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He keeps doing it but it is like Biden is Jimmy Carter for news coverage …Biden just called out Trump for his lies.
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He keeps doing it but it is like Biden is Jimmy Carter for news coverage …Biden just called out Trump for his lies.
I don't think this is an issue of regulation as I don't think there is anyway you could regulate what we have now out of existence unless you're prepared to greatly, greatly curtail the 1A.The surge of misinformation we are experiencing as a society is less a failure of the internet itself than it is a failure to regulate the internet.
It’s a great microcosm to examine. When the internet first came out, people thought it would be liberating. For a while, it was. In the era where there were thousands and thousands of small websites, forums, chat rooms, etc., the flow of information was democratized in a way.
The rise of mass social media and Web 2.0 has exposed what happens when you don’t control private profit impulses. The same companies dominate advertising and an increasing number of people get their news exclusively from social media.
We see the dangers of having these massive pillars of our current society under private control. Look at Twitter. This lesson can be applied far beyond the internet.
Antitrust isn't going to solve this, it wouldn't matter if X or facebook were broken up into various companies, the same misinformation would be on all of them.It’s not a matter of greatly curtailing 1A though. These social media companies have a responsibility to not publish misinformation. If their algorithms are directly responsible for people dying, which they have been, then the government needs to step in a regulate these companies. There is litigation around this issue currently. We’ll likely have to see what the outcome of that is before anything else can happen.
The other piece of the regulatory side is antitrust. This absolutely is a top down issue when the largest sites are owned by massive companies like Google and Meta or by billionaires like Musk. You’re right. The genie can’t go back in the bottle. So these sites need to be regulated in the same way that the airwaves are (or used to be.)
Harris put out a list of the 99 Republicans that vote against FEMA funding. I hope the list is shared in all 99 districts. Especially shared it with those being impacted by their representatives putting politics over the lives of those they represent.Biden just called out Trump for his lies.
That still does nothing regarding TV, radio, websites, email chains, etc.Maybe they should be shut down then.
I'm guessing that lawyers are a long way from proving that not only did the social media companies "promote" content that led to kids dying, but did so with knowledge that doing so would lead to kids dying either had the intent or extreme indifference to said outcome.Depends on what you think is practical I guess. Listened to an interview with a mass tort lawyer today about the litigation involving social media algorithms. These sites can’t claim they have no responsibility for the content on their site while actively curating an algorithm that promotes dangerous content that has directly led to kids dying.
I'm not a lawyer, either, but I know that if lawsuits around mis/disinformation were easy to win, then FoxNews and Newsmax and most of the rest of the right-wing media ecosystem would have been sued into oblivion already. The fact that they're still out there shows such efforts are hard to pull off.I don’t know, I’m not an expert or a lawyer. I just think sitting back and saying there is no practical solution to such a serious issue is stupid.
40 states have sued Meta due to the addictive nature of their product towards children. This is no different than the tobacco or opioid industry.
If the companies can’t figure out a way to have their product without promoting dangerous misinformation, then we can do without social media.
Might be a good topic for another thread if anyone has some articles/papers they’ve read on the subject.