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by lotsofpulp 4 days ago
There is no church-and-state issue because the state is not stopping anyone from distributing video to whoever wants it.

It’s trivial to make and distribute a video (or text website or audio recording). Just because one business does not want to pay for it does not entitle the public to it, like any other media.

3 comments

Yeah the church and state comparison is funny. The principles guiding separation of church and state are why the government can’t stop or punish tech companies from having studios.

What he’s suggesting is to violate the first amendment. You cant just tell tech companies they cant have studios.

Yet we could tell the studio companies that they can't have theatres. How did that not violate it? Has the amendment changed in the past century? Were the judges just stupid?

Maybe it's not so simple?

Regardless of the legal mechanisms, there is clearly a difference in power dynamics when people could only share media via specific venues compares to now when people have basically zero barrier to sharing any and all media.
> It’s trivial to make and distribute a video

It's trivial to shout into the void

It's nontrivial to get heard

Freedom of speech is not sufficient in a world where it is so easy for the powerful to drown out all but the biggest voices

There are 8 billion people in the world, and only 24 hours in a day. There is no reason to expect anyone to hear or see what you are saying, it’s logistically impossible. Even for professionals, hollywood, big news channels, all are becoming less and less relevant.
This feels like a strange take to me. With the internet, it has never been easier for people anywhere in the (connected) world to find an audience, which we've seen to great and detrimental effects. Prior to this, reaching widespread audiences _required_ powerful entities (publishers, marketers, broadcasters).

Why do you feel differently?

> Prior to this, reaching widespread audiences _required_ powerful entities (publishers, marketers, broadcasters).

I don't disagree I just don't think it has moved the needle that much. Powerful publishers still direct an enormous amount of the content available online

And there are fewer of them, because they have been consolidating for decades now

Edit: I think that a lot of people overestimate how much online publishing is independent. A vast majority of it is still backed/funded/owned by legacy media and publishers.

I see this all the time with video games. People will say "look at how popular "New Release" is! Indie games are so successful nowadays!" But it turns out that the game they're talking about is backed by a huge publisher

At least in the US, it seems like this viewpoint held more water before net neutrality died.
They already paid for it though. The movie was done.
So the government should force them to publish the viewpoint against their will?