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1525 points garyclarke27 | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.62s | source
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kleiba ◴[] No.23219907[source]
I've never lived in China but this immediately sounds like my (naive) idea of what it must be like: you're only allowed to consume what the government has approved.

I think this is setting a dangerous precedence.

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weiming ◴[] No.23219936[source]
Except in this case it's not the government, but private corporations taking some kind of political stance.

Google in particular has been very "active," not to forget also: https://www.businessinsider.com/youtube-will-ban-anything-ag... ("video that 'goes against' WHO guidance on the pandemic will be blocked")

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Tepix ◴[] No.23220012[source]
There is a lot of pressure on the large tech companies to stop spreading misinformation. This is one of their measures.
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indymike ◴[] No.23220331[source]
So? That pressure is unconstitutional in the US and should be ignored completely and resisted utterly.
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the-real-jap ◴[] No.23220598[source]
How is it unconstitutional? Google/Youtube is not a neutral carrier and can pick what gets broadcasted - just like Fox or CNN.

For the record: as a paying Podcast Addict user, I think this is a shitty action by Google. I just don't see how it is unconstitutional.

NB. I hope something good comes out of this, like more people discovering and using third party app stores, or being able to run apps on android auto even if google hasn't approved such apps (hello TomTom).

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1. indymike ◴[] No.23221270[source]
The pressure from the government is unconstitutional.
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2. moftz ◴[] No.23229213[source]
The govt asking Google to help keep the spread of misinformation down is totally different than the govt forcing Google to do so and arresting anyone that posts anything contrary to the official position.
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3. indymike ◴[] No.23233100[source]
Freedom of speech doesn't really care if information is correct or incorrect.