Last year Danny Mekić wrote this article : https://dannymekic.com/202310/undermining-democracy-the-european-commissions-controversial-push-for-digital-surveillance which was published in a newspaper and then the author got shadow-banned on X. Today the same Dutch newspaper reported that Mekić won two court-cases about this.

X is not allowed to shadow-ban users easily the judge said. Only during the court-case X explained why the account of Meki was shadow-banned : He had shared an article about the CSAM law on X. “I still
do not understand why X this only said in the court hall, rather than telling me right away when I
asked about it” Mekić said.

  • makeasnek
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    1 month ago

    You’re right, and it also shouldn’t be controlled by the courts. Imagine a court requiring a newspaper to print an op-ed or a “letter to the editor” the newspaper didn’t want to print. Sounds crazy, right? But because it’s twitter, people are fine with it for some reason. Look to conservatives in the US who are writing laws in TX to require social media sites to “not censor conservative viewpoints”. It’s your website, you should be able to set rules for how it’s moderated. Let people choose websites based on moderation policies. Twitter is already on its way to being a dead website due to their moderation strategies, we don’t need to throw out out free speech rights in the process.

    The long-term solution is decentralized networks like Activitypub/Lemmy/mastodon and nostr.

    • Armok: God of Blood@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 month ago

      The difference here is that a platform’s users have no association with the platform. A newspaper pays its employees and has a hierarchy. It operates as a single entity. A better analogy to what’s happening would be if all the public parks and roads were owned by companies like Microsoft and Reddit, and they could ban you from the parks and roads for any reason.

      • makeasnek
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        1 month ago

        In the newspaper example, these are not newspaper employees having their content rejected, but readers or other random members of the public.

        A better analogy to what’s happening would be if all the public parks and roads were owned by companies like Microsoft and Reddit, and they could ban you from the parks and roads for any reason.

        Except that’s not the situation. They don’t have a monopoly, people can use other platforms (like we’re doing right now). And it looks like users and advertisers are abandoning twitter, that free choice mechanism is working.