Suppression is a bigger scandal than the actual story

(taibbi.substack.com)

471 points | by eyeball 1250 days ago

61 comments

  • haltingproblem 1250 days ago
    I fear Taibbi is right, the suppression by Twitter, irrespective of the merits and veracity of NY Post's report, will now normalize all kinds of behavior by platforms of all kinds big and small. Which will then incentivize governments to take on the platforms. This also raises issues of unequal treatment - say the NY Post report was factually wrong - why pick on the NY Post only? Why not the hundreds of other "news organizations" peddling unverified and factually incorrect reports on Twitter.

    I wish it did not come to this. I feel this action will uncork second order effects which we will come to rue for a long time.

    Edit: This story was flagged which is unbelievable.

    • darkerside 1250 days ago
      I think you're right, but I don't think the previous status quo was tenable either, and maybe even more problematic. Disclaimer: these are opinions.

      We allow mainstream press, owned by allies of a politician, to make outlandish claims unverified in the weeks leading up to an election. This has always been "correctable" in the past, in a world where articles could be retracted or condemned, particularly by even more mainstream outlets (because there is a spectrum from tabloid journalism to "respectable"). With social media, the genie is out the bottle with that initial statement, and there's no way to set the record straight anymore, let alone in two weeks before an election.

      I realize that I used a ton of loaded terms here. That reflects a couple of opinions that I hold: that there is value in institutions, that truth is a social construct, that maintaining order in people's lives has intrinsic value. Folks are free to disagree, but please be clear about whether it's with the premise or the conclusion.

      • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
        I agree. Fabricating damaging information on the eve of an election is easier than ever, and impossible to correct. Allowing propagation of such fabrications is to be complicit with the bad actors responsible.

        Disinformation could be tolerated if we, as a society, have the time and means to determine its veracity. But with the ticking clock of an election, disinformation is too easy.

        Some countries have laws prohibiting any political news stories in the run-up to an election for precisely this reason.

        • j8hn 1250 days ago
          So, what do you suppose? Prohibition of political news stories leading up to an election?

          Have you heard of an October surprise?

          "On October 20, 1880, shortly before the 1880 presidential election, a forged letter was published purportedly written by James A. Garfield voicing support for Chinese immigration to the United States. At the time, most white Americans opposed Chinese immigration and both presidential candidates were in favor of immigration restrictions.[3]"

          And a list of many more.... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/October_surprise

          • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
            > So, what do you suppose? Prohibition of political news stories leading up to an election?

            That's exactly what I propose, precisely because October surprises are not in the best interest of democracy.

            Many countries [1] prohibit all political news stories during their election cycle. An added benefit of this policy would be to limit the length of the election cycle.

            [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Election_silence

            • bialpio 1250 days ago
              Election silence is unenforceable and becomes muddy in the era of the internet - with elections in USA, who do you sue if UK news outlet runs with some story? Who has jurisdiction? Besides, reporting news itself is usually still allowed as long as it is not political agitation ("Biden did something bad" is ok, "vote Trump" is not). I've been tempted to test this by posting agitation to Facebook from the USA (Poland still has election silence) or showing up with slogans to the polling stations (you can still vote when abroad in a few places set up by consulates), but I still like to visit my family from time to time.
            • j8hn 1250 days ago
              And the majority of the prohibitions in the list are a very short time frame from 24-48 hours.
            • j8hn 1250 days ago
              If you're worried about the interests of democracy then I would think freedom of speech would be important.
        • arkh 1250 days ago
          > Allowing propagation of such fabrications is to be complicit with the bad actors responsible.

          Years of "sources says" later disproved. Russia this, Russia that. And it's only now that we should stop propagation of unverified stories?

        • knaq 1250 days ago
          That just moves the date, because responses hit that deadline.

          Without your proposed law: Stuff shows up 2 weeks before the election.

          With a 10-week blackout: Stuff shows up 12 weeks before the election. (2 weeks before the blackout)

          • shlant 1250 days ago
            this is a good point, but I would not be surprised if the more recently someone hears a piece of information, the more impactful it is on their decisions. I would attribute this to not only individuals memory but also the amount of distractions within the 10 weeks (in your example) that would take away peoples focus.

            Just an inclination, not sure how much of this would be supported by the literature if there is any

      • mullr 1250 days ago
        It’s completely correctable. If fb/Twitter wanted to, they could track every person who saw a piece of “wrong” information, and plaster the retraction in front of their face.
        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          I'd argue that, if anything, that would make some people more certain that it was true
      • PaulAJ 1250 days ago
        The truth is not a social construct. Either Hunter Biden received that "thanks for the meeting with your father" email or he didn't.

        Importance is a social construct. If that email is what it puports to be, then whether it is important is a point of view.

        The media don't (mis)lead us by telling us lies, they do so by deciding which parts of the truth are important enough to tell us.

        • barrkel 1250 days ago
          The accepted narrative is a social construct, and most people's understanding of the truth is closer to a narrative than a series of facts.
        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          You can argue about facts all day, but I would argue that "truth" ends up being something more. Innocence or guilt, vindication on the history books, really any assignment of a quality is done by a collection of people, and the results apply with the bubble of people who have agreed to no longer question what is agreed upon as true.

          I promise I could argue all day about whether your initial simple statement was true or not. What does received mean? What did the email say, and did it actually mean what you paraphrase? You'd probably view it as bad faith (and you'd be right), but that faith already implies the exact social consensus I'm taking about.

        • cm2187 1250 days ago
          Unfortunately the notion of truth or lie is often less clean cut.

          For instance, when the media tell you "you can get reinfected by covid", is it a lie? As of today, there has been only 5 confirmed cases of reinfection worldwide, out of 50 millions confirmed cases. So it is technically possible but statistically insignificant. Are the media lying when they tell you it could happen to you? I think they do. But technically they don't.

          Also most of the lying is lying by omission. I present you one fact but you will never hear about that other fact that completely mitigates the first (the context, or the rest of the sentence, etc). So you can say something factually correct while completely misleading your interlocutor.

        • comex 1250 days ago
          The email didn't say "thanks for the meeting with your father"; it thanked Hunter for "inviting me to DC and giving an opportunity to meet your father", wording that leaves it ambiguous whether the meeting had already occurred or was in the future. This is important because, even if it is authentic, it does not necessarily contradict Biden's claim that (according to his schedules) no such meeting occurred.
          • cm2187 1250 days ago
            Biden's claim is that there is no trace of the meeting in the diary, but they did mention that the meeting could have happened informally. So they didn't claim no such meeting occurred.

            I am a bit puzzled that there wouldn't be a log of who comes in and out of government buildings. It should be easy to prove whether the said executives were at least in the building over that period or not.

            • comex 1249 days ago
              I believe you're referring to what the Biden campaign said to Politico, that Biden could have had (in Politico's words) "some kind of informal interaction with Pozharskyi" but "any encounter would have been cursory". [1] The Washington Post notes that Hunter Biden did arrange for a different business partner to shake hands with Joe Biden at an existing public event, and speculates that he could have done something similar for Pozharskyi. [2] While it's only speculation, that does amount to another possible scenario where the email is accurate. But I wouldn't call such an interaction a "meeting" exactly, and it would scarcely be evidence of corruption.

              [1] https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/14/biden-campaign-lash...

              [2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/10/14/hunter-bi...

            • zo1 1250 days ago
              Or better yet: Body cams for all politicians. Or camera + audio recordings of all government rooms and corridors. All encrypted, hashed and archived with a very specific and difficult to fake process that can "unseal" them.

              I don't think I'm a genius or anything, but why aren't we putting really smart people on this problem and giving them plenty of funding? I constantly think we're just a few steps away from putting in a small set of technological solutions that would over time solve all our political/criminal problems.

              E.g. Just imagine a world where all politicians, CEOs, major figure-heads are safely and securely recorded constantly. Think of all the ridiculous talking points and "Scandals" that would go away, be disproven, or never occur at all.

              • cm2187 1250 days ago
                That was tried (recording the oval office for historical purposes). Then it was immediately weaponised by the political opponents and the recording system promptly removed.
                • zo1 1250 days ago
                  Are you just adding some historical context and additional information? Or are you saying that to dismiss my idea/suggestion?
                  • cm2187 1250 days ago
                    Well, I think it will result into the same consequences. It would be immediately weaponised by the political opposition and would be retired almost as soon as it was introduced.
                    • zo1 1250 days ago
                      All "things" can be weaponized to various degrees. The good has to outweigh the bad, and we can't dismiss potential solution areas because they can be weaponized to some degree or have some set of negative consequences. A lot of the things we take for granted that exist currently could just as easily have been argued-against under the banner of "can be weaponized by the political opposition". And we've seen that potential, and put various "checks and balances" in place to try to stem that possibility.

                      In my mind, the constructive way to proceed would be, and I'd hope that you or others would indulge me on this: How can we have a tamper-proof evidentiary record of all the conversations that politicians engage in whilst minimizing the potential of it being regularly abused/weaponized and compromising the privacy of the individuals involved?

                  • darkerside 1250 days ago
                    False dichotomy
                    • zo1 1250 days ago
                      It would be if I was presenting an argument. However, I was asking out of curiosity. Their response seemed to be a criticism and I wanted to give them the benefit of the doubt by giving a valid alternative interpretation.
                      • darkerside 1249 days ago
                        Criticism is not dismissal
                        • zo1 1249 days ago
                          Stay on topic, please.
        • skybrian 1250 days ago
          Our understanding of the truth of things we read online is a social construct. Whether or not Hunter Biden received an email isn’t something ordinary readers like us will ever know, having no direct access to any of the evidence. At best we can read accounts written by others and decide whether they seem plausible.

          Even our understanding of Hunter Biden’s existence is a social construct to most of us, since we have never met him and never will. (It’s much easier to make the call on that one, though, based on pictures and it being undisputed.)

      • disown 1250 days ago
        > With social media, the genie is out the bottle with that initial statement, and there's no way to set the record straight anymore, let alone in two weeks before an election.

        Isn't it actually easier to correct the record with social media since you can correct it immediately and reach the people immediately? Whereas with newspapers, you'd have to wait days/weeks and have to search the tiny section they reserve for corrections?

        It's what made newspapers such great tools of propaganda. You push misinformation, spread it and then "retract" quietly relatively unseen.

        Edit:

        > If the idea that a particular professor or candidate is sexually exploitative becomes viral, can you really undo the damage?

        My point is that it's easier to "unring the bell" via social media than via newspapers. We are discussing the "previous status quo" : A newspaper writes a lie. How do you "unring the bell"? You have to wait until the next time you publish - which varies depending on whether you are a daily, weekly, monthly.

        Whereas in the social media era, you can just post on facebook, twitter, etc your retraction. The retraction is immediate and can be as visible as you want it to be.

        • pjc50 1250 days ago
          It turns out this doesn't work. The relative prominence of the counter-information doesn't change people's first impressions.

          People are still doing "but her emails" despite all the investigations into what happened. It's clear that the Hunter Biden story is an attempt to fabricate a "but his emails" narrative; there may be some facts in there, but none that impinge on Joe Biden.

        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          What you can't stop are the conversations that continue about the topic itself, irrespective of the news story.
        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          To your edit, we can rebuild cities after nuclear destruction much faster these days thanks to technology
        • threatofrain 1250 days ago
          Wildfire also spreads much faster on the web. If the idea that a particular professor or candidate is sexually exploitative becomes viral, can you really undo the damage?
    • eyeball 1250 days ago
      It’s crazy that they’re even blocking links to the ny post article via direct message. What’s next? Email?

      Will we have to resort to signal and other encrypted direct messaging methods to have open discussion?

      Or run your own mail server end hope your recipient doesn’t use one that censors?

      Creepy stuff.

      • crocodiletears 1250 days ago
        This has been the reality for people on the political fringes for some time now. Unfortunately nobody's been paying attention to it due in large part to the commentariat/journalistic class's willingness to encourage and provide cover for this behavior as a matter of political expedience.

        Another example: Messenger's been blocking links to joebiden.info (this may have changed, it's been six months since I've checked)

        • jessaustin 1250 days ago
          I'm glad HN didn't block that link. I've learned a great deal that will affect my vote in the upcoming election.
          • pjc50 1250 days ago
            So will you vote for the guy with the worse record of sexually harassing women instead? Have you looked at all the corresponding inappropriate gifs of Trump? Remember the "grab her by the pussy" statement? The whole Stormy Daniels fiasco?

            Joe Biden is a terrible candidate. He's just not as bad as Trump. The fact that America is in that stupid position is its own fault.

            • jessaustin 1250 days ago
              I haven't voted for either face of the status quo party, for president, in the last twenty years. This time around I'm going Green. I think Creepy Joe is kind of fun, but I have no doubt that the inexorable drumbeat for sanctions and wars will intensify when he is president. We still haven't left Syria, so whoever it is on the "democrat" side of the party who has such a hard-on for pipelines will get to kill more innocents there. Even better for them, Trump has destroyed the one decent diplomatic thing Obama did (Iran), so they won't have to pretend not to undermine the work of their "own side". (Keep in mind that Syria and Iran are allies, even though Republicans pretend to hate Iran while Democrats pretend to hate Syria.)

              I don't vote for lesser evils. Because of that I never have to regret how I voted.

          • briefcomment 1250 days ago
            Holy crap, those kids are so uncomfortable. The first girl, Senator Chris Coons’ daughter, is apparently on Hunter’s laptop.
        • j8hn 1250 days ago
          Yikes, I never really paid attention to how creepy and inappropriate he was with little girls and young women.
          • skinkestek 1250 days ago
            Just remember:

            Just like with DT this is also pulled out of context. I don't like any of them and won't (and can't) vote for any of them so I have no dog in the fight.

            That website shouldn't have been blocked, whoever did it should probably been charged with election meddling but it doesn't change my view of Biden.

            As for the videos I think many of them shows him (clumsily) trying to comfort people.

            Again - I'm also the guy who points out that "fine people on both sides" as presented in mainstream media is a hoax.

            I don't like either if them but think we should be fair to both if them.

            If I lived in the US my lawn sign would be "Any Reasonable Person".

            • j8hn 1250 days ago
              Are they out of context? Granted they are short video clips, but what would the greater context show?

              In three of the videos with younger women, they all seemed to recoil from his "affection". With the young girls, I don't think it would ever be appropriate for a stranger to touch them like he did.

              • skinkestek 1250 days ago
                > In three of the videos with younger women, they all seemed to recoil from his "affection".

                I pointed out it was clumsy ;-)

                But I think the larger context is he knew he was on tape so he should know better than to willfully do something that would be taken as sexual harassment.

                I honestly think he tried to come off as caring, just failed spectacularly.

            • nradov 1250 days ago
              Election meddling in general isn't a crime. It's not something the government could charge the site owner for, unless they somehow violated campaign finance laws.
              • skinkestek 1250 days ago
                > It's not something the government could charge the site owner for,

                I didn't mean the site owner did election meddling, rather than Facebook when thet selectively block sites like this.

                • nradov 1250 days ago
                  That is still not a crime.
                  • skinkestek 1250 days ago
                    Ok then. You might very well be right.

                    But what is the rule then? Manipulating social media in front of an election is only illegal if you are a foreigner?

                    • jjeaff 1249 days ago
                      Sometimes, election meddling can be seen as an in-kind campaign contribution and thus illegal if it is not within campaign finance rules.

                      For example, cohen paying off Trump's mistresses was prosecuted as an illegal campaign contribution.

        • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
          Do you really think that it's out of "political expedience" that sites are blocking links to probable foreign disinformation? Or is it out of a moral interest in not being pawns of the bad actors who stand behind it?

          This kind of disinformation is dangerous, and we are vulnerable to it precisely because we value freedom of speech. That doesn't mean that we're morally obligated to value all speech equally. Obviously false and dangerous speech should be suppressed. Twitter (and other sites) is taking a moral stand, not an expedient stand.

          • crocodiletears 1250 days ago
            Journalists and commentators are the ones acting out of political expediency. The platforms themselves are a mixed bag, occasionaly banning content that represents legitimate disinformation, but often suppressing information that's contextually true, or conflicts with an existing broader social narrative which the moderator required to inspect the content has bought into. The human moderators are often inconsistent.

            The concept that any person or organization should be granted absolute authority to serve as the arbiter of whay constitutes dangerous or false speech, and the power to arbitrarily silence those who utter it offends me, and I consider it to be dangerous in and of itself. We'll not be able to agree on this.

            WRT the NYP piece, probably foreign sourced is about right. Even before the media picked up its Russia Trumpet, I remember reading a rumor towards the beginning of the Trump-Ukraine phone call debacle that a Chinese billionaire had slipped Juliani a hard drive containing information that might be incriminating to Biden's some. Irrespective of the source, the computer shop narrative reeks.

            But in spite of information's questionable provenance, it has been accompanied with compromising images of Hunter himself, and beyond stating that a meeting with Burisma execs wasn't on Biden's 'official' schedule, the biden campaign has yet (to my knowledge), to expressly deny the validity of the documents.

            If this is disinformation, the FBI, which has ostensibly been in possession of the documents for several months, has every incentive to comment on it, as does the CIA. Beyond ambiguous citations of 'anonymous officials', I've yet to read that they've communicated anything to this effect. The Director of National Intelligence has gone so far as to claim that this wasn't a Russian disinformation project. But he's a Trump apparatchik with no history in intelligence outside his appointment, so I generally ignore him.

            Probably foreign sourced? My gut says yes.

            Possibly disinformation? The juries still out. Possibly's a pretty low bar for stealing someone's voice.

            The tech companies took it upon themselves to censor this information. They've not claimed they were compelled or reccommended to by any official bodies any more than they were required to censor the name of the Urkaine whistleblower. But they chose to, of their own accord.

            If you want to be treated like a platform, you have to live with the fact that your platform's going to be used to further the aims of anyone who wannts to use it. Bar illegal content and behaviors (things disinformation is not), the most you should do is notify your users, sit back, and take it.

            • TravHatesMe 1250 days ago
              Happy to see people think for themselves and form their own opinion. Good balance in your comment. You left room for doubt and rationally stated the reasons behind your opinion. Refreshing. Thank you.
              • skinkestek 1250 days ago
                Seconded. Refreshing.

                I also try to do the same[1] but crocodiletears did much better.

                [1]: you'll find me pointing out the "fine people on both sides" has been debunked and asking questions about the Hunter Biden disk.

