Zuckerberg Tells Angela Merkel Facebook Is On The Hate Speech Censorship Case
from the dislike dept
A brief review of the available record shows that Facebook and Germany have always had something of a contentious relationship. Past examples of this have included Germany trying to influence Facebook's really dumb "real name" policy, Germany trying to get Facebook to drop its facial recognition database, and even Germany attempting to outlaw the "Like" button. The context in most of these instances is a German government perhaps still rather touchy with a sordid, if decades-old, history and its overcorrection on matters of privacy and speech. The latest is no different.
At a recent UN summit, Mark Zuckerberg apparently had a discussion with German Chancellor Angela Merkel that Facebook will start getting involved in policing racism and hate speech on the social media network.
"I think we have to work on that," Zuckerberg told Merkel during their meeting on Saturday on the fringe of the United Nations Sustainable Development Summit in New York.It's the age-old question on matters of free speech: how do we handle speech the public generally finds unacceptable? And, to be fair, it's not the easiest question to discuss, because free speech advocates find themselves within the ranks of some truly horrible people who say some truly horrible things. Racism and bigotry is, of course, not acceptable as a matter of morality and public discourse. But should it be hidden by corporate interests at the request of the government of a free people?
Facebook has been much criticized in Germany for not doing more to shut down hate speech on its network during the refugee crisis, with Justice Minister Heiko Maas a leading voice calling for better moderation on the site. At a meeting with Maas earlier in September, when the minister demanded faster procedures to get hate comments removed, Facebook agreed to set up a working group to look at the problem.
No, it should not. And, when we slide emotion to the side, it's quite easy to see why not. First, on matters of comments that involve threats or calls to violence, we already have laws on the books (as I assume Germany does as well) to deal with that. Indeed, rather than disappearing the comments from social media, law enforcement would likely want to have those comments on hand should a crime for incitement or menacing have been committed. For charges of racism and hate speech, on the other hand, I would argue that the need for exposure of the bigot outweighs any, if there is any, harm done by the speech. Put another way: if there are racist assbags in the world, do you want to allow them to identify themselves, or shall we allow social media sites to put up a veil so that we can all pretend that everything is right with the world?
Zuckerberg is allowed to do with Facebook as the site's corporate interests please, but as an American leading a company that can only continue to benefit the world through the free exchange of ideas if the site rests on the principles of free speech, I would hope he might be cautious in what promises he might make that violate those principles.
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Filed Under: angela merkel, free speech, germany, hate speech, mark zuckerberg
Companies: facebook
Reader Comments
The First Word
“A quote that seems appropriate
"‘If someone tells me that I’ve hurt their feelings, I say, “Well I’m still waiting to hear what your point is”.’ -Christopher Hitchens.Subscribe: RSS
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There was that hungarian reporter who tripped the guy. The media immediatelly named her, which is illegal. They set up a facebook hate page where people threatened to kill her and someone offered 10k euro for anyone who does it. But this was not hateful enough to be deleted, unlike the dozens of pages that pointed out that this shit is hateful and illegal.
Facebook is all about censorship and pushing agendas.
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Techdirt
I find sites that don't allow profanities (imbd.com) especially annoying because you are supposed to intuitively know what is acceptable or not (ass, dick, crap, gosh-darn-it-to-heck...) else see your comment removed by their delicate admins.
Techdirt's approach is simple but it works. I haven't seen it in use anywhere else.
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Having hate speech out in the open has a moderating effect on the speakers, by including more reasonable voices, while driving it underground usually results in limiting it to the more extreme and possibly activist people who have similar views. Also, driving hate speech underground is more likely to result in violent actions, as the speakers come to believe that that is the only way that their voices will be heard.
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Re: Techdirt
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As much as I hate it...
For instance, I'm white with Native American ancestry. If I say the N-word, it's racist. But if I had African American ancestry... it's acceptable. Or is it? Who decides?
The problem is the same as the app censorship at Apple... they have these wishy-washy, timey-wimey rules that arbitrarily ban apps because whoever was reviewing it thought it might, possible kinda sorta violate some vaguely worded policy. It's been problematic for years.
