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by Sahhaese 2543 days ago
> could have

But they didn't, that's a detail you can't just conveniently drop to argue in the abstract.

3 comments

Handing the responsibility for the mass murder on a platform is not much different than blaming books, rock music or TV. There are good things and bad things on the chans. Blocking it would just be a sign of losing control and having no explanation for the deed.

But yes, increasing the pressure on these kind of online spaces seems to have had a overall negative effect. If you don't know the demographic and how gripers react to pressure, you should not preach about the source of radicalization.

And yes, you also will net the ire of people that like their freedom and haven't done anything.

The point remains that crime/radicalization can occur over any site/medium. Banning a site or medium seems heavy-handed unless it exists expressly to facilitate crime/radicalization, in my opinion. TOR, for example, has been a known avenue for the spread of child pornography, yet we don't shut it down.
there's more CP on twitter than TOR but nice meme

edit: nice meme bc who actually uses TOR? theres so much more cp on surface web liek chans, tumblr used to be a pedos dream, twitter etc.

no one uses tor zzz

Got any proof to back up that statement? There have been numerous FBI busts of Onion sites. For example: https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/11/fbi-operated-23-...
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/aug/13/twitte...

https://sputniknews.com/science/201905091074866833-Twitter-3...

you can literally google twitter child porn

theres hundreds of threads exposing how these people start group dms baiting kids

https://twitter.com/xcutesannex/status/1147456947727282177 shit in a similar format to this

This is a weird quibble. Is your argument simply to let me know I could've used an example with more child porn? Unless you're arguing there's no CP on TOR, my point in the context of the original comment stands.
> But they didn't

Because there was a more convenient option. I think they'll just run their own alternative, especially as domains are cheap. Also, what about that namecoin thing? Seems like a workaround.