|
|
|
|
|
by kbos87
1576 days ago
|
|
Honest question in good faith - Why should we hold true to some past ideals of technologists 20 or 30 years ago? I think it’s pretty clear at this point that the notion of the web as a self protecting organism that naturally rejects misinformation and stops bad actors is completely wrong. I don’t know that I’m 100% in favor of what is being proposed here (partly because I expect there are likely nefarious reasons why governments are pushing it so hard.) But I also think you can’t ignore that misinformation from anonymous actors has pushed democracy to the brink of collapse, and “that wasn’t the original idea of the web” isn’t the best rebuttal. |
|
Requiring real world identities to post online had a number of chilling effects on speech online.
- LGBTQ people were outed after having their online persona linked to their real world identity.
- People who need to maintain strong personal/professional life separations have been outed (ex: Slate Star Codex)
- People have had their lives upended by being part of an angry community (ex: Blizzards RealID caused revealing peoples identity to the gamer community. Love my games but wow does that community love doxxing and sometimes SWATing)
- It has not prevented spam / trolls / people being hateful online (ex: Nextdoor)
This has been a long standing conflict (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nymwars). The UKs opinion has always been one of providing as much information as possible to the government for questionable purposes. This is the same government which constantly wants to backdoor encryption so that they can spy on citizens at any time.