It is the task of the individuals in free societies to discern the lies from the truth, or at least to choose their tools in doing so.
You’re lying to yourself if you believe you can have real human free speech with a system capable of censoring all lies.
Banning a thing that allows “obvious lies” will have knock-on effects that haven’t been realized yet.
I guess we learned how to make faster cars to outrun cops…?
By choosing to frame things like that, it almost sounds like multinational monopolies on social media controlled by murderous fascist regimes and used to push industrial loads of machine-generated propaganda is something that's somehow preferable.
But Twitter is also owned by Russian oligarchs linked to Putin himself.
https://www.dw.com/en/what-do-xs-alleged-ties-to-russian-oli...
We're talking about Elon Musk's Twitter, who around the time of Russia's invasion of Ukraine was found to have hardcoded censorship of pro-ukraine content as well as users who posted pro-Ukraine content on Twitter.
it's truly amazing how many people dont really get that having only 99% free speech is just fine
People are living in parallel universes.
Well intentioned, but extremely naive. Something our society will sadly have to relearn every century or so.
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/germanys-laws-ant...
https://www.12news.com/article/news/local/valley/we-were-una...
The right to lie is fundamental to the principle of freedom of speech. Also the lies you think are “obvious” are almost certainly not obvious to everyone - they rarely are. And if someone cannot share a different view then you can’t arrive at the truth.
The british protests/riot mass movement cannot be attributed to misinformation any more than the Arab spring can be attributed to the police mistreating the Tunisian merchant.
It's obviously not. We prosecute fraud. No freedom can be absolute unless it is singular.
I think it's half that our governments don't want to give away control, lest the peasants become uppity. And the other half is that that's just how the dice landed when the laws were first created.
We can. But we don't and never have. Anyone arguing for the freedom to lie without consequence is off the deep end. There has never been a society that doesn't punish lying and fraud. (What constitutes a lie is a deeper question.)
> even if you think something is a ‘truth’, what you perceive as a ‘lie’ must be allowed
Why? Also, where? Ever?
If I go and commit a bunch of fraud, I'd expect--at best--riotious laughter from anyone with more than two brain cells if I offered, as my defence, that I cannot be punished for defrauding everyone because I'm part of the truth-finding process.
> truth that is just unchallenged feels more like propaganda
Propaganda is regularly challenged. A truth that cannot be challenged is an article of faith. This entire debate reeks of arguments from faith on both sides.
One, not true. If a real estate agent sells you a house based on a bunch of lies and somehow forgets to charge a commission, they're still punished.
Two, you're still drawing criteria per which speech is punished.
Let's edit the premise. No sale occurs. The agent spins some yarn, but you catch on and report them to a regulator. Do you expect them to go unpunished simply because it was all talk? Should they?
This is not speculation. When Elon Musk did that stunt on open-sourcing Twitter's source code right after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the source code explicitly included references to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in hardcoded rules to downrank discussions on the topic.
https://gizmodo.com/twitter-musk-ukraine-crisis-open-source-...
This is just the stuff he accidentally leaked.
https://www.twz.com/news-features/ukraine-pushing-slowly-wes...
Text from the 1st amendment: "or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press"
You see that part that says "The press"? Thats what a media company is.
Yes, if the government punishes "The press" for its speech, and threatens it with legal action, that is by definition something that effects free speech and is censorship.
Definitionally, I cannot think of something that could be more accurately be described as censorship.
If there was no house to be sold, and the agent wasn't even an agent, and they had no way of accepting that money, then of course they should not be punished.
As an example, lets say it was a youtuber who did this, and they recorded the video as a funny prank to post on the internet.
This would not be illegal and they would not be punished.
That wasn't the case, the case was "the press" covering criminals. Being the press don't give a company free pass to commit crimes and Xitter is paying for that.
PS: "1st amendment" is an American term that doesn't mean anything outside of american jurisdiction (and maybe not even inside, see Tiktok).
If the government makes it illegal to publish certain things, that would mean that it is both a crime and censorship. So yes, that would be the case and my previous statement applies.
The government making it illegal for the press to publish certain things is definitionally what censorship is. There is literally no more clear example of what censorship is than that.