Any freedom of speech you think you may be entitled to on Twitter is actually voluntarily granted to you by a transnational corporation.
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Replying to @aral
This privilege may be unilaterally modified or revoked at any time by said transnational corporation who owns the space you’re a guest of.
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Replying to @aral
While it works now (mostly), we’d be fools, long-term, to trust the medium of short-form immediate global communication to a private entity.
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Replying to @aral
And the only alternative I can see is a new global organisation, akin to the UN, to create a competing public network.
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Replying to @aral
@aral or a not-for-profit social network/space with a mission akin to@duckduckgo perhaps?1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
@janzilinsky Indeed. And yet without substantial public subsidy & international scope, it cannot compete. +@duckduckgo
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