            • creato 1250 days ago
              > If this is disinformation, the FBI, which has ostensibly been in possession of the documents for several months, has every incentive to comment on it, as does the CIA.

              This is ridiculously wrong. The FBI and CIA and every other government agency absolutely do not want to comment on something like this, because it just pulls them into this political bullshit. This is exactly the "official" reason James Comey was fired, for an almost identical issue, almost exactly 4 years ago. It is a near 100% certainty that any FBI or CIA official commenting on this issue now will be fired a few months from now.

            • skinkestek 1250 days ago
              > that a Chinese billionaire had slipped Juliani a hard drive containing information that might be incriminating to Biden's

              Questions: why would the Chinese do that? Or do you mean a Chinese billionaire did it without the involvement of the government? Or do you think their recommendation of Biden is a calculated move to get people to vote for Trump?

              • crocodiletears 1250 days ago
                My understanding is that he was a billionaire on the outs w/Xi's administration, however I only recall that much because it seemed like an interesting assertion at the time, but didn't look into it, nor did I bother remembering the source, because it was while I was skimming a bunch of articles and posts at once trying to keep abreast of the Burisma controversy. So I would take it with a significant grain of salt.

                Whether or not China would support the action is opaque to me. Trump's trade policies have massively reframed our relationship to the country, but whether or not that's been a positive thing for factions within the CCP is well beyond my knowledge or means to learn.

                • CapricornNoble 1249 days ago
                  Billionaire Miles Guo is an anti-CCP dissident. His website Gnews.org, is the only site I've come across with elicit Hunter Biden footage. I have no idea how/why he has that material, but I think if he sees an opportunity to undermine the CCP's public image by linking them to a corrupt drugged-out American "Princeling", he would capitalize on it.

                  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guo_Wengui#GNews

                  It's also the only site where I've seen the "BGY Program" mentioned. https://gnews.org/51672/

    • kenjackson 1250 days ago
      I think delaying the story until it could be somewhat verified is reasonable. I actually read it minutes after it was posted on the NY Post and my first thought was that it sounded like it shouldn’t have been published. I literally thought they’d retract it.

      I think the internet is breaking into various niche groups. I fully expect there soon to be completely partisan social networks. That’s probably the best way to deal with this.

      • commandlinefan 1250 days ago
        Well, ok, but can you find any other instance of a story that could have used some verification being suppressed by Twitter and Facebook at the same time?
        • jkhdigital 1250 days ago
          Ding ding ding and this is the tl;dr of Taibbi’s article
        • kenjackson 1250 days ago
          I can't, but I don't think its a bad idea. Given that, I guess you have to start at some point -- right? And last election social media was given all sorts of grief for the fake news... I can understand them wanting to be more careful this time. And of all news stories in recent years, this seems like a good one to begin with.
          • Meekro 1249 days ago
            > I guess you have to start at some point

            I notice they started with their political opponents.

            • kenjackson 1249 days ago
              Are they? Or do they just seem like the opponents to every political group? I'm sure liberals would say these media companies are also their opponents.
      • skindoe 1250 days ago
        > I fully expect there soon to be completely partisan social networks.

        As if that already isn't the case...

      • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
        The NY Post writing staff agreed with you, so the editors published the story with a fake byline.
    • didibus 1250 days ago
      Pretty sure twitter said they blocked it because the information came from a hack, not because they claimed any veracity for it being fake or not.
      • Consultant32452 1250 days ago
        Can you point me to a claim from the Bidens or law enforcement that the information was hacked?

        What are your thoughts on the Trump tax records which were criminally released to the NYT not being censored?

        • didibus 1249 days ago
          > Can you point me to a claim from the Bidens or law enforcement that the information was hacked?

          I'm not aware of any claim from them. I thought the claim of the hack comes from the NY Post article itself where they said the shop owner made a copy of the hard drive.

          > What are your thoughts on the Trump tax records which were criminally released to the NYT not being censored?

          You're using the word "criminally released" but that is an unproven fact, the times claims that "all of the information The Times obtained was provided by sources with legal access to it". Now I wonder how that can be as well, but at least that's the statement.

          So at least from the perspective of being a small time employee of Twitter that has to work on moderation, I can see them looking at both article and thinking the first one talks about a hard drive being copied by a shop owner and leaked. While the other is nebulous on the origin but claims it was legally obtained.

          This is obviously all speculation. But that be my thoughts, that I can see how the policy might have applied to one and not the other.

          I also have to think that it coming from the NY Post must have contributed. I don't assume Twitter reviews every tweet manually, and I can see how NY Post is more likely to get flagged than NY Times.

          • Consultant32452 1249 days ago
            >I'm not aware of any claim from them. I thought the claim of the hack comes from the NY Post article itself where they said the shop owner made a copy of the hard drive.

            The NY Post article claims the laptop was abandoned at the repair shop (never picked up) and that according to the law in that state became the legal property of the shop owner.

            >all of the information The Times obtained was provided by sources with legal access to it

            Notice that The Times does not say the source was legally authorized to release it. I didn't say it was criminally accessed, but that it was criminally released. For example, if an IRS employee or an employee at Trump's accountant released it without permission, those would be crimes.

            >So at least from the perspective of being a small time employee of Twitter that has to work on moderation

            I can accept that for the low level employee at the time of moderation. But once it got so high up that @Jack commented on it, and now over a week later the NY Post's account is still banned, it doesn't float.

            • didibus 1249 days ago
              > I didn't say it was criminally accessed, but that it was criminally released

              In that case it wouldn't make it a hack, but just a leak.

              > and that according to the law in that state became the legal property of the shop owner

              That's something I'm still fuzzy on. I'm not sure if it's the law in the state, or just the store's contractual policy. Also, I don't know if the laptop becoming property of the shop extends to the information contained within it. And it also didn't specify if the data on the hard drive was password protected or encrypted in any way which meant retrieval would still require hacking into it.

              > But once it got so high up that @Jack commented on it, and now over a week later the NY Post's account is still banned, it doesn't float.

              I can't speak to that. Now Twitter has a PR issue, and I'm guessing whatever choices they've made or not are based on them trying to mitigate and limit the PR damages.

              My guess is, the NY Post is now smearing twitter's own reputation, and possibly twitter doesn't like that, and are worried they'd use their account to further promote anti-twitter rethoric which might be why Twitter is against unblocking their account.

              I'm a bit confused how they unblocked the tweet about the email story but kept the account blocked, that's a bit strange.

              Another thing I wondered is how likely could Twitter be accountable for if Hunter were to sue them for defamation and libel? Normally it seem fair game to defame and cause libel to politicians, but would that extend to Hunter which isn't directly involved in politics? Or could that be a winning lawsuit from him if he wanted too?

    • cm2187 1250 days ago
      In fact new form of political advertising: suppress messages between users that mention stories you don't want to bubble up.
      • 1234letshaveatw 1249 days ago
        I love it! It's like adsense, the parties can bid to determine whether or not a story should be promoted or suppressed

        And you thought casino keywords brought in revenue...

    • adventured 1250 days ago
      > Edit: This story was flagged which is unbelievable.

      You just wrote a comment about the big tech left being a happy joiner in conspiring to commit election fraud.

      Which part of it is not believable?

      We've got the US version of the CCP in big tech going to work overtime on press and speech control / suppression to intentionally try to throw an election in favor of their preferred candidate. Over the prior few years big tech more than hinted about what they were going to do. This could all be seen coming a zillion miles away.

      The long-term outcome of their extraordinarily dumb choice is obvious and it will have immense, horrible consequences politically (the Republicans will do a lot of damage going to war over this in response).

      There's a recent op-ed in the Washington Post saying that the Biden bought-and-paid-for scandal should be lied about and proclaimed to be a foreign intel operation regardless of whether it is or not. That side will do anything to get rid of Trump at this point. There is no length big tech won't go to, to assist and play their part. They're betting the downside risk is minimal and the upside is Biden wins and they'll face zero consequences (the FBI will immediately cease any interest in anything the Bidens have done, absolutely nothing will come of it, all evidence will be washed away forever - instead of eg the FBI following the money trail back to Joe Biden for his cut of the proceeds).

    • perryizgr8 1250 days ago
      > why pick on the NY Post only?

      Keep in mind that the 3 year long series of false and inflammatory stories alleging Russian collusion were allowed. Finally it turned out to be a hoax. FB and Twitter felt no obligation to censor that.

      This is plain abuse of monopoly position by FB and Twitter, conscious attempt to keep voters ignorant, to push a certain political candidate.

    • TwoBit 1250 days ago
      Fox News has been suppressing the truth for 20 years now and where are the complaints about that?
      • rayiner 1250 days ago
        What Fox News was since Ailes took over, CNN and MSNBC have become. That's something to be really worried about. For a long time, I read the NYT and watched CNN. I never felt the need to check in and see what Fox was saying until the last 2-3 years. Now I do, because I don't trust that I'm getting the whole story.
        • tehjoker 1250 days ago
          Don't worry. When it comes to (especially) foreign policy, none of the media have been doing anything but state propaganda since the Remember the Maine incident. If you think blue TV is lying and check red TV you're missing the case where both blue and red agree it's good to lie to people. These cases where they agree revolve around suppressing opposition to corporate rule and around the nature of military alliances and misadventures.
          • skinkestek 1250 days ago
            I don't think rayiner says he's only watching fox now, rather he's checking that as well.

            Here's my take: When you look from different angles it gets harder to hide things. Fox News wants to hide some things, CNN wants to hide others. Looking at it from both angles you get to see some of the stuff each tries to hide and maybe you can make a reasonable guess on what both tries to hide.

            • tehjoker 1250 days ago
              Ah... I was assuming he was watching both. The problem is sometimes all the TV channels agree! You have to look for (usually written) news that is willing to criticize the state, corporations, and the war machine to get that angle.
        • justin66 1249 days ago
          What sorts of information do you believe a person would be missing out on by largely excising CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News from their media consumption?

          (there's an obvious question about what you'd replace them with, but I think the answer is almost anything would be more informative)

    • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
      They're not suppressing the article because it's wrong, but because it's pretty obviously intentionally planted misinformation disguised as news. Twitter has a choice: either they can suppress it; or they can be pawns of whatever bad actors are creating this disinformation.

      It's a hard choice, and clearly it's a struggle that as a society we have to deal with. Right now, creating and distributing disinformation is easier than combating it, and I think it's unfair to call out Twitter for making a moral choice in the matter.

      • pseudo0 1250 days ago
        According to the FBI[0] and the DNI[1], there is no evidence indicating that Hunter Biden's laptop is misinformation. Given that some of the emails have been independently verified by their recipients who have made statements on the record[2], and Joe Biden's campaign still has not disputed the emails' authenticity, the vast majority of the evidence points towards this material being authentic.

        The media and big tech companies crying "Russian misinformation!" when politically convenient is just going to further reduce trust in our institutions, and make the population more susceptible to real state-sponsored disinformation efforts.

        [0] - https://www.nationalreview.com/news/fbi-tells-congress-it-ha...

        [1] - https://news.yahoo.com/dni-ratcliffe-hunter-biden-emails-134...

        [2] - https://nypost.com/2020/10/22/hunter-biz-partner-confirms-e-...

        • tt433 1250 days ago
          I mean it's a false equivalency in the first place to put Hunter in some special bad place while the First Children reap the rewards of nepotism themselves. Misinformation doesn't need to be foreign, just good enough swill to distract some people from the important abuses of power.
          • pseudo0 1250 days ago
            Is anyone putting Hunter in some special bad place? We've had four years of virtually every newspaper in the country covering Trump's family, personal life, business dealings, taxes, etc. in exhaustive detail. I think everyone agrees that nepotism and misinformation are bad, so surely journalists should critically examine all allegations of misconduct, even when it affects their preferred candidate?
            • barumi 1250 days ago
              > We've had four years of virtually every newspaper in the country covering Trump's family, personal life, business dealings, taxes, etc. in exhaustive detail.

              They've been covered by being members of Trump's executive body, not because their family ties.

              Hell, you're talking about people who are features in Trump's reelection propaganda.

            • lawwantsin17 1250 days ago
              The post didn't vet the story at all. It's an op. Nothing more.
          • Clubber 1250 days ago
            It's entirely possible that both parties you mention could be corrupt. The concern of the article is that a large chuck of the entire news industry is trying to bury the story because they want to the election to go a certain way, which makes them just as despicable as the remaining chunk of the news industry. Remember how Tara Reade was handled? Me too.
            • tt433 1249 days ago
              Tara Reade also left a long trail of disaffected associates including multiple landlords, who told the same story about her being a prolific liar. Now of course you're welcome to believe that their testimonials were coached by the media boogeyman, but that's a conspiracy with far too many moving parts to hold up in my view.
        • barumi 1250 days ago
          > According to the FBI[0] and the DNI[1], there is no evidence indicating that Hunter Biden's laptop is misinformation.

          You're just saying that a misinformation campaign aiming at manipulating the US elections quite possibly according to the whims of a totalitarian regime that aims at undermining the US from the top might not have resorted to use totally false and made-up information.

          • pseudo0 1250 days ago
            I would assume that the FBI looked into the provenance of the laptop when they subpoenaed it over a year ago. Biden's campaign has also not repudiated the repair shop owner's story of how the laptop came into his possession, and the owner has a signed receipt. Hunter's lawyer allegedly also contacted the repair shop owner the day before the New York Post published the story. This set of facts indicates to me that the laptop was probably not obtained as part of a misinformation campaign.

            Fundamentally, for me the null hypothesis is that this is typical election year opposition research. Those claiming that this is an elaborate Russian conspiracy have to present a pretty compelling case to convince me otherwise, given the repeated collapse of such narratives over the past few years.

          • chrisco255 1250 days ago
            It's Hunters laptop. Hunter is a crack head and he was dumb enough to drop a laptop off for repair and never come back to pick it up. There is a signed receipt by Hunter. The email dates match up with secret service flight records. Hunter peddles access to his father for millions of dollars. Joe got a piece of the action.
            • shlant 1250 days ago
              this comment make for a good example of why it is very difficult these days to have a reasonable discussion based in reality: many people have no interest in the truth and just want to see their side "win".

              This also results in something related to what the article talks about: any reasonable criticism that goes against mainstream thought (or against mainstream news in general) will immediately be coopted and used as ammo by those mentioned in my first point who will take it and twist it into absurd, conspiracy-level or hate-fueled perspectives thereby minimizing the legitimacy of original criticism in the eyes of the public.

            • barumi 1250 days ago
              > It's Hunters laptop. Hunter is a crack head (...)

              Ok you already made it quite clear that you don't care about the issue being discussed, and your focus is only on smearing by proxy an election candidate that you feel strongly against.

              I have no dog in the race, as I am not an US citizen nor do I live in the US. However, it's very disheartening to see a country, which a couple of decades ago was seen as the shining beacon of democracy, see their democratic process dragged through the mud by people the likes of you, who are more interested in fabricating propaganda and conduct smear campaigns than actually help out their country rise above their internal problems.

              • chrisco255 1250 days ago
                Here's Politico's Quint Forgey quoting the Director of National Intelligence that the laptop (source of the emails) is in the FBI's possession and that it is authentically Hunter's: https://twitter.com/QuintForgey/status/1318166732419235841 Here's Fox saying the same thing, quoting a Federal Law Enforcement Official: https://twitter.com/SeanLangille?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcam...

                Here's a signed MacBook Repair quote from 4/2019, signed by Hunter Biden: https://www.zerohedge.com/s3/files/inline-images/hunter%20bi...

                And here's the NYPost article itself, excerpts included:

                `Biden wrote that Ye had sweetened the terms of an earlier, three-year consulting contract with CEFC that was to pay him $10 million annually “for introductions alone.”`

                `"Consulting fees is one piece of our income stream but the reason this proposal by the chairman was so much more interesting to me and my family is that we would also be partners inn [sic] the equity and profits of the JV’s [joint venture’s] investments."`

                `The documents obtained by The Post also include an “Attorney Engagement Letter” executed in September 2017 in which one of Ye’s top lieutenants, former Hong Kong government official Chi Ping Patrick Ho, agreed to pay Biden a $1 million retainer for “Counsel to matters related to US law and advice pertaining to the hiring and legal analysis of any US Law Firm or Lawyer.`

                https://nypost.com/2020/10/15/emails-reveal-how-hunter-biden...

                It's not a smear campaign. These are facts. The Biden's are political whorebags and don't deserve power.

                I'm a 10th generation American. The spirit of liberty runs deep in me. But speaking truth to power is part of the democratic process. Sorry you were mistaken in believing that democracy is all sunshine and rainbows. It's not. It's very messy and imperfect. And like gardening, you have to weed out the corruption by calling it out.

                • zimpenfish 1250 days ago
                  Worth noting that DNI Ratcliffe is the most unqualified DNI to be appointed (and only managed to get appointed on his second try by a minority), is a Trump loyalist, lied in his bio (disqualifying, I'd say) and appears to follow QAnon (but that could be for work purposes.)

                  The zerohedge URL is truncated and consequently doesn't work.

                  > And here's the NYPost article itself, excerpts included:

                  Show us the DKIM headers and let us verify the authenticity, then we'll talk about the content of the emails.

                  • jessaustin 1250 days ago
                    ...DKIM...

                    My understanding is that the purported emails were sent to Biden. He can't really do anything to control what is sent to him, so verifying that these emails were sent doesn't really prove anything. If he had forwarded the emails in a way that indicated his agreement, or if they had been sent by someone else connected to the candidate, that would be a situation in which DKIM would be relevant.

                    • zimpenfish 1249 days ago
                      > He can't really do anything to control what is sent to him

                      In which case the whole situation is nonsense and moot.

                      But it appears that some of them are from Biden - "The New York Post cited a purported email from Hunter Biden in August 2017 indicating he was receiving a $10m annual fee from a Chinese billionaire" - in which case the DKIM headers would be a simple check on authenticity, no?

                      • jessaustin 1249 days ago
                        Sure, if he is alleged to have sent an incriminating email, the headers should be published along with the exact contents so that the public may judge for ourselves. This was done for the Clinton 2016 emails that clearly showed undemocratic interference in the primary elections. So, the fact that they haven't been published in this case does make the whole story less believable. The journalists involved this time probably aren't as smart as Wikileaks, but that's no reason their reporting shouldn't be held to the same standard.
                • Klonoar 1250 days ago
                  Seek help.

                  Edit: actually, screw it, I'm also going to point out that there are way too many people showing up in this thread with useless number strings in their handles and completely blank profiles, trying to argue a conspiracy theory.

