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by 7u8Cpa2B
2627 days ago
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I am not sure how ethics is defined here. In fact, I can totally see how some of these options can be considered unethical. Before we proceed, recall that Facebook is now a "morally bankrupt liars" because it "enabled genocide", "facilitate foreign undermining of democratic institutions", "allow the live streaming of suicides, rape, and murders", and "host and publish the mosque attack video". Let's compare this with one of the ethical browsers listed here -- Tor. Tor allowed Silk Road, which allowed dangerous drugs and fake IDs to be sold, and other sites that hosted child abuse and pornography content. But privacy! Well, how about PeerTube? Interestingly, PeerTube "viewers don't have privacy" as it exposes the IPs of all viewers. Imagine if YouTube or Facebook does this. So what gives? |
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This is a nice example of a not so common fallacy, the "fallacy fallacy": suppose that you have an argument a for the proposition p:
a -> p
It does not follow that:
~a -> ~p
Which is to say, showing some cherry-picked argument for Facebook being unethical to be invalid tells us nothing about Facebook being unethical or not.
Given that you crated a throwaway account one hour ago just to post this comment, I suspect that you are aware of what I am saying, but others may not be.
For those interested in a less cherry-picked source of claims against Facebook, there's even a Wikipedia page just for that (warning: it is quite long):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Facebook