I'll bite I guess, but I want to note that I'm sticking strictly to the originally stated bullet points, so I probably won't be paying too much mind to "Well what about..." in reference to any peoples or actions outside of the originally stated bullet points.
- CNN is trying to force Fox News off air
Maybe I'm missing something because I don't really follow the goings on of cable news networks very much, but after a quick-ish Google search I only really found Tucker Carlson ranting on about how a person at CNN published an opinion piece that Fox News should be pulled by cable providers. Maybe they actually contacted cable providers? I still don't really see what the censorship issue is here though. I am willing to admit that it's kind of underhanded to see what's going on with digital platforms and then try to apply that to a competitor's television network, but big business is going to do what big business does.
- Twitter deletes a large number of prominent conservatives who have opinions different than theirs.
Twitter removed accounts that they decided broke their TOS. Just like any website that acts as a public forum they have a set of rules that all participants agree to when signing up. If they feel that someone is in breach of those rules, then they are free to suspend access. In this case they were suspending access to accounts that were spreading misinformation about election results in reaction to that not only being against their policies on misinformation, but also as we've seen it was being used to incite violence. Twitter does not have the power to prevent people from spreading that misinformation, but they are well within their rights to prevent people from spreading it on their platform.
- Apple, Google and Amazon deleting a free speech platform - Parler.
"Free Speech" Platform is a stretch. First off companies don't grant us our free speech, the government does. Also, it's a pretty big stretch to pretend like no one has ever been banned from Parler. For the meat of that bullet point though, I would mostly just parrot what I said in the previous one. All listed services have a TOS that users have to agree to, Parler broke those TOS by not having better moderation in place to prevent dangerous language, Parler got booted. Mind you, there is nothing that prevents Parler from existing by booting them off of AWS. Parler is more than welcome and able to host and maintain their own web servers, and AWS even retains all data for a time to make the migration process as simple as possible. If you are going to rely on someone else for all of your access and infrastructure though, then you are going to be handcuffed to their rules. That's just the way it is. If you want to set the rules, then do it yourself.
Now where do I personally stand? (Let's be honest, someone will probably ask) I think large tech companies like Amazon and Facebook need to be broken up regardless. They are dangerous monopolies for a lot of reasons, I just don't see this as one of them. I don't see this as a constitutional issue unless the Government passed regulations that mandated that these things happened, which as far as I'm aware did not happen. I don't think that pulling the protections that social platforms are granted by the government would help anything, and in fact would lead to many more people being pulled from those platforms. Though I do think that there is a great deal of influence in a powerful social presence and we need to think of ways of mitigating that, because in the wrong hands it can lead to dangerous situations.
Originally Posted by anmar85
Thank you for staying on topic and making a reasoned and intelligent replay unlike most of the people who responded. While I disagree with several of your points, at least you took the time to articulate them well so Kudos.
On CNN - there have been multiple individuals who work for CNN who have argued Fox News was complicit it what took place on Jan 6 and Fox should thus be removed from the airwaves. Given how Big Tech and Corporate Media work, I suspect that besides this public pressure campaign, the suits at ATT who own CNN could be putting pressure on cable carriers. But regardless, it is chilling for a group to try and censor / remove from the airwaves a station because they do not kowtow to the left like 99% of media do. Furthermore, it is also hypocritical as CNN and others of their ilk incited BLM riots all summer resulting in far more damage and people killed.
On Twitter - you say "Twitter removed accounts that they decided broke their TOS." This is not accurate. The vast majority of accounts removed broke no rules. They were removed for the crime of being conservative. That is Nazi Germany stuff right there. Hell Twitter still allows the Ayatollah Khomeini to post threats against America. And shoot, this guy Ayers actually detonated a bomb in the Capital and still has a Twitter account. So save the BS line they only removed accounts that broke their TOS - you know it is BS as do I.
On Parler - you are way off base and contradict yourself. Parler was a Twitter alternative that valued free speech. You claim "it's a pretty big stretch to pretend like no one has ever been banned from Parler" - which is actually true. Parler has taken down some posts and probably banned some users. But Parler's TOS is Parler's to determine - not anyone elses. And Parler did enforce their TOS. So you saying "Parler broke those TOS by not having better moderation in place to prevent dangerous language, Parler got booted" is not accurate. Google, Apple and Amazon all conspired against Parler to shut them down as part of the mass silencing of opposition voices.
By you arguing that these tech companies could do that, you are saying they could do that to any website or app they do not like. For example, tomorrow they could decide they don't like people talking about hookers and shut down ECCIE - just like that. is that the world you want to live in with this kind of power concentrated in a few unelected, unaccountable oligarchs?
And your whole argument that "there is nothing that prevents Parler from existing by booting them off of AWS. Parler is more than welcome and able to host and maintain their own web servers" is a joke and you know it. Yes technically that is possible, but do you realize the logistical and technical undertaking that is in normal times - and impossible in the timeframe Parler was given. AWS and a handful of others like it host the vast majority of large scale sites in this country. When these 3 companies shut Parler down - ON ONE DAYS NOTICE - no other web hosting company was willing to host them. That is collusion. And as some have noted, Amazon, Apple and Google's suspension of Parler is "clearly a violation'" of antitrust, civil rights and the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act.
in closing, you said "I do think that there is a great deal of influence in a powerful social presence and we need to think of ways of mitigating that, because in the wrong hands it can lead to dangerous situations". Well I would say it is already in the wrong hands and we have surpassed that dangerous situation. When the Big Tech companies start to quash free speech and opposition voices, just like they do in Communist China or did in Nazi Germany, we are in extremely dangerous territory