              • Kephael 1250 days ago
                If this is "democracy" I don't see a point to it. I haven't been able to vote on any civilizational matters under "democracy" anyways. This is like the CCP but instead of CCP restrictions it is DNC restrictions.
                • shlant 1250 days ago
                  I suggest you refrain from making such hyperbolized false equivalencies if you want people to seriously consider your perspective. People can empathize with your frustrations around the seeming lack of agency available to individuals in some democratic countries (in the US especially) without you comparing it to some authoritarian country.
                  • Kephael 1250 days ago
                    It's not hyperbole, and we do live in authoritarian countries across most of the "Western" world. If you question the Leftist narrative in a public manner you will lose your professional job. If you tweet facts that the Left does not like, it will be deleted (and possibly result in the aforementioned termination of your employment). We don't presently have camps, but we absolutely have an undocumented social credit system.
                    • shlant 1250 days ago
                      you are clearly super biased and just painting the same old reactionary picture that doesn't actually exist. If you think a few examples of misdirected cancel culture and a couple private companies choosing some very specific sources/articles they don't want on their platform is akin to "authoritarianism" you either need to read up on the definition or you are being completely disingenuous to support your regurgitated narrative.
                      • Kephael 1249 days ago
                        I don't think my eyes and work email inbox are lying to me. Just because it's a softer form of control does not make it acceptable.

                        This is part of why institutional trust has collapsed in the US and this will all end violently.

        • comex 1250 days ago
          Your article [2] doesn't actually say anything about Bobulinski claiming laptop emails were authentic, though perhaps he did somewhere in the full statement. Even if the emails themselves are authentic, the New York Post article which revealed them (the article that was suppressed) is misinformation in that it mischaracterized them. Their alleged provenance is also probably not authentic.
          • pseudo0 1250 days ago
            Thanks for pointing that out, I've changed the link to a different article that has Bobulinski's full statement. He verifies the authenticity of the contentious email referring to a "10% cut for the big guy" in the first paragraph of the full statement.

            What exactly did the New York Post mischaracterize? I read the article and my general impression was that it was a bit sensationalized, but that's rather typical when it comes to bombshell scoops. My understanding of the term misinformation is that it refers to presenting outright false information as fact, not the (unfortunately typical) narrative framing of factual information that happens in the news every day.

            Regarding the provenance of the emails, the FBI subpoenaed the laptop over a year ago, and they've had the original in their possession since then. If their digital forensic experts haven't found evidence of foul play, I'd consider that a good indication that the laptop is indeed Hunter's and was found in the repair shop. Hunter's lawyer allegedly also contacted the repair shop on Oct 13, in an attempt to recover the laptop.

            • comex 1249 days ago
              > If their digital forensic experts haven't found evidence of foul play

              We only know the FBI subpoenaed the laptop because it was leaked to Fox News. The leak itself is presumably accurate, but we have no information about what the FBI did or did not find on the laptop – except for a letter that they have "nothing to add at this time" to an appearance by DNI John Ratcliffe on Fox Business.

              In that appearance, Ratcliffe (a highly partisan official) did claim that the laptop was not part of a disinformation campaign, but also said that "I know so little about those emails and what is apparently on Hunter Biden's laptop". So it seems like he was referring to a lack of information about the laptop from the intelligence community rather than inside information from the FBI.

              Admittedly, the FBI generally can share information with the intelligence community, and apparently in this case it has not. That does suggest that they probably don't have e.g. evidence that a specific foreign actor was behind things. But we don't know whether they've found evidence that foul play in general occurred or might have occurred. Heck, it's even possible that they found evidence of foul play by a specific entity, but didn't send it to the intelligence community because that entity is American – though I wouldn't say that's likely.

              As for the lawyer, the closest we have to hard evidence is a screenshot of an email apparently showing that a lawyer for Hunter Biden spoke with the repair shop owner after Hunter was presumably asked for comment by the Post; it doesn't show any specific claims made by the lawyer. Beyond that we just have Adam Housley and Rudy Giuliani relaying the claims of the repair shop owner. Leaving aside those sources' lack of trustworthiness, Housley himself claimed that the attorney had the wrong year for when Hunter dropped off the laptop and "didn't even know when he left em there" [1]. If anything, that suggests that Hunter doesn't know the provenance, though it's hard to say without more information.

              [1] https://twitter.com/adamhousley/status/1317319606126604288

      • rayiner 1250 days ago
        > They're not suppressing the article because it's wrong, but because it's pretty obviously intentionally planted misinformation disguised as news.

        This would be a more credible assertion if the media hasn’t spent 3 years reporting totally random shit as “bombshells.”

        Taibbi, himself a left-leaning journalist (formerly at Rolling Stone) has catalogued these at length on his substack. https://taibbi.substack.com/p/the-bombshell-memory-hole-d20

        In the cold light of the morning after, even WaPo has criticized the coverage over stories sources from the Steele Dossier: https://www.mercurynews.com/hanson-the-dangers-of-elite-grou...

        > The Washington Post recently published a surprising indictment of MSNBC host, Stanford graduate and Rhodes scholar Rachel Maddow.

        > Post media critic Erik Wemple wrote that Maddow deliberately misled her audience by claiming the now-discredited Steele dossier was largely verifiable — even at a time when there was plenty of evidence that it was mostly bogus.

        > At the very time Maddow was reassuring viewers that Christopher Steele was believable, populist talk radio and the much-criticized Fox News Channel were insisting that most of Steele’s allegations simply could not be true. Maddow was wrong. Her less degreed critics proved to be right.

        People should be a lot madder about how they were lied to and manipulated about Russiagate. If the media takes this sort of “ends justify the means” approach to Trump, they will eventually do it with something you care about.

        • comex 1250 days ago
          > Taibbi, himself a left-leaning journalist (formerly at Rolling Stone)

          Yes, he's the type of 'left-leaning' person who described a book about white privilege as "Hitlerian race theory" and wokeness as "mak[ing] the Junior Anti-Sex League seem like Led Zeppelin" [2], and also described not only what you (and he) call 'Russiagate', but the Ukraine incident as well, as a "permanent coup" [3] where Democrats' conduct was more corrupt than the conduct being investigated. Sure. I guess you could call it 'alt-left'.

          > has catalogued these at length on his substack.

          If there's a full list of supposedly false "bombshells", it's not publicly available at that link. But it's strange that its lead example is the Times' exposé of Trump's taxes, which even it admits is "real information" that suggests "potentially real" tax fraud (plus Trump not being as wealthy as claimed, what a surprise). Should it not be news that the Times found what Trump had been going out of his way to conceal for four years? Because the darkest speculation from the past proved false – speculation by random pundits, mind you (Taibbi doesn't link to anything from the Times, though for all I know there might have been some op-ed by someone) – does that make Times' report somehow fraudulent?

          > In the cold light of the morning after, even WaPo has criticized the coverage over stories sources from the Steele Dossier

          Rachel Maddow is a terrible journalist who makes exaggerated claims about all sorts of things. I wish she was not on the air, and Erik Wemple of the Washington Post was right to criticize her. But she is not representative of "the media"; she is rather unusual as left-leaning TV figures go. (Her "less degreed critics" on Fox News are far worse.)

          But you didn't link to the Washington Post article. You linked to a Mercury News article that briefly mentions it. The Mercury News article, however, is full of misinformation. For example, it claims that Mueller investigation found "no evidence of actionable Trump obstruction". Well, technically, yes – because it assumed it could not indict a sitting president under any circumstances. The report suggested that the behavior would have been indictable otherwise, though it officially did not make a determination one way or the other.

          [1] https://taibbi.substack.com/p/on-white-fragility

          [2] https://taibbi.substack.com/p/if-its-not-cancel-culture-what...

          [3] https://taibbi.substack.com/p/were-in-a-permanent-coup

          • rayiner 1250 days ago
            I didn’t post the WaPo link because it’s pay-walled. I’m not endorsing the Mercury News article. But the whole “obstruction” debate was really proof of how sideways the media coverage had gone. Obstruction without something else is a pretty bullshit charge: https://reason.com/2019/04/19/in-defense-of-trump-obstructin.... We were promised he was a Russian asset, and when that evaporated we had an excruciating technical debate about Mueller’s assumptions about whether he could indict for obstruction.

            As to “White Fragility”—Taibbi’s language is colorful, but that book isn’t mainstream left: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/07/dehumanizi.... (Podcast version: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-great-awokening/id....) Whereas Kendi’s “How to Be an Anti-Racist” is a book about public policy written in familiar liberal public policy language, “White Fragility” is a bizarre self-help book for white people who read Kendi’s book and didn’t understand it.

            Also, while "Hitlerian race theory" is an appropriate description for someone who says white people should "strive to be less white." Picturing someone telling my half-white daughter that makes me think that Taibbi's description is on the nose.

          • himinlomax 1250 days ago
            "White fragility" appears to legitimately be a shit book, and not just one with a very shit title, according to a lot more self-described leftists than just Taibbi. This is a bizarre and unconvincing argument.

            Also you clearly appear to be unfamiliar with Taibbi's writing style. That's how he wrote stories about the war crimes of the previous admins; remember those? Or is GWB now considered a leftist?

          • roenxi 1250 days ago
            If your test of being "left leaning" ignoring inconvenient facts then I might suggest that your viewpoint will not do well in a debate.

            There is no inconsistency between a person being left leaning and that person thinking the Democrat party have adopted bad policy/insane rhetoric or that some elements of the radical left are insane and dangerous.

            I'm a solid right wing voter; and I'd happily point out that some Republican policies are horrific (their approach to deficits is not acceptable), that their rhetoric is sometimes unhinged and that the fringe elements of the right wing are dangerous lunatics. Still think they are the better of 2 options.

            And on White Fragility is exactly the sort of book that would have, in the 1940s, been used to justify Hitlerian race theory. In the 1940s it would be pointing out that Jews are systematically advantaged and as a group trying to downplay race but that one can't claim to be blind to it.

          • unishark 1250 days ago
            > But it's strange that its lead example is the Times' exposé of Trump's taxes, which even it admits is "real information" that suggests "potentially real" tax fraud (plus Trump not being as wealthy as claimed, what a surprise). Should it not be news that the Times found what Trump had been going out of his way to conceal for four years?

            It's hard to follow but his complaint here seems to be kind of a wonkish insider lament about the media reaction he expects to follow the NYT story, not the story itself. And in particular that his own article years earlier in Rolling Stone already told the same basic story about Trump as con man but I guess won't get any credit.

            As for the list of bombshells, there a link to another story which steps through many references to news stories in turn, in a narrative style, not an enumerated list.

      • jsu32 1250 days ago
        It was really fun to watch half (liberal) Twitter claiming this was disinformation (i.e. false information) and the other half - including Twitter itself - claiming it was hacking (i.e. absolutely true information, albeit one they shouldn't have their hands on).

        I feel most people don't care about the facts, they care about their opinions which is now part of their identity. This is not good at all.

        • pavlov 1250 days ago
          You've got this wrong. The ban on publishing personal information from hacks doesn't apply only when it's "absolutely true". It's about the claimed provenance, not the veracity.

          If I made a tweet that reads: "Here's some juicy extracts from jsu32's personal diary, I stole it from their hard drive" — it would fall under Twitter's policy, regardless of whether I ever stole your hard drive or not.

          • knaq 1250 days ago
            There certainly wasn't a hack. At worst there could be a copyright issue, but political stuff is very strongly protected for fair use. The drive legitimately changed ownership, according to the repair contract, after 90 days of abandonment.
            • comex 1250 days ago
              Allegedly.
          • thu2111 1250 days ago
            Almost by definition information that was stolen via hacking is true, unless for some bizarre reason the victim was privately forging documents about themselves, which nobody has ever alleged.

            At any rate, the OP merely observed that people supporting Twitter can't get their story straight: half are claiming it's Russian disinformation (again) and others that it's hacking (but supposedly it's not), and those two narratives aren't compatible.

        • chrisco255 1250 days ago
          This wasn't a hack. Hunter dropped his laptop off for repair and never picked it up.
      • dionian 1250 days ago
        They never provided evidence for this. By their own standards they should censor their own actions.

        Also, why didn't they do this with the Pee Pee tape that the media wrote long thinkpieces about for YEARS? Trending on twitter, too, of course. There was never evidence of that either, yet they had no problems with it.

        Are they changing their standard now based on the fact that the media lied so much in the past? and if so, why are the main perpetrators not being targeted?

      • mshroyer 1250 days ago
        > because it's pretty obviously intentionally planted misinformation disguised as news

        "misinformation" implies it's false. What's the evidence for this?

        I'm as skeptical as anyone about the actual provenance of the information, but to my understanding, nobody in the Biden campaign has so far denied the material's legitimacy.

        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          I think the question is, what is the information? The story seems like spaghetti, thrown at the wall to convey a sense of corruption, with no disprovable claims being made.
          • mshroyer 1250 days ago
            I personally think the information is a big nothingburger. But that's quite a different thing from saying it's misinformation.
            • darkerside 1249 days ago
              I think it's fair to characterize tone and intent as part of the message. And when the tone of the message is, BREAKING NEWS THERE HAS BEEN A CORRUPTION, having no evidence of it seems worthy of the phrase misinformation.

              As has been said about Trump so many times this cycle, "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence". Except nobody's saying that this time. Maybe because there is no actual claim being made? Just the appearance of one?

      • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
        You may be right in practice, but according to Twitter the claimed reason was hacking/doxing, not misinformation -- in fact, the opposite of misinformation!
      • jkhdigital 1250 days ago
        “pretty obviously intentionally planted misinformation disguised as news”

        I am astonished at your blinding confidence in your ability to distinguish misinformation from news. You must be a Facebook content moderator ::snicker::

        • creato 1250 days ago
          I can't tell you for sure if this story is misinformation or not. That's part of the problem with misinformation. Well constructed misinformation is not easily proven false.

          What I can tell you is that it is absurd to believe it is true given what we know about the details surrounding the "discovery" of the information.

          • mshroyer 1250 days ago
            I'd be with you if the Biden campaign denied the material's legitimacy. So far, at least as far as I'm aware, they haven't.
    • tracer4201 1250 days ago
      The liberal wing was upset that state and non state actors influenced the 2016 election by manipulating social media.

      Now, Twitter is working to suppress some content that they believe is a repeat attempt — the October surprise if you will.

      I don’t have strong opinions on whether it’s right or wrong, but I don’t think this is a scandal.

      Twitter is a private company. You don’t have a constitutional right to write whatever you want on Twitter. If Americans believe otherwise, then they’d have to nationalize Twitter or at least pass legislation that mandates what content Twitter can or cannot moderate.

      I do find it surprising that social media companies are being held to a very different standard than “news”. In the US, we have specific news organizations that are unashamedly biased and blasting the airwaves with dangerous propaganda.

      I’m not trying to make a case of whataboutism, but it’s mind boggling that social media receives so much scrutiny when this other group of fairly openly nefarious actors get a free pass. As far as I can tell, this is because the media organizations have fairly established relationships with politicians from one party or the other, with political parties using them as propaganda loud speakers.

      • missedthecue 1250 days ago
        Should T Mobile or Verizon be able to censor your phone calls and text messages if they don't like the content? After all, they're private companies as well.
        • sagichmal 1250 days ago
          They're common carriers, a different set of rules apply.
        • commandlinefan 1250 days ago
          ISPs are private companies, too. Should they be suppressing political information as well?
          • triceratops 1250 days ago
            ISPs are not common carriers and legally they can suppress political information. Guess under whose administration they stopped being common carriers?
          • tracer4201 1250 days ago
            For one, ISPs aren’t social media companies. If my ISP censors information, then effectively I have no way to access that information, particularly in cases when there’s no other ISP in my area.

            A social media platform banning certain content is different. Just as we have alt right media sources such as Breitbart, nothing is preventing you from starting your own social media platform, with whatever content you want or don’t want.

            At the end of the day, you still have a variety of content sources on the internet to consume that same content. Twitter is not the only source of information, and if you believe it is, then we have more serious problems.

            I was literally banned from r/conservative for posting a question that folks found very inconvenient. Should they be forced to reverse the ban? How far do you believe is too far?

            In my opinion, this is pretty clear cut. If you don’t like Twitter’s policies, don’t use their website.

            I’m surprised the free enterprise conservatives are actually the ones so against this. “We want government to get out of the way... unless it furthers our agenda and helps us stay in power, in which case, let’s threaten to regulate or break up private companies.”

            • bialpio 1250 days ago
              > In my opinion, this is pretty clear cut. If you don’t like Twitter’s policies, don’t use their website.

              On one hand yes, but on the other, does that also apply to other services? Can I open a shop only for <insert skin color> people only and claim that if you don't like it, go somewhere else? How about other categories, protected or otherwise? As a society, we already agree that there are some freedoms that private businesses are denied, and for good reasons, because when taken to the extremes, you end up with this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nur_f%C3%BCr_Deutsche.

              > A social media platform banning certain content is different. Just as we have alt right media sources such as Breitbart, nothing is preventing you from starting your own social media platform, with whatever content you want or don’t want.

              Not really - you can start your own media outlet and selectively run the stories you want, that's fine. But if you just regurgitate user-generated content, IMO you better be really careful about applying your own rules consistently and in a transparent manner.

              • triceratops 1250 days ago
                > Can I open a shop only for <insert skin color> people only and claim that if you don't like it, go somewhere else? How about other categories, protected or otherwise?

                You're missing the fine distinction between protected and non-protected categories. Discrimination based on what you are is banned - those constitute the protected categories. Sex, gender, national origin, race, family status, veteran status, religion, and sexual orientation all fall under things you are.

                Business and private organizations however, are allowed to discriminate against their customers based on their actions. It gets fuzzier if those actions intersect with a protected category (e.g. a supermarket probably (IANAL) can't throw out a gay couple for family-friendly PDA if a hetero couple would be allowed to stay). But by and large, if you do or say something on my premises that I dislike, I can kick you out.

                Imagine if weren't so. Anyone could disrupt religious services by shouting obscenities. You couldn't have a peaceful shopping trip or grocery run. It would be total chaos.

                • bialpio 1249 days ago
                  So can I be banned from a social media platform if it so happens that I am a member of a church that forbids something and it so happens that I am vocal about it?

                  > But by and large, if you do or say something on my premises that I dislike, I can kick you out.