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Re: Techdirt
That said, the hivemind isn't so strong here as it is on, say, reddit, and there are some pretty ridiculous comments that get disappeared, but Techdirt isn't a particularly controversial site. Start having serious discussions on the refugee situation in the EU and I'm sure the comments section would be a graveyard of disappeared items as the two sides battled it out.
It also lets Mike and his chums claim they're not censoring or directing the conversation, while at the same time they've got control over the censorship thresholds...
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The real answer to hate speech
The real answer to hate speech or any speech you don't like is to put your big boy pants on and get over it. People need to quit being so sensitive. Anything someone says that is hateful, hurtful, etc is far more of a reflection on the speaker than the person being spoken too. There is literally nothing you can say to me, about me or about anyone I care about or anything I believe that will hurt me. If you are attempting to say something to me to hurt me it is a poor reflection on you, not me.
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Re: Re: Techdirt
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Re: The real answer to hate speech
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Bring on the censorship
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Re: The real answer to hate speech
When people talk about privilege, this is exactly what they mean.
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A quote that seems appropriate
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Re: Bring on the censorship
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It's illegal for the media to name a reporter who does something on camera? Even in a country that doesn't protect freedom of the press like we do, that stretches credibility.
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Re: Re: The real answer to hate speech
I'll let that "good speech" comment slide here as that didn't come across objective (what exactly is good speech anyway? That's subjective)
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Who invited mr invasion of privacy to a UN summit, This has got to be a joke or they were just trolling him, with a fake invite.
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Re: The real answer to hate speech
Are you sure?
Remember, sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can make me believe I deserved it.
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Re: Re: Re: The real answer to hate speech
I really do hate that kind of cop out. What it does is to paint morality as some kind of subjective thing that cannot be quantified, discussed logically, or expressed in any kind of scientific terminology, which I think is laughably false. Morality is subject to all the same material laws the rest of our world and philosophy is subject to. Areas of moral ambiguity or areas in which we simply haven't applied enough thought capital to, or areas where a moral certainty might not exist (areas of which I think there are less in quantity than most people think).
If what I said above is true, than there can certainly be "good speech" as an objective reality. We just need to train our brains to understand how to see morality and goodness in a consequential or even scientific light....
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Re: Re: Techdirt
It is diabolical.
Mike, you and your Google masters are evil.
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Having a lot of information that the UN would like to get it's hands on gets you in the door. Offering to let them in on it gets you in the door of all of their member nations.
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Re: Techdirt
;-)
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"doesn't protect freedom of the press like we do"
Hungary isnt Israel, reporters dont get beaten up and their cameras trashed every second day...
Its really disgusting to see what the pro-migrant media does these times. The only thing against their freedom are privacy laws, yet they claim that the government intentionally beats up reporters, which is simply bullshit.
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Re: Re: Techdirt
What is somewhat releated is the media bias.
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Re: Re: Techdirt
This is simply untrue. Comments that seriously disagree with the majority of commenters here are left uncollapsed all the time.
The real problem with the vast majority of the comments that get collapsed is not that they disagreed with anybody, it's that they are full of vitriol, personal attacks, and outright lies.
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Re: Re: Re: Techdirt
Such a simple idea, yet for so many it seems to be completely beyond their comprehension and ability to understand.
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Re: Re: Techdirt
Yeah, but that doesn't mean it's actually happened.
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Free speech
You would think so, but the history of sites like Craigslist and Backpage indicate otherwise.
For charges of racism and hate speech, on the other hand, I would argue that the need for exposure of the bigot outweighs any, if there is any, harm done by the speech.
While I agree with you, it seems Germany has a different view of the subject.
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Censorship is hate speech
The censorship being wrought on the anti-immigration speech is itself hate speech, as it is expressing hate against white people.
We need more real talk in the world, and none of this PC garbage that only serves the interests of the powerful. The liberal elite, the likes of which include Merkel and Zuckerberg, are scared of dissent and uprising because they are the ones who will benefit the most from inundating the Western world with Muslims and Africans. For instance, feminism has killed birth rates in the Western world, so countries are importing Third World migrants to boost their populations.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The real answer to hate speech
Wow. When did you suddenly start making so much sense? o_0
Having said that, ironically enough I find that "good" is somewhat tricky to define in an objective, definitive sense, but "evil" is dead easy: any act whereby a person places their own interests above the well-being of others to such a degree that they are willing to knowingly cause harm to others in order to achieve their goal is an evil act. Defining "good", though... what's the objective opposite of "cause harm to others"? It's not simple.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The real answer to hate speech
The objective opposite is "that action, idea or speech which causes the maximum benefit or happiness to others." These issues MUST start at the macro level before we talk about the micro, but an objective good is that which benefits the most people in the most quantity while correcting for any harm or negative impact on others.
