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by AnIdiotOnTheNet
1986 days ago
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> This is a logical fallacy and the equivalent of saying 'you are welcome to practice free speech, in this here sound-proofed room'. No, it's saying you're welcome to practice free speech, you just can't borrow my megaphone to do it. How hard is this to understand? You are not entitled to use other people's property without their consent. If twitter was actually the only way to communicate with people on the internet you might have a case, but that is completely, ridiculously, absurdly not true. |
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Yes, you can make your own blog and post whatever you like on it (actually these days even that is questionable with cloud vendors deplatforming blogs they don't like), but the chances of your speech reaching a wide audience are millions of times smaller than if you just posted on one of those established platforms and your speech was allowed to spread without censorship.
The problem with your analogy is that your megaphone makes it virtually impossible for anyone else to have one. This was not the case in the early days of the internet prior to these hyper centralised platforms emerging. This is where both the law and just general public mindset hasn't yet caught up with the implications of modern social media. In business, we have anti-trust laws specifically for this scenario. In information and social media, we have nothing.
A cafe owner refusing service to an individual is not comparable to a global-scale speech platform selectively suppressing ideas that the owner doesn't like from reaching a wide audience.