                  It cannot be a fuzzy "I dislike what you do", as it is prone to selective enforcement (and I can still discriminate based on what you are, but maintaining plausible deniability).

                  • triceratops 1249 days ago
                    I have no idea, legally speaking, what they would be permitted to do.

                    In reality what they would actually do would depend on what that "something" is. If it's something like "don't eat meat on odd-numbered dates", you're probably fine. On the other hand, you say something harmful or distasteful to other protected categories, you'd be lucky to keep your account. They'd weigh the harm to you of kicking you off versus the harm to others by letting you stay and (of course) the PR liability incurred by doing either.

                    If the discrimination criteria are broadly found to match up with a protected class you're in legal hot water. IOW using proxies for "plausible deniability" is a risky strategy and businesses have been punished in the past for doing it.

                    > It cannot be a fuzzy "I dislike what you do", as it is prone to selective enforcement

                    You're right it can be. But again, consider the alternative on online forums. Anyone could post porn or vulgarity on religious forums, or socialist propaganda on business forums. It would be very disruptive if selective enforcement weren't allowed.

        • hackinthebochs 1250 days ago
          The difference is that social media aren't neutral communication channels when the visibility of a communication is altered by likes and algorithms.
          • ethanwillis 1250 days ago
            DMs don't have their visibility modulated in the same way as the main feed.
        • tracer4201 1250 days ago
          I would say yes. If they censor my calls, I would switch providers. But more importantly, if we as a country believe that’s wrong, we should pass legislation
          • Negitivefrags 1250 days ago
            There is legislation. It’s called common carrier. The argument is this existing legislation should be extended to social media as well.
            • amanaplanacanal 1250 days ago
              We can’t even get it applied to ISP’s, I don’t know how we could stretch it to social media.

              My guess is that any legislation attempting to make social media common carriers would eventually be found to unconstitutionally abridge the first amendment.

      • haltingproblem 1250 days ago
        You make valid points and I don't know why are you downvoted. But Twitter is not a journalism play, it is a platform play and purported to be neutral. If there is blatant supression then they will antagonize atleast 50% of Americans which would be terrible for their bottom line.
        • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
          1. Twitter is absolutely a journalism play. Look at the front page.

          2. Neutral doesn't mean "whoever can game the algorithm wins"

          3. Less than 50% of Americans are opposed to suppressing sharing of articles like the one suppressed.

        • IfOnlyYouKnew 1250 days ago
          "Platforms" and "publishers" are not actually legal categories, not mutually exclusive, and any sorting of Twitter into one of those categories happened entirely in your head. Twitter also doesn't specifically call itself "neutral" (some "publisher" comes to mind doing that far more).
        • triceratops 1250 days ago
          YSK there's no requirement for a "platform" to be "neutral". By law platforms can do whatever the heck they like with regards to content moderation. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying or misinformed.
    • IfOnlyYouKnew 1250 days ago
      > will now normalize all kinds of behavior by platforms of all kinds big and small

      Slippery slope is a falacy, just like "correlation proves causation", to pick one HN somehow likes.

      Was there any doubt of their technical ability to delete and otherwise change content on their network in every which way? No, of course not. Was there any doubt that it would be legal? None whatsoever...

      Nothing has changed, except one lie got a little less play than its equivalent four years ago. Because some institutions learn.

      • reificator 1250 days ago
        > Slippery slope is a falacy, just like "correlation proves causation", to pick one HN somehow likes.

        I've seen too many "if this happens then that will be next" come true to write every use off just because your 9th grade teacher said it was fallacious. For instance the U.S. legal system leans very heavily on the concept of "precedent". Slippery slopes are baked into the system.

        I don't think you can just pull out the fallacy card every time it comes up and declare anyone who is predicting a chain of events to be arguing in bad faith.

        • TravHatesMe 1250 days ago
          I get tired of seeing these comments too. In the last few years it has become commonspeak to throw around these terms with no nuance. Strawmanning is a new favorite word for many. I sometimes shudder at the pretentiousness of it all (for some reason "false dichotomy" gets on my nerves, I feel like there are easier ways of saying that there are other possibilities).
        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          It's a logical fallacy, meaning the statements don't logically follow. That doesn't mean there isn't a heavy implication, which there often is.
        • shlant 1250 days ago
          don't worry! there's a fallacy for that too!

          https://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/the-fallacy-fallacy

      • bloaf 1250 days ago
        > To live in this process is absolutely not to be able to notice it-please try to believe me-unless one has a much greater degree of political awareness, acuity, than most of us had ever had occasion to develop. Each step was so small, so inconsequential, so well explained or, on occasion, 'regretted,' that, unless one were detached from the whole process from the beginning, unless one understood what the whole thing was in principle, what all these 'little measures' that no 'patriotic German' could resent must some day lead to, one no more saw it developing from day to day than a farmer in his field sees the corn growing. One day it is over his head.

        > How is this to be avoided, among ordinary men, even highly educated ordinary men? Frankly, I do not know. I do not see, even now. Many, many times since it all happened I have pondered that pair of great maxims, Principiis obsta and Finem respice-'Resist the beginnings' and 'Consider the end.' But one must foresee the end in order to resist, or even see, the beginnings...

        > In the university community, in your own community, you speak privately to your colleagues, some of whom certainly feel as you do; but what do they say? They say, 'It's not so bad' or 'You're seeing things' or 'You're an alarmist.' And you are an alarmist. You are saying that this must lead to this, and you can't prove it. These are the beginnings, yes; but how do you know for sure when you don't know the end, and how do you know, or even surmise, the end?

        -- Milton Mayer, They Thought They Were Free (The Germans 1933-45)

        In the past few decades, the political right served as the watchdog against governmental abuse of power (domestically), while the left was more sensitive to corporate abuses. But with the rise of big tech has come a generation of left-leaning young people willing to give the benefit of the doubt to corporations they see as by- and for- their own generation. At the same time, the right's foray into populism has ushered in a party-wide acceptance of authoritarianism (provided it is wielded against members of out-groups).

        I agree with you if we were talking about a decision by HN, or Metafilter, or other small communities. But Twitter/Facebook et. al. do not feel the same. The situation feels more like a company deciding that they can ban certain literature on the grounds that they own all the land in the town [1].

        So it seems to me that our watchdogs are in some sense asleep at their traditional posts. It seems to me that we have an instance of a corporation granting itself new and wide ranging powers (regardless of their benevolence) over a wide swath of public discourse. It seems to me that this ought to be resisted as a beginning, though we cannot see the ends.

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsh_v._Alabama

        >...we have recognized that the preservation of a free society is so far dependent upon the right of each individual citizen to receive such literature as he himself might desire... can those people who live in or come to Chickasaw be denied freedom of press and religion simply because a single company has legal title to all the town? For it is the State's contention that the mere fact that all the property interests in the town are held by a single company is enough to give that company power, enforceable by a state statute, to abridge these freedoms. We do not agree that the corporation's property interests settle the question... Ownership does not always mean absolute dominion. The more an owner, for his advantage, opens up his property for use by the public in general, the more do his rights become circumscribed by the statutory and constitutional rights of those who use it.

  • mrfusion 1250 days ago
    > Both the government and private companies can censor stuff. But private companies are a little bit scarier. They have no constitution to answer to. They’re not elected. They have no constituents or voters. All of the protections we’ve built up to protect against government tyranny don’t exist for corporate tyranny.

    - Aaron Swartz

    • dang 1250 days ago
      No one seems to have pointed it out, so I'll mention that Aaron was clearly paraphrasing Noam Chomsky there. The point about government being partially limited by constitutions and elections while private companies are not is one that Chomsky has been repeating for decades, and the phrase "corporate tyranny" is very much Chomsky's. This is in keeping with his left-libertarian view that workplaces should operate democratically.

      It's not that Aaron was plagiarizing—the quote is from a documentary interview (https://www.reddit.com/r/aaronswartz/comments/dpo2ot/both_th...). In that context it's not common to make attributions and the editors would probably have cut it out in any case.

      • AniseAbyss 1250 days ago
        Whenever America disappoints me, and that's basically all the time these days, I remind myself that it has also produced critical thinkers like Twain and Chomsky.
    • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
      I respect Swartz a lot, and he makes many good points. But let's not pretend that Twitter and Facebook hold information monopolies with equivalent power to the government's ability to censor. As proof, consider that we are having this conversation right now, about an article that was published and is freely, legally available online to anyone with a web browser. You can disagree with Twitter's editorial choices, but (as long as we prevent a literal technological monopoly, a prospect that seems increasingly probably) the consequences thereof are in no way similar to government censorship.
      • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
        The lines get blurry when there is a revolving door between Silicon Valley tech companies and DC.

        Recent example from the banning of Bret Weinstein from Facebook: https://twitter.com/Liz_Shepherd/status/1319451084859953154?...

        This is a Facebook communications person responding with an official reply to this incident. She describes herself as "Facebook comms, formerly @TheDemocrats and @SpeakerPelosi".

        This is an example of power leakage. These institutions do in fact (i.e. de facto, not de jure) have elements of sovereign power given their relationship with the political/ruling class, it's just that they are not directly accountable in the same way that a government is. They engage in censorship for the benefit of the ruling/political class and use political formulae as a mask (TOS violations, "community standards" violations, exhortations to the first amendment, section 230 protections, etc) in the same way governments do.

        • disgruntledphd2 1250 days ago
          > Recent example from the banning of Bret Weinstein from Facebook: https://twitter.com/Liz_Shepherd/status/1319451084859953154?...

          What's most f-ed up about that one is that Liz posts from her personal account. The appropriate thing to do is to post from facebook comms or something.

          Overall though, its a continuation of the grand old tradition that appeals to SV tech companies must come from "important" people or trusted sources (like Twitter or here) or they don't matter. It is super disturbing though.

        • nl 1250 days ago
          And Joel Kaplan, head of Facebook Public Policy was one of the people involved in the "Brooks Brother Riot"[1] that shutdown the recount of the 2000 election and took over from Karl Rove in the GW Bush Whitehouse.

          [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooks_Brothers_riot

        • flower-giraffe 1250 days ago
          It’s not limited to DC - Former UK deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg @Facebook VP, Global Affairs
        • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
          "Power leakage" is inevitable. Everyone has political opinions. Most cops are Republicans. That alone doesn't mean that they're incapable of doing their job competently.

          What you're doing amounts to an ad hominem attack: you're criticizing the person delivering the message, rather than the message itself.

          • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
            I'm not talking about political opinions, I'm talking about highly connected political operatives in positions of power within these companies.

            Liz Bourgeois would be an example of such a person.

            She was Assistant Press Secretary at the DNC and prior to that was a Legislative Correspondant for Nancy Pelosi and Debbi Wasserman Shultz.

            Now she works as "Director, Strategic Response Communications" at Facebook.

            • dlp211 1250 days ago
              This would be a valid criticism if these companies didn't hire top tier operatives from both parties and donate substantial amounts via their PACs to both.
              • CamTin 1250 days ago
                It's not clear why this would be the case. Why should we care which "party" somebody is from when then issue at hand is a revolving door between DC and the Valley? The military-industrial complex has done fine under a two-party system and so presumably will the private-public corporate surveillance state. Everybody in power in the US has to pick one of two letters to put after their name, but they're all part of the same ruling class.
                • sieabahlpark 1249 days ago
                  It's because he naively believes one party is the bad version of government and the other is good. Instead of reasonably believing that all government is bad when unchecked, regardless of who.
              • pushrax 1250 days ago
                Even if completely neutral with respect to the two parties, the effect of social media as a transport for political information means it has a high involvement in political activity.

                Don't pretend those two parties form an ideal set of alternatives; they have many common problems maintained by their duopoly.

              • thu2111 1250 days ago
                Do they? As far as I know the only example of any identifiably Republican person high up in Silicon Valley is Joel Kaplan, and we know from leaks that Zuckerberg spends a significant amount of his time trying to stop his workforce from lynching the guy.
                • Fnoord 1250 days ago
                  > As far as I know the only example of any identifiably Republican person high up in Silicon Valley [..]

                  "Thiel is Silicon Valley's most outspoken Trump supporter" [1]

                  [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Thiel

                  • Fnoord 1249 days ago
                    Another one just popped up in my mind: Condoleezza Rice @ Dropbox
                    • kodah 1249 days ago
                      Would it be possible to compile a list of all of the political operatives (current and former) in tech? Can we make them register in the future?

                      I didn't know this was happening, but I guess I should have.

      • mellosouls 1250 days ago
        I think that is an optimistic view.

        Consider that an overwhelmingly partisan ownership and stewardship of the majority of media, (whether left or right - currently, as the example in the article it's liberal left) has a more insidious power to control the narrative and push counterpoints to the margins until they die naturally, partly because there is in that situation a de facto monopoly.

        Government-censored material never actually dies, and has a habit of being leaked (or released on change of government) and causing scandals; Silicon Valley etc-suppressed material has a habit of being sidelined into the anaemic and eccentric irrelevance of the cancelled and the crackpots, and by the time we realise some of them are actually worth listening to, the damage is done.

        Especially in the context of a society where "speech is free", and egregious censorship is assumed not to exist, this is arguably even more damaging - the idea that suppression exists is itself dismissed by the mainstream and chattering classes; that isn't necessarily the case in a country under authoritarian, censoring governance.

      • acituan 1250 days ago
        > But let's not pretend that Twitter and Facebook hold information monopolies with equivalent power to the government's ability to censor

        Agreed, their narrative shaping capabilities far exceed governments'.

        > As proof, consider that we are having this conversation right now,

        That is a very poor way of judging it for several reasons; a) we are not currently on Twitter or Facebook, we don't have the same reach nor subject to same corporate normativities b) past performance is not always indicative of things to come.

        > You can disagree with Twitter's editorial choices,

        Except they claim they are not making editorial choices, and can't be held up to that standard, which a great chunk of the problem.

      • RhysU 1250 days ago
        > But let's not pretend that Twitter and Facebook hold information monopolies with equivalent power to the government's ability to censor.

        Those private entities can censor in excess of the government. They are scarier.

        • vkou 1250 days ago
          All that a private entity can do is toss you off their platform.

          If every single private website threw you, and your views off the internet tomorrow, you'd return to the age of tyranny and darkness... That ~every human being on earth lived in prior to ~1995. The horror!

          In contrast, your government can kill or imprison you, if you say something it doesn't like - but for some strange reason, nerd culture spills gallons of ink on the thesis that private censorship is scarier.

          This is a serious case of misplaced priorities.

          • RhysU 1250 days ago
            I do not worry about my particular government unjustly killing or imprisoning me.

            The platforms can deny me a voice, can allow lies about me to circulate in my absence, and can cause a mob with pitchforks to metaphorically show up outside my door. Job, career, ability to support my family, place in any community? All gone.

            My government owes me constitutional behavior and is answerable for violating it. The platforms owe me nothing and are answerable for nothing.

          • thu2111 1250 days ago
            Sure, so Chrome and Safari blacklist your websites. You're only back to 1995, the horror.

            Then Amazon refuses to sell your books. And VISA refuses to let people buy them, if they find them in an alternative outlet. What's the big deal, you're only rolled back to the 1980s. And then they go a step further and say, if you're assisting in the distribution of these books, we'll cut off your AWS and payment processing services as well. Hey, you're only rolled back to the 1940s. People can still photocopy the sheets they got from a friend manually as long as the companies they rely on don't find out, right?

            The problem here is that a small number of large companies are being captured by extreme left-wing political activists who don't recognise disagreement as being legitimate. Trying to figure out how much private sector censorship is OK is a distraction. The problem here is the ever increasing power of Marxists inside large powerful institutions, often smuggling their ideologies in under the guise of 'diversity' or 'inclusion' programs (which are inevitably about conformity and exclusion).

            • vkou 1249 days ago
              Ah, yes, our means of communication have been captured by the extreme left.

              That's why in 2020, when you go on Facebook, you can't even talk about conservative ideas, like Laffer curves, owning guns, reducing entitlements, pooh-poohing (non-police) unions, voting for a republican, the virtues of surprise-billing and of having your health insurance tied to your employer, starting wars against yet another state that most of us can't even place on the map...

              But, wait, you can.

              If that's how Facebook erases conservative ideas, they are doing a pretty poor job of it.

            • disgruntledphd2 1250 days ago
              > The problem here is that a small number of large companies are being captured by extreme left-wing political activists who don't recognise disagreement as being legitimate.

              While this may be true of the rank and file, the policy people (like Liz upthread or Joel Kaplan) are always political activists/lobbyists because the gig is talking and convincing political organisations of things.

              And please note that there's been a bunch of stories about Facebook particularly, intervening on the right-wing side a bunch - how does this support your theory about left-wing activists?

        • stonogo 1250 days ago
          Get back to me when Twitter has the power to round up everyone who read a given story and have them executed in the street, because that's what government censorship can look like. It's not limited to some partisan nerd toggling a flag in a database somewhere. I think you should probably take this opportunity to re-evaluate the relative powers of these entities.
          • onecommentman 1250 days ago
            I think the discussion is focusing on levels of the US government and what has been experienced by the public under that government since its founding. Actual exercised power by US governmental entities.

            The discussion of other governments will probably lead this thread into a swampy delta and it will lose its motive force.

            • dnautics 1250 days ago
              > I think the discussion is focusing on levels of the US government and what has been experienced by the public under that government since its founding

              Get back to me when twitter can order an airstrike against an minor and enjoy qualified immunity.

              • briantakita 1250 days ago
                The Chinese Communist Party is being accused of many human rights violations against the Uyghurs, Falun Gong, Christians, factory workers, etc. There are also allegations that the CCP is interfering with the United States government & election process. If these violations are true, then Twitter & the Big Media is complicit in obfuscating evidence of collusion & hidden business partnerships between the Vice President via his family & the CCP.

                If these allegations are not true, then the public conversation has been censored & the story of censorship overshadows investigation which would absolve the innocent parties.

                Either way, the public deserves to have direct access the truth.

            • stonogo 1250 days ago
              I'm not sure why the artificial limitations on comparison; Twitter and Facebook are wholly active and engaged in markets with governments with such histories. Anyway, if you want such examples, look to the Mexican Dirty War for many, as well as the Banana Massacre. The latter of course was merely a threat to deploy the Marines, but the reasoning announced was not strikebreaking but because the strikers were "subversives"; that is, the US claimed to want them silenced not for what they were doing but for what they were saying.