In other words, it ends up being a math equation. If you can weight the good done to the people concerned while subtracting the weighted (where we can argue about how we weight this), you get a number. Positive numbers are objectively good, negative numbers are objectively bad, and some outcomes can end up more or less good or bad based on their number. How we arrive at that number is insanely complicated, and it never really is a number, but our own intuition, but when we take moral questions down to their bedrock, this process becomes evident.
Take gun control, for instance. Let's say as a hypothetical we know or have strong reason to believe that outlawing all firearms everywhere in our country will lead to 1000 less deaths per year in the country (I'm not saying this is even remotely true, just a hypothetical). Let's say we also know that outlawing these guns will have a negative impact on hunters, on people who might need them to protect themselves (and may indeed be counted as deaths from crime if gun bans were enacted), and that there is a loss of freedom, however great or small that freedom might be. The moral question is does value of the negatives outweigh the positives of the 1000 lives, understanding we have to take into account who those 1000 lives are, how they live, how, if at all, they contribute to their own deaths, etc. It's complicated, but the process is simply a weight of benefit versus harm.
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It's Just Facebook
You can make the claim that wanting something other than a zero-sum solution is "getting emotional", but that in itself seems like a very emotional argument -- zero-sum arguments like "censorship is always wrong" are silly too. Anytime someone claims something other than death and taxes is absolute, it's pure folly.
Logic says that Facebook doesn't run our lives (it's just a website), and the decisions they make on their website have few if any repercussions in the real world (it's just a website). Facebook is by and large crappy ads, terrible opinions, and mountains of stupidity (it's just a website) -- what exactly are we trying to save here? Does it really matter what Facebook does anyway? Aren't they just a highly overvalued BBS when you get down to it?
Because when someone posts a shit-link from a shitty site that's not the same as speech. That's an idiot parroting a link. NOT censorship. If someone makes a personal statement and it gets erased for no reason, that is closer to censorship.
People are fighting to protect their free speech, but somehow are really convinced that fight will be won on Facebook? Come again?
If I offended anyone, it doesn't mean I hate you.
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Re: It's Just Facebook
Where did anyone say that?
Because when someone posts a shit-link from a shitty site that's not the same as speech.
So repeating someone else's speech isn't speech? I disagree. That's also a dangerous position, because if that isn't speech, that means suppressing it isn't censorship.
If someone makes a personal statement and it gets erased for no reason, that is closer to censorship.
If someone makes a statement of any kind, personal or otherwise, and it gets erased by an authority, whether for a reason or not, that is absolutely censorship. Not just closer to censorship.
People are fighting to protect their free speech, but somehow are really convinced that fight will be won on Facebook?
Perhaps it can't be won on Facebook, but it can certainly be lost there.
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With regard to the economic migrants, I've yet to hear of anyone lying back and trying to enjoy being poor. Again, that's down to Western foreign policy. You know those FTAs we keep reading about here on TD? NAFTA, etc.? There are loads of these, the idea being to squeeze what value can be had out of the "partner" (read "poor sucker") nations via ISDS and IPR. Debt-loading and austerity measures in exchange for development loans, foreign aid used to prop up the most brutal dictators (Hot Air recently had a piece about soldiers being disciplined for interfering with paedophile activities, by which I mean "they tried to put a stop to it")... don't get me started.
So next time you take a pop at "the migrants" take a long, hard look in the mirror and ask yourself how complicit you are in helping to create the circumstances that drive them in this direction by encouraging the policies that make them so desperate.
Hint: There are more and better opportunities to create a better life in the West. If we work to make things better for them where they live, they'll stay there.
Economic migrant here, I moved from Ireland in 1989 to the UK to improve my chances of getting a decent job. That's why I don't point fingers. And yes, I would have stayed in Dublin if I'd had better opportunities there.
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Re: Censorship is hate speech
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I doubt benefiting the world is on Zuckerberg's radar.
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