn't an ideal option)
>
>  
>
>
>     > > The Ministry of Truth congratulates you; take notice that
>     > > the Ministry's cheques take up to 48 hours to arrive.
>     >
>     > Please ensure it's made out to CASH ;)
>
>     What? Twitter Inc's HR/accounts department not paid you last month?
>     Shoddy...
>
>
> No, they said my request for money might be offensive to those who
> believe in a resource based economy and banned me ;)
>
>
> -- 
> Ben Tasker
> https://www.bentasker.co.uk
>

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