              In the past, I would have said that Posse Comitatus would have prevented such behavior from being directed toward American citizens, but after seeing the mutual-law-skirting nature of the Five Eyes approach, as well as the presence of Federal troops in law enforcement roles in US cities over the past year, I'm no longer confident.

          • thu2111 1250 days ago
            People are alarmed by these moves because they represent a wider trend in which the left increasingly does not recognise the right as politically legitimate, i.e. they do not believe non-leftists should be allowed to exist. Tech firm activist censorship is merely one visible (or not so visible) aspect of this. But it's not the only aspect.

            The very same sorts of people with the very same views are also in government institutions in abundance, as we've seen in recent years with the descent of the various left-wing elites into conspiracy theories about Russia - theories that were then used to try and effectively block implementations of public votes, on the belief that surely the public could not possibly reject their enlightened governance unless they were being manipulated.

            This isn't purely a US thing. The UK has the same problems. Recently one of the government's advisors on COVID was complaining (on Twitter!) that the BBC had agreed to unfairly rig a debate she was involved with, but hadn't properly enforced that rigging:

            https://twitter.com/SusanMichie/status/1311234012283899904

            A lot of the British political class lost their minds over Brexit. You saw incredible things, like politicians running as candidates of the party saying they'd implement the decision, and then switching post-election to the party with saying they'd void the vote and never leave. They had flat out lied to voters about their intentions. That happened quite a few times. There were many other tricks deployed too. They fundamentally didn't believe in the legitimacy of their political opposition and were willing to manipulate the electoral processes to try and "win" despite having lost at the ballot box.

            • davvolun 1249 days ago
              > People are alarmed by these moves because they represent a wider trend in which the left increasingly does not recognise the right as politically legitimate, i.e. they do not believe non-leftists should be allowed to exist.

              Those two things aren't remotely the same. The legitimacy of the right in the U.S. is an open question when they participate in direct voter suppression, gerrymandering, continually lose popular votes but still gain controlling power of the strongest apparatus of the government, have used that power to appoint (shortly) 16 of the last 20 SCOTUS Justices going back to 1969 using rules they are quite literally making up on the spot. "Consent of the governed" is a valid question under these scenarios.

              But you need to provide some very strong evidence "they [the left] do not believe non-leftists should be allowed to exist." You're using some very strong language based on very weak arguments.

              The fact you, presumably, pass off things such as Russian interference in fair and free elections as "conspiracy theories" should, god willing, be absolutely damning to your credibility. Or that "herd immunity strategies," as mentioned in the tweet you link, should be presented as a valid and equal alternative strategy to NOT LETTING PEOPLE DIE; you're arguing flat-earthers should be given equal footing in a debate with NASA.

              • CapricornNoble 1249 days ago
                >>>But you need to provide some very strong evidence "they [the left] do not believe non-leftists should be allowed to exist."

                At least one very recent example: https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2020/oct/12/keith-olber...

                • davvolun 1249 days ago
                  Keith Olbermann, currently hosting on the mainstream news channel of YouTube (/s) after being evicted from actual mainstream news, is the opposite of strong evidence. Further:

                  > "The hate he has triggered, the Pandora’s box he has opened, they will not be so easily destroyed,” he said. “So, let us brace ourselves. The task is twofold: the terrorist Trump must be defeated, must be destroyed, must be devoured at the ballot box, and then he, and his enablers, and his supporters, and his collaborators, and the Mike Lees and the William Barrs, and the Sean Hannitys, and the Mike Pences, and the Rudy Gullianis and the Kyle Rittenhouses and the Amy Coney Barretts must be prosecuted and convicted and removed from our society while we try to rebuild it and to rebuild the world Trump has nearly destroyed by turning it over to a virus."

                  The implication "should not be allowed to exist" is very different from "prosecuted and convicted and removed from our society." So even taking a marginalized voice talking from his YouTube channel, arguing that the left believes the right "should not be allowed to exist" is a ridiculous stretch.

                  You need to read more than just the headlines.

                  • CapricornNoble 1248 days ago
                    His YT channel is small....but he has ~1M Twitter followers. Put in context, that's 2x the followers of TYT's Cenk Uygur, 4x as many as Jimmy Diore, and just a few hundred k short of Steven Crowder. That is not indicative of a "marginalized" voice IMO, and your only defense of his position boils down to "Hey he's not advocating for genocide, just mass incarceration of our political opponents." That strikes me as a tone-deaf position to take on a social media site where hand-wringing over the fate of the Uighurs in China is so en vogue...
                    • davvolun 1248 days ago
                      Unless you have better evidence than Keith Olbermann to back your statement, I think we're done here. I'm not going to go back and forth about Twitter followers as a valid metric for gauging public opinion on genocide...
              • thu2111 1249 days ago
                I think you need to re-read your own post.

                you need to provide some very strong evidence "they [the left] do not believe non-leftists should be allowed to exist."

                You literally start by saying:

                The legitimacy of the right in the U.S. is an open question

                Perhaps you're using an odd definition of legitimate, but generally for a political movement to be recognised as legitimate means it is allowed to take part in the political process, to be supported by people without suppression and so on. Terrorist groups are not politically legitimate, political parties with voters are. It gets tricky in the unusual cases where political parties and terror groups become closely related, as was seen with Sinn Fein and the IRA.

                You yourself are now arguing that maybe the right isn't legitimate because of a bog-standard list of leftist talking points, none of which are obvious or uncontroversial, for example what you call "voter suppression" is more obviously interpreted as enforcing existing laws that define who can vote; calling this "suppression" implies that no such laws do or should exist. But nobody is arguing that, are they?

                But you need to provide some very strong evidence "they [the left] do not believe non-leftists should be allowed to exist."

                This thread is literally about Twitter shutting down a conservative newspaper that has reported news relevant to an election in which conservatives are competing. The NY Post and the story it reported no longer exists on Twitter. How much clearer a piece of evidence do you want?

                And again - hold a mirror up and look at the reflection. Your post ends by saying that I should not be given "equal footing in debate" i.e. that people with those views should be (debate-wise) wiped out, not allowed to exist at all. You are the embodiment of what I'm talking about.

                • davvolun 1249 days ago
                  "not allowed to exist at all" doesn't mean what you seem to think it does. Nothing you have said bears any more discussion.
                  • thu2111 1248 days ago
                    It's the other way around.

                    By "not allowed to exist" I don't mean literally executed in a mass genocide of half the voting population. Using such an interpretation is very bad faith, assuming that's what you're getting at.

                    I mean not allowed to be visible, to play any part in the public sphere, not allowed to "exist" in the sense of mattering to the structures of power in a country. Being forced to be invisible, forgotten, erased from the written and spoken record. And with that far more rational interpretation you can hopefully see that your views definitely qualify.

                    • davvolun 1247 days ago
                      I'm not going to go back and forth with a "yes, it is" "no, it isn't" exchange with you, but "not allowed to exist" is VERY clearly different from "not allowed to be visible" -- the thing that you specifically wrote to clarify what you meant.

                      Using the interpretation of THE THING YOU ACTUALLY WROTE is not "very bad faith" -- IT'S THE THING YOU ACTUALLY WROTE.

          • zo1 1250 days ago
            > "[...] have them executed in the street, because that's what government censorship can look like."

            We're discussing western first-world governments for the most part, and short of some crazy world-altering event or war, they most certainly do not have the actual power to do this.

      • pessimizer 1250 days ago
        This is a forum sponsored by multimillionaires, therefore not responsible to advertisers. Also heavily moderated.
      • lki876 1250 days ago
        > As proof, consider that we are having this conversation right now, about an article that was published and is freely, legally available online to anyone with a web browser.

        As long as you control what a large segment of the population sees, you can orchestrate peoples actions. Censorship has never been absolute or complete and doesn't need to be in order to be effective.

      • kodah 1250 days ago
        You missed the part where this thread was flagged by HackerNews earlier.
        • striking 1250 days ago
          If it was flagged, and then became unflagged, it may have been flagged by the users of HN and then may have been unflagged by mods.

          Is it then mods enhancing the freedom of expression by unflagging something, or censoring the community self-moderation? You decide!

          • kodah 1250 days ago
            Personally I look at it as a barometer for where peoples sentiments fall on a linear path. Who is doing moderation vs censorship has little consequence if you acknowledge that the entire system is distributed and the outcomes are the same.
      • raxxorrax 1250 days ago
        I think the perspective of Schwartz is much better developed instead of just ignoring the negative effects of well visited social media sites removing content on political grounds.

        Yes, technically the info is still available.

      • Synaesthesia 1250 days ago
        They're unaccountable and significant centers of power (unaccountable to the public), yes maybe not with the power of the government, but approaching it. Is that the kind of rule we want?
        • barumi 1250 days ago
          > Is that the kind of rule we want?

          It's the kind of rule you have since, well, ever.

          Does anyone expect to force a private publisher such as the NY Post or even NY Times to publish content against the will of their editorial board just because you see fit?

          This issue has absolutely zero to do with censorship. A random publisher not posting something is not censorship. It's literally the editorial board's job to decide which gets published and which is left out. Not posting false or deceitful information forced upon by third parties is also not censorship. Just because you have a personal view that is not aligned with an editorial board's mission statement that doesn't mean the editorial board is engaged in censorship.

          This topic seems to boil down to some people wanting the benefits of abusing a publisher's reputation and readership to force-feed their own personal opinion on the public. Not being able to perform that kind of abuse is not censorship.

          • etripe 1250 days ago
            They can either be editorialising, in which case they're a publication, or they can be censoring as a platform. They're not currently regulated like a publication, so they must be censoring, then.
        • roenxi 1250 days ago
          Yes, it is better for power to reside with people who are easily replaced and/or ignored if necessary. I'd rather have Twitter go off the rails than my local council.

          However, it is still a scandal and worth bringing everyobody's attention to. I don't think we've ever seen such naked politicking by a tech company in the West. This is a concerning new low for Silicon Valley.

    • chroem- 1250 days ago
      It gets better (worse?) though: reddit has removed any references to Aaron Swartz from its list of founders.

      https://www.redditinc.com/

      > Reddit was founded in 2005 by two college friends.

      > Steve Huffman, Co-Founder/CEO

      > Alexis Ohanian, Co-Founder

      • sparky_z 1250 days ago
        Isn't that technically true, though? I thought Swartz joined them later, months after they had already launched the site.
        • nl 1250 days ago
          Yes, this is true. Aaron always seemed to regard it as a sore point, but he was never listed as a Reddit founder.

          I'm aware that PG has called him a founder, but seemingly the Reddit guys never thought of him as one.

          • whamlastxmas 1249 days ago
            Aaron's contract with the reddit founders explicitly gave him a "founder" title. To say he was never "listed" as a founder is misleading - listed where? He definitely was entitled to call himself as much and in most startup contexts it would be hard to claim he wasn't.
      • SquareWheel 1250 days ago
        The quoted section is accurate. Swartz received the title of co-founder as part of a merger, but he never actually co-founded reddit.
      • mjfl 1250 days ago
        why?
    • PaulAJ 1250 days ago
      Thus it always was. Back in the day in America there were a few big newspapers (basically, USA Today plus a couple of local city or state papers) and three TV channels. They all broadly agreed on what was important and how to present it. That was "the news", and it shaped how people saw the world.

      If you were so inclined you could find some alternative points of view in the right newsagents, but mainstream mass-media generally represented a single perspective, and that was the filter through which most people saw the world.

      People back then complained that the "Republocrats" were a cosy duopoly. There was no culture war because a large majority of Americans were part of a single culture. (As long as you were white, of course. If you were anything else then nobody cared what you thought).

    • yenwodyah 1250 days ago
      And at the same time, private companies cannot force you to use their services, or threaten you with violence or imprisonment if you refuse to follow their rules.
      • beagle3 1250 days ago
        This is getting blurry as well, and though you are technically correct, one might have to sue or suffer damages for not following their rules:

        My children’s schools requires the use of Microsoft Teams From home (and associated TOS) for them to attend class. There is also a parent WhatsApp group for urgent messages to parents. And as of the pandemic, there is also mandatory Zoom classes.

        This is a public school. If I sue I could possibly avoid these - I am not even sure of that. But either way, I and my children will suffer if I don’t comply.

        Microsoft. Facebook. Zoom. Coerced de facto to follow their rules; they might cancel my accounts if I don’t behave accordingly - Facebook and Google have certainly done so before.

        • unishark 1250 days ago
          The millions of people locked up in prison would see it as more than a technicality. Personally I'm much more nervous about screwing up some details in following the govt's rules versus a private company.

          Getting banned by Google/Facebook and losing all your data in the cloud is just the modern equivalent of losing everything when your hard drive dies. The way to mitigate this danger is the same.

          • mschuster91 1250 days ago
            > Getting banned by Google/Facebook and losing all your data in the cloud is just the modern equivalent of losing everything when your hard drive dies. The way to mitigate this danger is the same.

            No it's not. A HDD failing or getting lost? That can be guarded against with backups.

            With getting banned by Google or Facebook? When all your accounts, your identity is tied to that address/account and you get banned, you cannot be reached anymore by people who don't know that you got screwed over.

            The obvious solution would be to self-host an email server, but unfortunately that's impossible as it will be mercilessly assaulted by spammers and hackers on the inbound side and you'll be having issues with deliverability on the outbound side.

            The real solution would be for legislative and regulatory action that recognizes the importance of identity and forces all email providers to adhere to due process. But unfortunately, worldwide legislators are too old / too incompetent or in the pockets of other people who don't care...

            • unishark 1250 days ago
              > No it's not. A HDD failing or getting lost? That can be guarded against with backups.

              Exactly. Back up your cloud data.

              > With getting banned by Google or Facebook? When all your accounts, your identity is tied to that address/account and you get banned, you cannot be reached anymore by people who don't know that you got screwed over.

              I thought the fact that I consider this perspective to be absurd was kind of obviously built in to my statement.

              You can use a new email to contact people. Especially when you have your backups.

              • beagle3 1250 days ago
                Google effectively killfiled a domain I run. It took me a few months to figure out, but about 95% of emails sent to @gmail.com or g-suite hosted addresses from that domain (which were, overall ~20% of emails sent), got into a spam folder.

                No recourse, no one to talk to; my solution was to switch from a small but reputable ISP I had used for 17 years (and which never had a single spam complaint or blacklist entry in any list I can read) to fastmail for that domain; because Google decided they didn't like something about that setup; already spent a couple of work days no one was paying for to troubleshoot and eventually gave up.

                Google+Microsoft+FastMail likely cover 95% of your recipients. If they don't like you, you're going to have a very hard time reaching people.

              • mschuster91 1249 days ago
                > I thought the fact that I consider this perspective to be absurd was kind of obviously built in to my statement.

                It is not absurd, it is reality. With emails you at least can manually walk through the hundreds of sites you have stored in your password manager, hope that the password still works and you did not encounter a site that got hacked and reset all the passwords, and change the email address... but with "sign in with Facebook/Apple ID/..." you are at the mercy of the target site having a fallback login mechanism. (Hint: many don't or it's buggy because never tested)

                • unishark 1249 days ago
                  Ultimately this is just more information in the cloud which you failed to back up.

                  I end up having to reset forgotten passwords a lot (maybe dozens of times per year) and don't think I've ever encountered a reset situation like you describe. If it's important I can always call them to resolve an account problem. If it's unimportant I can make a new account.

                  • beagle3 1249 days ago
                    If it’s an account that’s not tied to anything important, sure; But if it’s tied to a bank account, credit card, utility bill etc, it’s often not as easy to “just make a new account”. You’ll likely need to fax a copy of your id to a fraud department who’ll take their time.

                    A friend of mine has been unable to convince a credit agency to reset their password as they are out of the country and cannot fulfill the requested authentication task. Wouldn’t be a problem in normal times, as they are back and forth every other month. Except it’s been 7 months since corona disrupted that. They can’t just “sign up for a new account” as it tied to their identity.

                    I’ve never had this problem myself either. But it’s a real problem.

                    • unishark 1249 days ago
                      Fair enough, extend the "call them" category to also mean signatures occasionally required by mail. I have had to do that, say with certain rarely-used financial situations. Though not banks, who are very accommodating in my experience (even the notoriously evil ones).

                      First class mail is working internationally, by the way, to almost every country. Unless they're in Yemen or something perhaps. Keep in mind we were comparing the dangers of corporations to governments. So being in a developing country during a pandemic when there's a communications breakdown with the US also presumably means you can't access a US consulate either. So you'd have the exact same difficulty if it was a govt agency you needed to deal with instead of Google/Facebook/Microsoft.

                      • beagle3 1249 days ago
                        Said credit agency has sent a physical notice (by first class mail) to the address they have listed, except it is out of date. It's an authentication catch-22, which is easily solvable for anyone inside the country (and would have been easily solvable for that person in their normal course of life without corona). Not yet kafka level, but the it does bring his name to mind.

                        And, yes, a government agency would cause the same issues. The thing is, government is (supposedly) accountable to the people, but GoogFaceSoft is accountable to their shareholders. The incentives do not align -- but many of the powers (and abuses of power) do.

        • dnautics 1250 days ago
          It's still fundamentally government that made that choice to force you into one service.
          • beagle3 1250 days ago
            So? Whoever runs that service gets to set and enforce their ToS and you don't get to appeal. So they enjoy many government rights with non of the checks and balances. (They don't get to employ physical violence yet, true).
        • jjk166 1250 days ago
          That's the government coercing you, not microsoft. I'm sure microsoft doesn't mind a captive market, but if the government decides to use slack or whatever instead, you're going to switch over to slack regardless of any protest from microsoft.

          The companies which seem to benefit the most from the government's power are the ones which would suffer the most from losing the government's current favor. They must bend over backwards to stay in the government's good graces, not the other way around.

          • beagle3 1250 days ago
            However, if microsoft dislikes me for something I did, they can kick me out; Google has done so with respect to Android APK related stuff, for example.

            I'm sure courts can properly resolve this, after a few months, if it did happen ....

            It's the government coercing me to comply with Microsoft's TOS that's the problem.

            > They must bend over backwards to stay in the government's good graces, not the other way around.

            Of course, but they pay for the government's good graces by e.g. giving them free access to all hosted data -- not by making sure the users are well taken care of..

            • jjk166 1249 days ago
              If a restaurant owner doesn't like me taking my shoes off, they can kick me out. There is a clear business interest in maintaining an atmosphere where people want to eat, and my bare feet would make plenty of people lose their appetites.

