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by rbanffy 5784 days ago
> What’s Google’s decision whether to sell crap like this got to do with freedom of speech?

Everything.

I, personally, find it disturbing. But if it does not breach the ToS of the Android market, Google has no right to remove the materials. More than that: by removing it from the market, Google would be dictating the terms for censorship in the marketplace, making it difficult for neonazis to find material that appeals to them.

And this is a delicate issue: if you segregate against those with unpopular points of view (the neonazis, religious nuts (aren't them all), proto-terrorists, extreme right-wingers) you drive them underground. If their ideas can no longer be debated in the open, they will be debated - and reinforced - in communities with like-minded people.

I don't care about neonazis and other miscellaneous idiots, but I care about a functioning society I am part of. There is not that much difference between segregating on beliefs and segregating on skin color.

2 comments

Actually, there is no connection between Google's decision and freedom of speech.

First off I'm not attacking you since you mentioned that you are not from the US, and the majority of people in the US don't understand this either.

Freedom of speech is not the right to be able to say anything you want anytime, anywhere, anyhow.

Freedom of speech is the right to say anything you want without government interference.

Google is not the government. They own the app store, it is their property. If they want to limit what people say, that is not a freedom of speech issue. That is a property rights issue. If I want to go stand on the lawn at Google HQ and have a KKK rally, they have no obligation to allow me to do that. Same goes for the app store.

Google has every right to remove the material. Property rights are the foundation of this country, probably more so than freedom of speech.

As for the difference between beliefs and skin color, actually there is a huge difference. It is in court decisions that there is a difference between things you are born with (skin color) and things you choose (beliefs).

> Freedom of speech is the right to say anything you want without government interference.

Indeed. Still, the respect Google gives to people who say things they disagree with reflects what they think of your right to say things they disagree with.

I am bothered with people that really believe nazi crap. I don't agree and I don't like it, but I believe ideas should be exposed in the open and be examined under the light of reason.

I think it's important to remember though that in most countries freedom of speech explicitly excludes stuff like hate speech.
But this is about Google, not the government. Your local book shop is free to not sell nazi literature and so is Google, freedom of speech doesn’t even come into play here and neither does segregation. Nazis can try to find another book shop or open their own, simple as that.

It is pretty obvious why it is not a good idea to apply freedom of speech not just to citizen-state relationships but also to citizen-citizen relationships. Wouldn’t citizen-citizen freedom of speech, for example, imply that publishers have to publish every manuscript that is sent to them?

Freedom of speech is all about making it impossible for the state to make a law which would, for example, make it illegal to sell nazi literature. Nothing more.