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Internet Censorship Archive

Archives for November 2022

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Twitter’s now-former head of Trust and Safety predicts what’s next for its “custodians of the internet.”

In this op-ed, Yoel Roth examines why he left Twitter last week (because all decisions now lie with one person, Elon Musk) and the hellish rules about content moderation Musk will have to navigate, whether made by regulators or the planned moderation council.

But, as Roth explains, the most notable check on Elon’s “unilateral edict” and free speech platitudes may be Apple and Google:

Twitter will have to balance its new owner’s goals against the practical realities of life on Apple and Google’s internet — no easy task for the employees who have chosen to remain. And as I departed the company, the calls from the app review teams had already begun

Russell Brandom
Russell Brandom
What if Q made a drop and nobody noticed?

That’s what happened last week, as Vice’s David Gilbert highlights the muted reaction to last week’s four separate drops from the mystery conspiracist. Even within the world of Qanon, the response has been muted at best.

It’s not that people are coming to their senses exactly; they’ve just stopped caring about some rando on 8kun.

Adi Robertson
Adi Robertson
How Alex Jones built his own reality.

Alex Jones has had lots of profiles over the years, but a new feature by Verge alumnus Joseph Flatley at Failed State Update focuses on his cult of personality and the allegedly hostile work environment at his site Infowars. Beneath those allegations, there’s a larger story about Jones’s political and social opportunism — and how it’s slowly backed him into a corner.

Adi Robertson
Adi Robertson
Alex Jones gets another $473 million fine on top of his billion-dollar defamation penalties.

First it was $45 million in Texas. Then $964 million in Connecticut. Now there’s another Connecticut penalty, thanks to a judge who imposed additional punitive damages. The judge cited Jones’s “utter lack of repentance” for subjecting families to years of harassment by lying about their children’s deaths. A separate order bans Jones from moving assets out of the country, preempting an attempt to keep his money out of the courts’ hands.

How America turned against the First Amendment

Moderation laws. Book bans. Courts that keep getting played. America’s politicians are tired of the First Amendment getting in their way, and no one seems to care.

Adi Robertson