              If the government points their guns at me and says eat at that restaurant or else, the restaurant owner has done nothing wrong. It is the government forcing me to wear shoes, not him. Even if he lobbied for a law that made dining at his restaurant mandatory, the government still decided on its own to go along with it - the restaurant owner had no power to make them do it. Forcing the restaurant to allow me to take my shoes off will only make the dining experience of everyone else forced to eat there more unpleasant.

              It is dumb that the local school chose a setup that relies completely on Microsoft. You and everyone else negatively affected should be sure to show your dissatisfaction with the school board on election day. But there's nothing wrong with Microsoft having the ability to kick you off if it doesn't like you.

              • beagle3 1249 days ago
                Perfect analogy.

                Unfortunately, said restaurant owner can (and has) kicked people of for sharing recipes that owner thinks it owns (but doesn’t have to prove)

                The problem was never with the shoes off crowd.

      • Anon4Now 1250 days ago
        You have now been suspended from your Oculus for wrongthink.

        My point is, it's not overt like government suppression, but pressure can be applied nonetheless.

    • Spooky23 1250 days ago
      I guess. It’s pretty obvious who the Post answers to.

      Companies ultimately have shareholders and customers they are accountable to. Even fairly awful companies like Facebook have to meet some minimal standard of conduct to keep advertisers on the platform.

      • 0x262d 1250 days ago
        unfortunately what those shareholders want is the highest possible overall profit extraction from the areas they operate at any cost, which is anti-social and bad.
    • dnautics 1250 days ago
      I have a lot of respect for Aaron swartz, but:

      > They have no constitution to answer to.

      Do we seriously believe any government follows it's constitution? What is the mechanism for redress should it fail to do so?

      > They’re not elected.

      Neither are most operators in the government. And even for those operators that are elected, the role of government has expanded to the point where any given elected official has authority over so many concerns that the one you care about is going to be diluted to the point where you may not even want to vote for the thing you care about the most.

      • skinkestek 1250 days ago
        > Do we seriously believe any government follows it's constitution?

        Absolutely. Many do. Look at America and their second amendment: there's no way that would fly today if it wasn't in the constitution. Luckily it is and power hungry politicians have to accept it.

        Same with the first amendment. Some of these are even are powerful today than before and I hope the fourth amendment will soon see a renaissance.

        > What is the mechanism for redress should it fail to do so?

        Courts.

        Also it affects politicians directly. There was a petition here to give a mountain on the Finnish border to the Finnish people. Many people advocated for this but in the end it was struck down because politicians aren't even allowed to give away land and they know it.

        • Consultant32452 1250 days ago
          >Look at America and their second amendment

          In America the right to an abortion is more respected under our legal system than the right to a gun despite what is written in the Constitution.

          The law is downstream of culture, and that document only says what 5 Justices say it says.

          • skinkestek 1250 days ago
            I don't disagree with the first part. I think you are right but don't talk more about it: it brings up the ugliest discussions at this place.

            For the second part they seem to be lucky to get a good judge now that will not let her own ideas interfere much with her job and instead interpret the constitution as it was written.

            • zimpenfish 1250 days ago
              > interpret the constitution as it was written

              Does this mean she'll be ruling that owning people is ok, removing the vote from women, and striking down the 2nd Amendment?

              • Clubber 1250 days ago
                The 13th, 19th and 2nd amendments exist in the constitution, as written:

                13th: Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

                19th: The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.

                Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.

                2nd: A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

                Any political and / or legal discussion should start with at least a vague understanding of that document. All our laws and institutions are founded with it.

                • zimpenfish 1249 days ago
                  > "interpret the constitution as it was written" > amendments

                  "was written" would not include "amendments".

                  Perhaps it was meant to be "is written" and that would definitely include the amendments but then you absolutely do not get to call yourself an "Originalist" because, e.g., the 19th was passed 130 years after the Constitution was written and for damn sure none of the framers were still alive then.

                  • Clubber 1249 days ago
                    Different parts of the constitution were written at different times. Amendments are part of the constitution regardless of when they were written.

                    Originalists interpret the applicable parts of the constitution as they were written, when they were written.

                    Search Scalia on the topic and watch some videos. He goes into pretty interesting depth on the subject. It's pretty fascinating.

                    https://www.c-span.org/video/?292678-1/justices-breyer-scali...

                  • skinkestek 1249 days ago
                    Clearly I meant the whole constitution, including every accepted amendment; I suppose they become part of the constitution as soon as they are accepted?

                    Anyway I think this should be obvious. The subset of people who has long time accounts on HN and who also are for slavery is really small, possibly non-existent.

              • Consultant32452 1250 days ago
                The constitution as it was written allows for amendments. The 13th and 19th Amendments outlawed slavery and gave women the right to vote, respectively.
                • zimpenfish 1249 days ago
                  But those amendments didn't exist when it "was written" - if you're an Originalist claiming to interpret the Constitution "as it was written", that excludes amendments. If you change it to "as it is written", sure, that includes them but you lose the claim to be an Originalist given the timestamps on everything after the 12th Amendment since that's 76 years later and I'm reasonably sure none of the framers were alive then.
                  • Consultant32452 1249 days ago
                    The 19th Amendment was ratified in 1920. It was written then. The fact that other parts were ratified at different times doesn't stop you from interpreting each part "as it was written." But you know that.
      • folleno00 1250 days ago
        It says answer to, not follows

        If the people demand they answer to it, it’s that or off with their heads, usually.

        The hard part is getting people to demand they answer.

        Lots of cool gadgets and the belief we’re making each other better to dispose of.

    • krapp 1250 days ago
      I mean, I can switch social media platforms a lot more easily than I can switch governments, and corporations don't have a monopoly on violence which would allow their tyranny to lead to torture, gulags and mass graves, but OK.

      I guess being banned from a forum is much much worse than being sent to the re-education camps.

      • zo1 1250 days ago
        The methods have changed, the motivation and net result is the same: opinion and thought control.

        Tech has made it impersonal, clinical, obfuscated, random and ubiquitous. There is no need to "send people to gulags" or torture them in order to suppress their ability to sow dissent amongst their peers. That is the sole purpose, even if it's algorithmic and emergent without a central "dictator" controlling what can or can't be said. Essentially only approved opinions and movements are allowed to gather steam, no different to the movement of dissent and mistrust of the government that had to be stemmed previously using gulags.

        So yes, you are 100% right it's not the same and we are not being sent to re-education camps. But that doesn't mean certain individuals are not being persecuted through "random" algorithms that target and marginalize them. As another poster here mentioned, censorship does not need to be absolute for it to have an effect. You also mentioned network effects earlier: I would urge you to consider what "network effects" are occurring due to mild and moderate censorship that is not absolute.

        • krapp 1249 days ago
          I don't see social media suppressing dissent at all. I see dissent everywhere - from anti-vaxxers, flat earthers, anti-maskers, BLM, Antifa, neo-nazis and militias. Ideologies and conspiracy theories once confined to AM talk radio and underground forums have become mainstream politics. Pedophiles have rebranded themselves "minor attracted persons" and are campaigning on social media for pedo rights as human rights. QAnon is mainstream enough to win elections. Even conservatives who are, we are told, terrified to speak openly in what they describe as an oppressive Orwellian atmosphere of left-wing censorship, somehow manage to flood social media with right-wing speech.

          If the sole purpose of tech and social media is opinion and thought control and dissident suppression, it doesn't seem to be working outside of the obvious authoritarian places like China.

          > I would urge you to consider what "network effects" are occurring due to mild and moderate censorship that is not absolute.

          Subtle network effects and mild censorship exist everywhere - we typically refer to these networks as "society", "culture", "religion", "family,", "employer," etc. Certainly social networks can modify behavior, but typically it's easier to undermine that effect on social networks (through alternate accounts) than it is in real life, and typically the negative consequences for breaking norms on social media are less severe than in real life.

      • akhosravian 1250 days ago
        You could switch off Facebook, Twitter, YouTube or Twitch, but for all but the most influential of people the folks you interact with won’t follow.
        • krapp 1250 days ago
          That's still not tyranny, that's just the network effect. They have a choice about what platform to use as do you and I.
    • bitwize 1250 days ago
      Except that, you know, private corporations usually can't legally jail you or shoot you in the head for expressing the wrong opinions or propagating the wrong info.
    • dd36 1250 days ago
      And now we have forced arbitration with class action bans.
  • timoth3y 1250 days ago
    Many are confusing "censorship" with "content moderation". The difference is very important.

    Censorship is when you are prevented from publishing on your own platform. Content moderation is when a platform owner choses what can be published on theirs.

    Twitter decided they did not want their platform used to spread what they considered to be Russian disinformation and propaganda, but they in no way prevented the NY Post or anyone else from publishing the story.

    In the same way, when Hacker News and other well-run platforms remove or hide abusive and troll-like comments they are not infringing on anyone's 1st Amendment rights. A site does not lose the right to moderate content just because they become successful.

    • nanis 1250 days ago
      I am always impressed when people make these kinds of absolute statements about the primacy of private property rights.

      Now, let's consider:

      * Alice should be able to choose without restriction to whom she is going to rent

      * Bob should be able to choose without restriction who's allowed to play golf at his club

      * Carlos should be able to choose without restriction to whom his bank is going to lend money

      etc.

      I am not saying I agree with those statements. I am saying when you say "Twitter is a private company. They can choose without restriction who's allowed to use their platform," you are not saying anything substantively different than those statements.

      In a universe where the ability to put your speech in front of other people depends on being able to post it online in a place where they might be able to see, there are trade-offs involved that seem to be conveniently shoved aside when it is about news you do not like.

      I prefer the cacophonous chaos of everyone being able to tell me about stuff they deem important. One step further, I prefer to live a society that can learn to live with that without falling apart.

      • timoth3y 1250 days ago
        > I am saying when you say "Twitter is a private company. They can choose without restriction who's allowed to use their platform,"

        That's a straw man. I never said anything like what you are pretending I said. They obviously could not ban users on the basis of race or religion or a number of other criteria.

        But that's not really what's under discussion. The question is should Twitter (or other platforms) lose their right to moderate content when they become successful?

        I don't think they should.

      • Spooky23 1250 days ago
        Your analogy is broken. Clever to try to compare Twitter to discrimination though.

        In all of the situations, the principals have broad discretion to make choices about their property. Alice can turn away people with credit problems. Bob can require a specific handicap to play. Carlos can choose to not loan money to high risk professions.

        They cannot say “no black people at my apartment complex”, “no golf if you are Jewish” or “no loan if you’re gay”.

        You may prefer chaos, most people do not.

        • abnry 1250 days ago
          But isn't the sort of sneaky racism exactly what people claim is such a problem today? There's not overt claim of inferiority or an explicit denial of opportunity, but yet there is still "systemic racism".

          The analogy is that Twitter can't censor stories that benefit republicans, but if the "reasons" for censoring always seem to work against republicans and are applied inconsistently, then perhaps things aren't as they seem.

          • Spooky23 1250 days ago
            It can be, and the line may move. Sometimes “systematic racism” or similar arguments are thrown about without context, or with a local context that doesn’t make sense to others.

            The republicans have a serious problem, and it isn’t Twitter. Blaming media outlets for not paying attention to things is a well worn if dubious path. It’s hard to give credence to with this story given the provenance of the information and obvious problems.

          • objectivetruth 1250 days ago
            Republicans aren't a "race" and political preference isn't a "protected class" in the US (with a couple minor exceptions).
            • abnry 1250 days ago
              It is an analogy, and it's already established we aren't discussing law. The question is the principles, causes, and reasons at play and how they relate to other principles, causes, and reasons.
            • nanis 1249 days ago
              I think it would be helpful to forget about the "Republicans" and think about other people who might hold other opinions which may not be shared by the owners of one of the dominant platforms for announcing your views.

              No one is saying that New York Times has to publish the story. However, if someone wants to publish a story and announce it to their followers on a platform, citizens need to think long and hard before agreeing to "whatever the shareholders want goes."

              The fact that they do not have a product they sell to the recipients of information at a positive price makes it harder for competitive alternatives to gain any traction at all. So, the fact that once a platform like this achieves a certain reach it is unlikely to be effectively challenged means we need to think hard about how much power we want them to have in terms of shaping the conversation: Both conversation we like and conversation we do not like ... It is not sufficient to think in terms of your affinity to the dominant forces. You have to think about what kind of society you want to be in when you are in the minority.

        • onecommentman 1250 days ago
          One person’s chaos is another’s vitality. Every human on earth, by living the natural world, has chosen chaos/vitality at some level. We also “moderate” that entropy in lots of convenient and comforting ways.

          Cybernature is a new experience. As a species, we are working out what level of moderation we would like.

          Explorers tends to be rough-and-ready sorts, and so veer towards the vitality side of things. They know how to make the chaos work for them. For good and/or evil. Since there isn’t the downside of “instadeath” of the physical world, more risk-taking, and thus more chaos, may be justified.

          Settlers tend to like fences, highways, channel markings, flight corridors...structure. There are usually eventually more settlers in any area, so their view prevails in the long run.

          (You can be an explorer in one area and a settler in another...it’s not some permanent psychological feature. You can demand political content freedom from de facto pseudocarrier monopolies while being happy with a locked-down OS for self-driving cars.)

          In computing, the barrier to entry for exploration is so low and it is so new (in the long view) that the percentage of settlers is pretty low, hence the cultural bias toward freedom (including content) rather than control in these forums.

          [Personally, I trust the American people to curate their own content. I expect the educational system to educate the citizenry to be skilled enough in critical thinking to be able to curate the content presented.

          But I expect the marketplace of ideas to police itself against systematic biases and inaccuracies, either with effective editing of its own content and/or in actively and effectively supporting a “loyal opposition” to its views.

          Twitter seems to be doing neither, because it’s much closer to being a de facto common carrier monopoly than a media channel. Common carrier monopolies had been accepted and successful for a hundred years in the US, but only with heavy Federal regulation. The hip, cool alternative: break them up.

          Great truths from Gen X, the generation to which you can’t easily mass-market.]

        • tomp 1250 days ago
          Agreed, these aren’t good analogies.

          Twitter and Facebook are getting closer to: the post not delivering your mail, or the power company turning off your electricity despite paying your bill, or the phone company cutting you off after you say the wrong thing...

      • scoot_718 1250 days ago
        Then fuck off to 4chan
    • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
      Content moderation is a form of censorship. Censorship isn't always bad. You can look up the history of the term if you want (hint: it shares the same origin as the term "census").

      A closely related phenomenon to the pathological applications of censorship is the abuse and redefinition of language for political purposes like what you're doing.

      • ketamine__ 1250 days ago
        The NY Post doesn't own the copyright to the photos it is publishing. Imagine if someone stole your laptop and published all your photos.

        I hope someone can step in and do to the Post what Peter Thiel did to Gawker.

        • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
          That would require someone claiming to own the photos, which would likely hurt that person quite a bit.
        • ben509 1250 days ago
          Hunter Biden left his laptop at the repair shop and never paid for the repairs. After waiting the legally required 90 days, the repair shop became the rightful owner of the laptop and its contents.

          Once they owned those photos, they had every right to publish them or do whatever they wanted.

          The least the press could ask VP Biden would be, "will you pledge that your son will not be involved in any sensitive discussions or allowed access to any sensitive material?"

          Even if there were no corrupt actions at all, Hunter Biden represents every kind of HUMINT leverage imaginable.

          • mytherin 1250 days ago
            So if I sell my laptop that still has some photos on it, the buyer would own the copyright over those photos because they own the laptop?

            If I deleted the photos from the laptop, but they used a recovery tool to restore them from the disk, would they still own the copyright then?

            What if I have the same photo on two different USB drives, and I sell those to two different people, who owns the copyright then?

            That doesn’t seem right. Copyright is not generally attached to a physical medium. You don’t lose copyright by losing ownership of the physical medium that holds a copy of the photos/source code/etc.

            • ben509 1249 days ago
              > So if I sell my laptop that still has some photos on it, the buyer would own the copyright over those photos because they own the laptop?

              No, since you made an agreement to sell the laptop, and only the laptop.

              > Copyright is not generally attached to a physical medium.

              That's correct. But it can be transferred to satisfy a lein; depends on the fine print the repair shop has in their contract.

          • darkerside 1250 days ago
            The answer would be, of course, are you fucking crazy? And that would be the end of it.
          • jjeaff 1249 days ago
            That's not how copyright works.
        • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
          My understanding is that it is Gnews that is publishing these photos, not NY Post. NY Post is publishing screenshots of emails.
          • ketamine__ 1250 days ago
            Not true but I'm not going to link to prove my point.
            • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
              Oh yes, you're referring to the pictures of Hunter with a crack pipe in his mouth and things like that. You're correct. I took that to be just proof that they had the laptop. Everyone knows that Hunter has a crack addiction problem.

              I think I totally forgot about that because of the censored sex tapes and nudes being published by Gnews which are way more salacious.

      • strathmeyer 1250 days ago
        Content moderation is a form of free speech.
        • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
          Free speech is a moral principle.

          Content moderation decisions can adhere to this principle or not. Removal of viagra bot spam from a blog comment section is a clear example where content moderation adheres to the principles of free speech.

          Removing content on a platform like Twitter simply because the Silicon Valley elitists/leftists that run Twitter don't like it is not in keeping with the principle of free speech (for the record I interviewed and got an offer from Twitter but declined). A good razor to use is to see if the rules are being applied in an uneven way. The principle of freedom of speech is an application of the idea of epistemic humility.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epistemic_humility

          The point you were trying to make is "Content moderation falls under the first amendment" which I can't disagree with.

          It's important to understand the difference between a moral principle and a legal instantiation of it (the first amendment). I hope that helps clear things up for you.

          • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
            How does removing “Viagra bot spam” adhere to the moral principle of free speech? Why does the New York Post get special moral privileges that Bob’s Viagra Store does not?

            This is the frustrating thing about this debate: one side tries to position itself as “anti-censorship”, when really that position only extends to cover speech they care about.

            • abnry 1250 days ago
              Because the one is an obvious expression of carnal desires and greed while the other is at least ostensibly about ideology and truth.
              • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
                The whole point of “freedom of speech” is that there should be no value judgment that determines whether or not something is acceptable to say.
                • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
                  To accept the legitimacy of the principle of freedom of speech is to make a value judgement. If you want some pure criteria you can use to make content moderation decisions, then the purest criteria is no content moderation at all.

