| > [..] when moderators are afraid to ban people for potentially abusive language then it's very easy for the discourse to start slipping and become toxic. I think it really depends on what the purpose of your forum actually is. Perhaps that's the problem - people go to these platforms for different reasons. In my opinion, Twitter is not a place for intellectual discussion and debate, the format itself encourages quick and low-depth hot-takes. And don't get me started on the Tweet numbering... > [..] we all deserve a place where we can be treated respectfully and have intellectually stimulating conversations. I don't think we fundamentally do. It would of course be nice and it's something I personally want - but I don't think it's something I deserve. I accept that some things will offend me, and that's okay. If I don't want to see it, there are many options available. > I don't understand what the issue is here, if this is talking about twitter, you can just delete an old tweet if it's upsetting people later. In theory, but you have "cancel culture" where something is taken entirely out of context and judged with modern sentimentality, rather than in the context it was written. Also it should be okay to openly disagree with your past self and not have the re-write history, it shows personal progress. > The article even shows how twitter has a process to let you delete the tweet and restore your account. "Let you" - it didn't seem like there was much of a choice if the person wanted to continue using the service. My original point about a better social media still stands anyway, I believe censorship should be opt-in. "I don't want to see X content" - sure, here's your wall with X content removed. "I don't want to talk to Y" - sure, here's everything with Y removed. |