We have heard the rumblings, now it comes.... the Code of Conduct for social media along with the banhammer.
From Bloomberg we get this warning:
U.S. Internet giants Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc., Google and Microsoft Corp. pledged to tackle online hate speech in less than 24 hours as part of a joint commitment with the European Union to combat the use of social media by terrorists.
Of course terrorists are defined down to "unambiguous hate speech that they said promoted racism, homophobia or anti-Semitism" before the short article ends.
Buckle up folks, the ride is is about to get bumpy.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by cubancigar11 on Thursday June 02 2016, @10:21AM
That is not what it happened but it has become a meme to argue from your POV and get the reply you have gotten. What really happens and happened is that most people don't like to be making final decisions on the internet as most people run to reddit to relax from the stressful life where they have to make uncomfortable decisions. That is the majority. They will argue all day long but won't do anything as their real life is unaffected by most of what they are so passionate bout online. These people are malleable and they stick with majority. And majority was already on reddit. That is why single cause forks of community don't survive. It has got nothing to do with 'cesspool'. If tomorrow reddit decides everyone who mentions linux will be banned, any resulting fork will also not survive. Even in case of slashdot, multiple fuckups for multiple years, multiple ownership and policy changes didn't make SN. It was when CmdrTaco wrote that slashdot is not his anymore, when old timers got convinced there is no hope and an alternative is needed.
(Score: 4, Informative) by Vanderhoth on Thursday June 02 2016, @11:06AM
Partly right with the Voat migration. I don't think anything you said is incorrect, but the Voat migration stopped when the person being blamed for all the censorship and crap that was going on on Reddit (Ellen Pao) was let go / resigned. In hindsight she was really just a scapegoat. She did have some hand in the events (firing a really well liked community manager) that lead to mass protests (major subs that went private) and the initial migration to Voat, but she wasn't the sole provocateur, she was just the face of the shitty decisions that were being made.
Also Voat wasn't really equipped to handle the massive amount of traffic they started getting. There were days I'd go to Voat several times a day (I just keep tabs open) and the whole day was spent refreshing the "be patient" message, I eventually just stopped going. Since things on Reddit more or less went back to normal after Pao left, there was no reason to keep going to Voat to see if they'd upgraded their servers.
I also agree with you AC was full of it. I didn't see any "hate speech" going on on Voat, no more so than what I see on Reddit or any other internet forum.
"Now we know", "And knowing is half the battle". -G.I. Joooooe