                  You can remove obvious spam (e.g. viagra advertisements posted by bots) and still adhere to principles of free speech. Advertisements posted by bots are not written by human beings acting in good faith in the pursuit of truth. And I mean that very broadly. Even trolling can be done in good faith.

                  • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
                    > Advertisements posted by bots are not written by human beings acting in good faith in the pursuit of truth.

                    So if Twitter didn't believe that the New York Post article was written by people acting in "good faith in the pursuit of truth", it's okay to censor?

                    The intentions of the speaker and the value of their speech are subjective. It's fine to argue that we should be okay with censoring some thing you don't like. But at least acknowledge that you're not making an appeal to "the principle of freedom of speech" — you're just arguing for others to adopt your own boundaries of what's acceptable.

                    • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
                      > you're just arguing for others to adopt your own boundaries of what's acceptable

                      By virtue of operating under the principle of respecting free speech you are making a value judgement and asserting a set of values. There is no panacea or pure criteria you can use besides no content moderation at all. I give the example of spam posted by bots as what I think is an obvious and non-controversial example of content that can be removed that doesn't violate the principle of free speech. Another example might be someone who simply replies "f* you" to every comment on a thread.

                      I don't know how to further explain this or qualify this. I think you just fundamentally don't understand or haven't actually reflected on what I'm saying.

                      • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
                        You are correct, I don’t understand what you’re saying. I agree that there is no panacea or set of pure criteria other than not moderating at all. But there is also no singular principle of free speech beyond that, either — just different sets of tradeoffs that try to cultivate discourse that the moderator thinks is valuable. My issue is that people tend to present their own preferred set of tradeoffs as the One True Set that embodies the principle of free speech.

                        You mentioned “good faith” before, so let’s say that’s our operating principle: all parties must be speaking in good faith. Now consider that Twitter suppresses the New York Post because they believe they’re publishing in bad faith. Twitter is still adhering to our set of free speech tradeoffs. So why is this comment section full of people saying they’re not upholding the spirit of free speech?

                        It’s because they want Twitter to make a different set of tradeoffs. That’s fine, and I’m happy to have that discussion. But not when it masquerades as a discussion about whether Twitter suppressing this article is somehow incompatible with free speech as a concept.

                        • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
                          Ok I get what you're saying.

                          It really comes down to whether or not you believe in objective morality. If you do then there is a sensical notion of free speech (or any other principle) even if no one person has a complete picture or understanding of what it is right now (although I would argue that we have a much better understanding of free speech than we do 6000 years ago). It is something we can strive for and recognize since it is an objective thing.

                          To reiterate my example, I would say a reasonable person living in 2020 would say that removing bot spam from a comment section is a content moderation decision that is in keeping with the idea of free speech.

                          • jakelazaroff 1249 days ago
                            Even if you believe in objective morality, I think my point about how the discussion should go stands.

                            Let's say that your definition of free speech is the objectively correct one. You then have to convince people to adopt that framework. You can't appeal to the objective definition; that's a circular argument. So you have to do it on the merits of the tradeoffs, like "bot spam is noise that detracts from a conversation".

                            To your example specifically, my own opinion is that it depends. I'm fine with removing bot spam from a comment section. But move down to more "infrastructural" layers, and I become less okay with it. For example, I don't think ISPs should try to block spam; they should be entirely agnostic to what content passes through their pipes.

          • IfOnlyYouKnew 1250 days ago
            "Content moderation" is about the speech someone running a website is willing to participate in. Requiring them to publish everything their users post would be what's called "coerced speech", which happens to be single biggest no-no of the legal concept of freedom of speech.

            Forcing someone to say something against their will is considered far worse than preventing someone from saying something they want to say. That's how "warrant canaries" work: the government can stop you from disclosing the court order you received. But they cannot force you to continue saying that you never received such an order.

            • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
              I think you're stretching the idea of compelled speech to the point where it loses its essential meaning. Compelled speech is when someone forces you to say something, not when you are prevented from disallowing someone to say something under their own name on your website/property.

              When I comment on HN I do not comment as HN itself.

              What you're talking about seems like an application of the idea of private property rights (i.e. kicking someone out of your house/office for saying something you don't like).

            • ThrowawayR2 1250 days ago
              > "Forcing someone to say something against their will"

              As many on HN have said in the past, corporations aren't people. Speaking about their will makes no sense.

        • TeMPOraL 1250 days ago
          So this would make censorship a form of free speech.

          We've reach a contradiction, so there must be an error in the chain of reasoning. My money is on "content moderation is a form of free speech" being wrong.

          • chrisoverzero 1250 days ago
            >We’ve reach[ed] a contradiction […]

            No, it’s only that people are using differing definitions of “censorship” and talking past each other.

            Content moderation is, in fact, a form of free speech. Twitter (for example) is allowed to choose what they want to host on their website, and what they want not to host on their website. This is free speech – it’s their site, one can’t make them host what one writes. If choosing what to remove from their website is deemed “censorship”, then there’s no contradiction.

            • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
              The contradiction is that "freedom" is paradoxical. It is impossible for everyone to be free if any two individuals disagree.
          • krapp 1250 days ago
            Content moderation isn't free speech, it's freedom of association, or in constitutional terms, freedom of assembly.

            Consider that Ben Franklin wouldn't publish libelous or slanderous material submitted to his newspaper - clearly a form of "content moderation." He believed in the right of the people submitting such things to express them and would suggest they try elsewhere, but also believed in his right not to publish those views on his "platform."

            I don't think anyone would accuse Ben Franklin of not believing in free speech, so clearly a reasonable person can square the apparent circle. Freedom of speech isn't the only right relevant to speech, and freedom of speech doesn't guarantee a right to speak on all platforms.

          • nkurz 1250 days ago
            I'm not sure. What is the exact contradiction that you see?

            Viewing moderation as another form as speech seems reasonable to me, or at least as reasonable as viewing a campaign contribution as a form of speech. Perhaps the actual issue is that "free speech" cannot be a guaranteed right shared by all, but is inherently a rivalrous good.

          • cortesoft 1250 days ago
            My money is on content moderation being censorship.

            If content moderation is censorship, then you are arguing that if I ask you to say something out loud and you don't say it, you are censoring me.

            • salawat 1250 days ago
              No. You are censoring the other by attempting to compel their speech. Their speech is no longer free.
              • cortesoft 1250 days ago
                Isn't requiring twitter to publish a tweet also compelling speech?
          • RangerScience 1250 days ago
            My money is on censorship being a form of free speech. Not a concept that I've heard before, or that (at a glance) makes any kind of sense to me. Can you walk me through that equality?
      • cortesoft 1250 days ago
        That is a really loose definition of censorship. Most dictionaries say it is the "prohibition or suppression" of content, which I don't think a content moderation is. It requires trying to stop the spread of the content itself, not just the content on a particular medium.
      • timoth3y 1250 days ago
        > Content moderation is a form of censorship.

        It's really not. Not legally or in the common use of the word.

        If I kick an abusive troll off my message board that is moderation. If a judge orders someone not to use a computer for two years, that is censorship.

        To conflate the two is to make the term "censorship" almost meaningless. Platforms all over the web filter spam, pornography, abusive behavior, off-topic posts, etc all the time. It's not censorship.

        Similarly, if Twitter was legally forbidden from marking tweets with their fact-checking tags, that would be censorship.

    • jsu32 1250 days ago
      It's a matter of scale. As the article says, the current Democratic Party Alliance for suppressing damaging stories is so broad, that even though you can publish your story, the chances of reaching its intended audience at scale are slim.

      Also - if Twitter gets to decide whats get published on their platform, they are an editorial organization - something they've vehemently denied they are in the past.

      • narshian 1250 days ago
        The chances of garbage information reaching audiences “at scale” is why we have a malignant tumor in the White House, in the first place.
    • pessimizer 1250 days ago
      No, prior restraint is a form of censorship where you are prevented from publishing on your own platform. "Content moderation" is a euphemism for censorship that you agree with. "Content moderation" is to platform censorship as "prevention of material support for terrorism" and "the maintenance of the public order" is to prior restraint.
    • throwawayay02 1250 days ago
      Twitter did not decide that in good faight. First, because they are used as a public platform, like it or not, and as such they are not expected to moderate anything. People follow or block what they want. And second, because they are biased in their censorship and are not forthcoming about it.
      • AgentME 1250 days ago
        Every public platform would look exactly like your email's spam folder if they weren't expected to moderate anything.
      • phs318u 1250 days ago
        > as such they are not expected to moderate anything

        When even the president's tweets have been squelched or tagged, I highly doubt that anyone reasonably familiar with Twitter over the last couple of years would have that expectation.

      • sagichmal 1250 days ago
        > because they are used as a public platform . . . they are not expected to moderate anything

        Says who?

        > because they are biased in their censorship

        Yes, and reality has a liberal bias, eh?

      • triceratops 1250 days ago
        There is no legal requirement for a "public platform" (this is not a legal term) to be unmoderated or "neutral". You've been misinformed.
    • sleepysysadmin 1250 days ago
      I would say you're proposing a false dichotomy. There are 4 options or more.

      In the case of Twitter, in order to maintain their "good samaritan" the extent of their "content moderation" is quite specficic.

      any action voluntarily taken in good faith to restrict access to or availability of material that the provider or user considers to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable.

      The NYPost article was damaging a political opponent to be sure. It was not obscene, lewd, filthy; though clearly twitter allows porn so these are immediately ruled out. It wasn't violent by any means.

      Was it harassing or otherwise objectionable? Well I think there's some good debate possible but that debate is cut off immediately because the "content moderation" must be done in good faith. This very clearly is violated.

      So Twitter did not content moderate as per the laws they must obey. Therefore we now have 2 options. Twitter loses platform protections and becomes directly liable for any and all content they publish aka any anonymous person posting. OR they stop their censorship.

    • fogetti 1250 days ago
      Doh. By the same logic China (or other oppressors) is not censoring anything because people can travel to Vietnam (or Japan for that matter) and they can tell anyone what they want.
    • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
      You can call it "censorship" or "content moderation." I don't care, the distinction is meaningless for this conversation. The only meaningful argument is what Twitter (for example) CAN do (legally), and what they SHOULD do (morally).

      Clearly, Twitter is legally in the right to suppress this information, because it's their platform. They can set the content rules as they like, as arbitrarily and capriciously as they like.

      More of a judgment call, but I would argue that Twitter is morally in the right as well. This is obviously a case of carefully engineering disinformation, using America's value of freedom of speech against us. If they don't suppress it, Twitter is actively aiding bad actors, with very serious consequences. Twitter does not want to be in the business of content moderation, but in this case the information is question is so obviously falsified; it is spread so obviously in bad faith; and its consequences are so obviously dangerous to the nation, that they are justified in taking a moral stand against it.

      • nomdep 1250 days ago
        Would you say the same if, next year, the official investigation founds that he is guilty?
        • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
          Good question. The answer is yes. Aside from the factual basis (or lack thereof) of the information in question, there's the question of how it's been used. Giuliani, obviously the bad actor of this story, has been sitting on this laptop for a year. If he wanted to have a serious discussion about Biden's alleged impropriety, he should have released it early. At this point in the election cycle, it's a blatant attempt to grab a news cycle and force voters to a bad decision before the dust has settled.

          I support a total blackout of political stories in the run-up to an election.

          [Edit: rephrase to clarify that my position would not change.]

    • platz 1250 days ago
      > what they considered to be Russian disinformation and propaganda

      was it?

      • dillondoyle 1250 days ago
        There's strong evidence

        Trump's own government warned Trump that Giuliani was being targeted. [1] Guliani met with Derkach in Ukraine explicitly to get dirt on Biden - incredibly in the middle of impeachment surrounding Ukraine.. Derkach is a known Russian agent (recently placed on sanctions list - the timing must be noted as well). [2]

        It's been reported that the Biden emails were already being pitched around the time Guliani was in Ukraine - which throws into question the timeline of this computer repair story. [3]

        Burisma emails were also hacked, and it was widely reported that Russia was going to use them for an 'October surprise.' Hacking emails/iCloud etc is a proven method employed by Russia/GRU many many times for similar political interference over the last 4 years. [4]

        Russia is also known to have mixed false materials into legitimate hacked materials in FR-17 - which is a reported reason why FB/TW/the legitimate press has refused to spread this [5]

        It should also be noted that the Trump campaign shopped the story around and not even the Journal (and evidently Fox News too) wouldn't report on it. [6]

        It's been widely reported that the FBI is currently investigating. [7]

        Though personally I call F U on Trump's DNI going on Fox News while the FBI sends a 'won't break longstanding precedent to comment' letter to Congress. [7]

        While not the same as a reciprocal 'Comey disclosure' at least someone is leaking enough to the press that we know the above. Ironically let's hope for more in the the way of Comey -> Richman -> NyTimes

        an addition. while not fact, Putin going to the press to 'reject' this story feels very very much in line with trolling and his underlying effort to just make one question what is real and mess with us [8]

        [1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/giuliani-bi... [2] https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sm1118 [3] https://time.com/5902557/hunter-biden-rudy-giuliani-ukraine/ [4] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/14/us/politics/hunter-biden-... [5] https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/T... [6] https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/fbi-hunter-... [7] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/25/business/media/hunter-bid...

        [8] https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-election-putin/putin-...

      • skindoe 1250 days ago
        I'm sure they totally would do the same thing for a different political candidate /s
      • TwoBit 1250 days ago
        I don't know about Russian involvement, but it was clearly a right wing attempt to meddle in the election to achieve a last minute bomb on their opponent like in 2016.
        • mjfl 1250 days ago
          If something is going to be suppressed as Russian propaganda, there better be evidence that it is Russian propaganda. Otherwise the suppression itself is propaganda in the other direction.
          • nearbuy 1250 days ago
            Twitter's objection was that the New York Post article contained hacked or illegally obtained material (personal intimate photos, etc.). Publishing those materials is a legal grey area.
            • bgentry 1250 days ago
              No, if if the content is true and in the public interest, there is really no question about the legality of publishing it in the US: it is 100% constitutionally protected.

              Twitter’s initial justification for removing the “hacked” material is completely at odds with their past decisions to leave up hacked/illegally obtained materials like the Snowden docs, Trump tax returns, Panama papers, etc. Of course they have since changed their stance.

              • nearbuy 1250 days ago
                That's exactly why it's a legal grey area. We don't know if the content is true or forged. Publishing stolen content is illegal unless you can prove it's in the public interest, and even if some of it is, it's doubtful the personal photos are.
                • bgentry 1250 days ago
                  Even if the content of the leaks was fake, which we have no evidence to indicate and none of the key actors have really claimed (as opposed to the story about how they were obtained), it would still be legal to publish it because the public officials involved mean it has a clear public interest.

                  There’s the possibility of civil damages if it amounts to defamation, but that’s quite a standard to reach. Such damages would fall on the publisher of the story, the NY Post, but not a platform like Twitter (per section 230 safe harbor immunity). There is no legal gray area here.

                  This is the same reason why those who publicized the now widely rebuked Steele Dossier are not facing legal consequences for it (including Twitter), nor should they.

                  Of course your original comment said nothing about the accuracy of the reporting and instead only made the claim that there was a legal gray area around publishing hacked materials like these, which is simply not true.

                  • nearbuy 1250 days ago
                    > the public officials involved mean it has a clear public interest.

                    It's clear only to you. You cannot normally legally publish hacked or stolen photos of celebrities. The personal, intimate, or family photos of Hunter Biden almost certainly do not meet the bar for public interest.

                    Twitter is not liable here. But as a private company they're allowed to have a policy against linking to hacked or stolen material on their platform. It's the NY Post that's in a grey area.

                    > Of course your original comment said nothing about the accuracy of the reporting and instead only made the claim that there was a legal gray area around publishing hacked materials like these, which is simply not true.

                    My original comment was in response to someone saying Twitter blocked it because it was Russian propaganda, which is simply not true.

                    • raxxorrax 1249 days ago
                      > It's clear only to you.

                      Really? Who would be the judge of that? The suppression itself is hard evidence to the contrary.

                      • nearbuy 1247 days ago
                        That's circular reasoning. According to Twitter's statement, they blocked directly linking to hacked materials (which includes personal, intimate photos of Hunter Biden). They haven't suppressed any other discussion on Hunter Biden or the contents of that laptop.

                        Maybe you don't believe Twitter. Maybe Twitter suppressed the story for political reasons and you feel that proves the hacked content is of public interest. But if Twitter was honest then their policy is just to not allow direct links to any hacked or stolen photos. It doesn't mean they're important.

                        How are personal photos of Hunter Biden with his family important to public interest?

            • scoot_718 1250 days ago
              Except it was faked and not hacked or illegally obtained.
              • nearbuy 1249 days ago
                I don't think anyone is sure what it is yet. A common tactic in misinformation campaigns is to mix authentic (possibly hacked) photos with forged material. The authentic material is added to make the leak seem more believable.
        • Consultant32452 1250 days ago
          Are you aware that the "grab her by the pussy" tape was a timed drop just before the 2016 election? Would you have preferred that be censored?
        • abnry 1250 days ago
          How the heck can an opposing party "meddle" in an election that the very party itself is contending in?
          • takeda 1250 days ago
            By fabricating a story to be released exactly on October 15 where there's not enough time to verify if it is true or not.

            We are here on Hacker News, are you certain that a legally blind person in Delaware. would be the guy to fly to all the way from California to repair water damaged laptop? If you don't know how such repair looks like, I recommend you to search Luis Rosmann on YouTube (actually cool to watch anyway).

            I initially thought that the repair maybe involved reinstalling windows or removing viruses (which you could get assistance from text to speech tooling), but it was a water damage.

            Edit: https://youtu.be/DoiByFIPgK8?t=468

            • 1234letshaveatw 1249 days ago
              I assume by your broken english you are a foreign actor? btw, the repair shop is located very close to one of the Biden residences.
              • takeda 1249 days ago
                I wasn't born in US, but I'm an US citizen. It's funny you're accusing me being a foreign agent, when your account is only 6 months old and only talks about politics here.

                As far as I know the Biden residence was sold few years ago, and Hunter lives in LA, but could be wrong, it's not possible to find definitive answer. But he has a house and his son was born in LA so high chance that's where he lives.

                I also have hard time to believe that someone who makes $80k a month would care about laptop repair, and even if he did, wouldn't have someone on payroll (perhaps IT person from his company) who would go to his house to get it fixed.

