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by neovialogistics 935 days ago
According to the management of LiveJournal competitor Dreamwidth, you get approximately one violent mentally ill person stalking and sending actionable threats of assault or murder to their partners, ex-partners or family using the platform as their medium of choice for every 20,000 US based users, each of which has approximately a 10% chance of carrying out one or more violent felonies in each year.

For each of these cases that do then occur, approximately 10% of them require somebody representing the platform to attend court (usually briefly) and approximately 1% of those result in a judgement against the platform even when they show that the platform took all reasonable precautions and legal requirements including, where applicable, closing accounts and reporting inappropriate behavior to the relevant authority.

So let's run the numbers for one million US users. You have 50 real psychos on the platform. Roughly 5 violent assaults (or worse) connected to the platform occur a year. 0.5 of them require the platform to send a legal representative.

Assuming the platform is following all legal requirements and can show this, there are 0.005 legal judgements in the USA against the platform for enabling violent crime per year for every million US users.

Or, if you have 200 million US users, you can expect 1 court judgement for not doing enough about violent criminal activity a year. Now, what about the four other major categories of crime communicated by US residents on the internet: drug sales, child sexual exploitation, domestic terrorism and piracy of entertainment products? That 1 judgement a year, unless you have a very good legal team, will become 30 judgements a year.

When they say that "people could die" they are using an attention-grabbing shorthand for "if we can not demonstrate a commitment to full legal compliance then the headquarters will be raided by two dozen FBI vans, or, if we're unlucky, Secret Service vans." Note that appearances matter much more than results, particularly because of the senility of the average policy maker in the United States. Look how badly Meta has had to drop the ball to get 9-digit fines and they have ten times the userbase of our hypothetical.