“A 'seismic shift' as community backs new laws to fix online hate”...https://www.smh.com.au/technology/a-seismic-shift-as-community-backs-new-laws-to-fix-online-hate-20200130-p53wbg.html …
In an ideal (online) world, that would be great but the practical ? is how does @facebook retrospectively validate 2.7 billion identities of their current users or @Twitter validate 1 billion tweets? 78% of respondents believe that platforms need to do much more #SafetybyDesign
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It’s not easy, that’s true. A good start? Educate people not to exchange with or react to people using an anonymous handles. Block people who post hate speech. Call them out online and ask others to block them.
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Agreed - great advice!! There has to be a combination of prevention & education (these are humans wielding the hate), the platforms using advanced tech & policies to better enforce abuses & protect users & the regulatory enforcement tools to serve as a safety net & backstop!
Kraj razgovora
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These sound like good ideas however there are issues with how social media has changed democracy for the worse. Australia is rife with corruption and there is no whistle blower protection. In this country anonymity is safety.
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Firstly, you might be anonymous to the public on social media but that doesn’t mean you are anonymous to the authorities. Secondly, we have to balance this right to anonymity (which didn’t exist pre-Internet) against the clear and widespread hurt being caused by keyboard cowards.
- Još 4 druga odgovora
Novi razgovor -
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