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by klyrs
1680 days ago
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I mean, that's definitely your opinion, but this doesn't match any definition of censorship I'm aware of -- it sounds like you want compelled disclosure. It's a single statistic that YT collects per video. YT also has location data for the dissenters. Is it censorship that they aren't showing a country-by-country breakdown of where the dislikes are coming from? Is it censorship that they aren't showing a town-by-town breakdown of where the dislikes are coming from? Is it censorship that they aren't showing the IP address of each dissenter? Clearly, that got ridiculous. But, what I'm curious about is if there's an underlying principal in your mind here. Because what you appear to be suggesting is a regulation compelling not only disclosure of internal statistics, but specifically how fine-grain those internal statistics are allowed to be? And, for example, what about twitter? They don't have a dislike button -- do you think they should be compelled to implement one? Since your focus seems to be on where people are getting their news, do you think that news sites (above a certain popularity?) should be compelled to implement dislikes on their own content, or only user-submitted comments? |
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It's just that it is a very unique situation. We're at a stage where YT is one of the most important platforms on the current web, it's incredibly centralized, and at the end of the day it is up to the whims of Alphabet execs on how they want information published on their platform.
So maybe it's not exactly "censorship" in the standard definition. However, there is functionality that exists and has existed in the product since inception (when it was a rating system instead of voting). You have always been able to see how unpopular a video really is. Taking this away is an alarm to me, especially in today's environment.
I apologize if it's a bit hard for me to explain my reasoning here, but it just truly unsettles me.