                Also, I still can't see how a legally blind person (I know legally blind doesn't mean completely blind) can do a water damage repair.

                There are so many other holes in that story, but even if ALL of that was true, I don't see how actions of a 50 year old man implicate his father. There isn't any "smoking gun" in relation to Joe Biden. So what was the purpose of this story again?

    • centimeter 1250 days ago
      > censorship: the suppression or prohibition of any parts of books, films, news, etc. that are considered obscene, politically unacceptable, or a threat to security

      There's no sane way to interpret twitter's actions as anything except censorship. The fact that they're legally entitled to commit this censorship doesn't make it something else.

      • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
        To have a sensible conversation, we have to acknowledge what the alleged Biden emails are: at best, stolen information; and at worst, intentionally manipulated or fabricated information. In either case, the information is being released now for the explicit goal of altering the outcome of the election in favor of those who are releasing it.

        We haven't had this issue in history before: it's never been so easy to reach so many people with such bad information. This places intermediaries, including Twitter, in an awkward situation: they can "censor" by restricting access to intentionally misleading information; or they can release it, and thereby become pawns of the bad actors who propagate it.

        As has been pointed out, this is a moral issue. We should step pretending that all censorship is bad, and that compelling intermediaries to publish literally everything is a moral good.

        • j8hn 1250 days ago
          I don't think either of your opinions have to be acknowledged or assumed in order to have a sensible conversation about this issue.

          "We haven't had this issue in history before: it's never been so easy to reach so many people with such bad information."

          Is this a literal statement?

          Is it bad information?

        • centimeter 1250 days ago
          > stolen information

          Who the hell cares if the information was stolen? Jeffrey Epstein's little black book was "stolen information" - do you object to using that information to make an indictment?

          > intentionally misleading information

          Crazy how a credible leak is "intentionally misleading" when it's politically inconvenient.

  • babesh 1250 days ago
    It is incredibly obvious that most US media is biased. This includes suppression on both sides of the political spectrum. It includes both mainstream media and social networks. It isn’t just here and there. It is endemic.

    It pushes mindsets and frames discussions. It precludes discussion. It is coordinated and pushed relentlessly.

    You can tell when opinions suddenly shift amongst influence makers. Suddenly others get in line. Welcome to a modernized version of 1984.

    Now you know that Twitter and Facebook are party to it as well. So are Fox News, New York Times, Washington Post, LA Times, public broadcasting, etc...

    I realized that even supposedly unbiased news was irredeemably compromised when public broadcasting barely reported on the Snowden disclosures. This was after realizing all mainstream media did not fact check the calls for the second Iraq War.

    The real news just serves as a skeleton upon which the powers that be drape a narrative to further their causes.

    If you can’t tell yet, both Biden and Trump are lying through their teeth.

  • csours 1250 days ago
    > "The Republican version of Burisma story – essentially, that former General Prosecutor Viktor Shokin was Elliott Ness, and Joe Biden intervened to fire him specifically to aid his son’s company – is also not supported by evidence. What Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and his cohorts have done to date is take a few unreported or under-reported facts and leap straight to a maximalist interpretation of corruption on Joe Biden’s part.

    This isn’t right, ..."

    It feels like we're learning again how terrible propaganda is, and how to deal with it in a new medium.

    I do not claim to be fair or smart or scalable enough to tackle the problem of propaganda, and in fact, I think at times propaganda can be used for good.

    However, Matt Taibbi has failed at least as much as Twitter and Facebook have in handling this.

    Propaganda needs context. Twitter and Fb were not prepared to provide the context, and so they removed the story. Matt provides some context, but it is buried deep in his post, in the absolutely least likely place for it to be read: the paragraphs right before the last paragraph.

    When dealing with propaganda, provide the context front and center.

    ---

    The answer for bad speech is famously 'more speech'. But what is the answer for poisoning the well of public discourse? I think this is the most important question of our day, the crux of the information age. Information is cheap, speech is cheap. I know society has gotten over it in the past, and I have some faith that we will again, but don't pretend it is easy.

    • timmytokyo 1250 days ago
      The NYT's media columnist had some behind-the-scenes reporting on the Trump campaign's attempt to get the Hunter Biden emails into the Wall Street Journal. The WSJ reported out the story and provided the necessary context. The story ultimately concluded there was no evidence of malfeasance on Joe Biden's part.

      The kind of reporting the WSJ did here is worlds apart from just leaking a bunch of documents without any context, and I'm glad we have real journalists doing it this time.

      https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/25/business/media/hunter-bid...

  • mjfl 1250 days ago
    Thought I would post some of the contents of the suppressed articles. They seem falsifiable through financial transaction records:

    > A tranche of emails from a hard drive belonging to Hunter Biden — published exclusively by The Post last week — revealed how the scandal-scarred son tried to leverage his family connections to land lucrative deals overseas and boost his Burisma pay.

    > Speaking before reporters at a Marriott hotel near the debate site Thursday evening, Bobulinski claimed he had a falling out with the Biden family when Hunter Biden wanted to pocket $5 million from an initial $10 million cash injection into SinoHawk, ponied up by CEFC.

    > “He said, referring to ‘the chairman,’ his father, that CEFC was really investing in the Biden family, that he held the trump card and that he was the one putting his family legacy on the time,” said Bobulinski, who declined to take questions afterward.

    > “During these negotiations I repeated to Hunter and others that SinoHawk could not be Hunter’s personal piggy bank,” he went on.

    > “CEFC through July 2017 was assuring me the funds would be transferred to SinoHawk, but they were never sent to our company. Instead, I found out from Senator Johnson’s September report that the $5 million was sent in August 2017 to entities affiliated with Hunter,” he said, referring to the Wisconsin senator’s congressional probe into potential corruption in the Biden family.

    https://nypost.com/2020/10/22/hunter-ex-partner-tony-bobulin...

    • mjfl 1250 days ago
      It certainly seems very corrupt to me for any founder of a company to withdraw any significant amount of the invested capital as cash.
  • chmod600 1250 days ago
    Was anyone besides me surprised that huge payouts to your family creating massive conflicts of interest are normal? And even acceptable for someone running for office?

    In a private company, if you don't disclose such conflicts and recuse yourself from related decisions, you'd be fired immediately. (Though perhaps I'm wrong here if I was wrong about politicians.)

    • rantwasp 1250 days ago
      it depends. as a low level foot soldier definitely. the higher in rank you are the greater the odds that you can actually get away with it w/o being held accountable
      • chmod600 1250 days ago
        With other politicians there was always a lot of smoke, some investigations that go nowhere, and then it's dropped without really finding a fire. That's traditionally what I thought "without being held accountable" meant.

        Now, we see the fire in plain sight, and the media is saying it's all fine and normal. That's a new level of "without being held accountable".

      • ed25519FUUU 1250 days ago
        Isn’t it usually the other way around? People at the top are all in it together, so they look after one another if just for self preservation. Instead they blame it on a rogue employee (or child).
  • fortran77 1250 days ago
    I think the story is a big nothing. It was a comment not by Hunter Biden, but an associate, who may have been overstating or exaggerating what Hunter Biden said he'd do.

    And I plan to vote for Biden (even though I'm a registered Republican.)

    But I think suppressing links to a story in the NY Post was a stupid and unethical move. And one that's likely to amplify the story, not bury it.

    • betwixthewires 1250 days ago
      What do you think "the story" referred to in this article is?
  • mjfl 1250 days ago
    14 years ago free speech was one of the most celebrated rights in the hacker community. That's why things like Wikileaks were built. Today, several people in this thread seem to believe that the info on Hunter Biden's laptop should be repressed because it is "stolen info". What have we come to?
  • lkrubner 1250 days ago
    One has to be somewhat ignorant of the mission of the IMF or World Bank to think this is somehow new:

    "Poroshenko was telling Joe Biden that in order to get an American aid package, he’d gone beyond even what the I.M.F. asked for and raised energy prices for ordinary Ukrainians not by 75%, but by 100%, as well as taking steps to curtail subsidized medicine prices."

    Where this is good or bad, this has been common since the 1970s. Some writers refer to this process as "neoliberalism" as the effort seemed motivated by a desire to bring back the old era of laissez faire. Since the 1970s the IMF has demanded similar internal "reforms" in nations in South America, Africa, and Asia. If this is surprising to anyone then I would assume they are young or they have not been paying attention.

    • ciguy 1250 days ago
      Everyone should read Confessions of an Economic Hitman by John Perkins. I first read it in highschool and it really shaped my thinking about the USAs role in international affairs. Some accuse the author of exaggerating certain things but nobody really denies the main facts that he lays out.
    • barumi 1250 days ago
      > Some writers refer to this process as "neoliberalism" as the effort seemed motivated by a desire to bring back the old era of laissez faire.

      Some writers refer to this as helping a country use the IMF as a political crap shield to enact necessary policies that would be otherwise politically nightmares to pull but are absolutely necessary to implement in order to get the state's finances under control.

      I lived in a country that was subjected to an IMF intervention after their government bankrupted the state, and the IMF's role on the recovery was done mainly by eliminating heavy subsidies and cash transfers from the state to a few public-in-name-but-private-in-operation companies which were chronically underfinanced and politically unable to change their pricing models to allow them to cover their operational cost. So yeah, the IMF name was used to justify price hikes, but let's not fool ourselves into believing that those reforms didn't had a positive impact on the state's expenditure.

  • __float 1250 days ago
    At what point do we look to capitalism as a driving factor for misinformation spreading?

    Media outlets are incentivized to bring in clicks/shares/likes. They're not incentivized to research stories sufficiently, so...a shaky lead from a sketchy source but a super compelling headline? Of course that gets published.

    Taking this as some anti-conservative war from the tech industry is super misleading.

    • ThrowawayR2 1250 days ago
      > "Media outlets are incentivized to bring in clicks/shares/likes."

      Even an individual who posts a blog post wants clicks/shares/likes, even if there's no money involved, to validate their work in putting out a post and to bolster their self-esteem. That highlights why capitalism is not itself the issue; any type of news media would just respond to what its customers want. And what the public wants is infotainment, not well-researched stories.

      The real problem is people and that's a problem that can't be solved.

    • luckylion 1250 days ago
      > Media outlets are incentivized to bring in clicks/shares/likes.

      Yes, in a way, but also obviously not. If that was their only/primary driver, they'd go all click bait all the time. They wouldn't report things that aren't loved by the masses.

      They clearly do, so clicks/shares/likes can't be their primary things.

      I do believe that it's partially right, it's just not number one. Number one is agenda, and within the pool of stories that benefit the agenda of the company, they choose what generates most engagement.

      • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
        The "agenda" of the paper is whatever position it thinks it's reader base has, if it's reader/ad funded. The political bias due to owner or donor conflict of interest is only one potential source of funding.
        • luckylion 1250 days ago
          Since newspapers are often front-runners and form their readers opinion (rather than just parroting back what their readers already believe), I have doubts.

          There's certainly a part of "we need money from ads", but being able to influence the political decisions of a nation is power. That's a value in and by itself, it's not just something you wield to sell ads.

    • cmdshiftf4 1250 days ago
      > Taking this as some anti-conservative war from the tech industry is super misleading.

      Very wrong, but we both know that. Not the brightest war for leftie tech companies to be provoking though.

    • pessimizer 1250 days ago
      This isn't capitalism, this is an outlet with connections to a the current regime trying to come up with ways to protect that regime, while intermediaries with deep connections to the previous regime try to blunt the effectiveness of that outlet to aid in restoring that previous regime. Nobody cares about the clicks on this article, and no one is taking a moral stance.

      Capitalism is trash, but this is traditional kleptocracy. Both sides are conservative; one is literally running to "restore normality."

    • jokethrowaway 1250 days ago
      It's not capitalism, is the lack of capitalism.

      It's having a centralised government (which can be used to obtain a lot of power) that create an incentive for misinformation.

    • centimeter 1250 days ago
      The abundance of low-quality news today can be understood as a consequence of the cantillon effect in an inflationary environment. American-style crony capitalism might incentivize low-quality media, but without the presence of massive subsidies propping up News Corp, AT&T, and the other few firms owning the vast majority of American media, I would expect more legitimate and reputable news firms like Bloomberg or Reuters.
      • Covzire 1250 days ago
        Capitalism is the least of journalism's problems. Journalists making political endorsements has all the same dangers under communism (where they always endorse the state party without exception) or capitalism (where in the last 50 years they've overwhelmingly endorsed global interests and Democrats over American ones).
      • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
        The low quality media we are drowning in is memes and conspiracy theories from random individuals. Even in the mainstream, the worst news is Rupert Murdoch's, and he made his money selling low quality media, not made his low quality media from crony capitalism.
  • jsu32 1250 days ago
    To people claiming Twitter was right:

    - was this disinformation (i.e. emails were fake?)

    - or, was this hacking (i.e. the emails were real but NY Post shouldn't have them?)

    Twitter clearly claimed the latter, in other words they were confident the emails were real as soon as the story broke out (!!!)

    Impressive journalism on their behalf, but to put sarcasm aside, this is why it's impossible to censor in real time. There is no time to evaluate a story in minutes so your biases (or, worse, corruption) needs to fill the void.

  • zachware 1250 days ago
    I'm definitely not one closed off to this story, I think it's important. That said I think "we" tend to forget that platforms like Twitter are private companies, we don't really have a "right" to post anything to them.

    Now if the government had ordered this moderation, that's where the idea of rights and first amendment comes into play.

    If we're not happy about the moderation we don't have to use the moderating platform.

    • kodah 1250 days ago
      The problem here is something new, as Matt points out.

      Law enforcement, tech companies, and the news media are operating under on some type of cooperating agreement which is not transparent to users or the creators of content. In normal human society you know the binds that bond, this is a reasonable expectation, and an expectation that even been challenged in the law. As the law infinitely expands, who am I (as a commoner) to know what I did wrong? Do I have the opportunity to change? Do I have the opportunity to face my accusers in a forum?

      Our rights, and the framework they reside in, are far too outdated for this sort of problem. The leaders we have in both business and government are too cowardly, weak, or self-interested to directly address the McCarthy-esque patterns that are beginning to emerge that seem to be opportunistically aligned to further narratives.

      • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
        If your point is that the originators of the Biden story are shocked and confused that it's being suppressed in an opaque tech cooperating agreement, they shouldn't be: the story is being suppressed because it's at best illegally obtained data, and at worst deliberately falsified; and in either case, it's now being used by bad actors in an attempt to manipulate the results of the election. There's no mystery here: Twitter is being very clear about why this story is blocked.
        • kodah 1250 days ago
          As Matt stated, and really the whole point of the article, the Biden story doesn't matter. Forget about charging Biden with any wrong-doing for a moment and see what this relationship and mechanism between law enforcement, tech companies, and media entities is for its merits: The same mechanism that autocratic governments use for control and operated in the name of "the public good".
          • joshuamorton 1250 days ago
            I don't follow, are you suggesting that Tech companies and the media, in acting directly in opposition to the sitting president, are somehow forming an autocracy? Does that word continue to have a meaning?
        • bassman9000 1250 days ago
          There's a severe double standard here given that Twitter has allowed worse than that, which was the whole point of the article: that the decision making is opaque, arbitrary, and probably coordinated.
    • Thorrez 1250 days ago
      > we don't really have a "right" to post anything to them.

      The article never talks about rights. The article is about journalistic failures.

    • zests 1250 days ago
      I do not think anyone is confused about whether or not the bill of rights applies to private companies. Free speech is an idea that can be extended to all types of speech.
      • floatingatoll 1250 days ago
        Comments exist on many prior HN discussions of Twitter and Facebook that demonstrate confusion around whether the bill of rights applies to private companies or not.
    • Clubber 1250 days ago
      >Now if the government had ordered this moderation, that's where the idea of rights and first amendment comes into play.

      Congress is currently grilling tech CEOs as to why they aren't banning / censoring QAnon and similar information. It seems Congress has moved to attempt to censor free speech by applying pressure on these private platforms to censor free speech.

      >That issue about the functioning of democracy is one where Facebook is in the spotlight right now as a hugely powerful platform for misinformation in the run-up to the US election.

      >This week the social media giant moved to shut down groups spreading the Qanon conspiracy theory, which promotes the idea that President Trump is leading a battle against satanic child abuse.

      >It was the Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee who wanted a really tough approach - a minority report from the Republicans agreed there was a problem, but favoured milder solutions.

      Congress is grilling tech companies as to why they aren't censoring speech hard enough and are threatening a "really tough approach" if they don't comply. It seems censoring speech is not only government pressured now, but also bipartisan.

      https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-54479130

    • chroem- 1250 days ago
      > Now if the government had ordered this moderation, that's where the idea of rights and first amendment comes into play.

      That may be the latest popular interpretation of the bill of rights, but it is absolutely not in the original spirit of its authors. They were defined as "inalienable rights" granted to all people. In other words, your essential human rights to free expression don't get waived depending on who the offending party is.

      • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
        There is no “offending party”. Freedom of speech means speech cannot be compulsory. What would be contrary to the “original spirit” would be forcing Twitter and Facebook to amplify speech they don’t want to.
        • chroem- 1250 days ago
          Your implication is that Twitter and Facebook are human beings, and I think a majority of people would contest that idea.

          What I am saying is that the authors of the bill of rights did not intend for a person's human rights to go away the moment they are persecuted by an entity other than the United States federal government.

          • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
            The New York Post is also not a human being, for that matter. But I wasn’t implying that.

            People want to use Twitter’s property to spread a message, and Twitter said no. That’s not “persecution”, it just means they have to find some other way to do it. If I get kicked out of a bar because I say something the owners don’t like, I’m not being persecuted — even if I think it’s unfair.

            • zajio1am 1250 days ago
              > If I get kicked out of a bar because I say something the owners don’t like, I’m not being persecuted — even if I think it’s unfair.

              In some countries that would be violation of consumer protection laws. If some service or product is offered to a general public, than arbitrary exclusion of a consumer is illegal in some jurisdictions.

            • chroem- 1250 days ago
              We already have a significant amount of legal precedent to compel a private business to serve certain groups. Those protected groups were legally enshrined in the first place to extend them the same rights that everyone else already enjoyed by common custom, not to create a new group of people with elevated privileges. In my opinion, it's time that we now legally enshrine the common custom of a right to service as well.
              • jakelazaroff 1250 days ago
                I don’t understand the point you’re trying to make. What group has elevated privileges, and what group is being discriminated against that needs protecting?
  • radus 1250 days ago
    I think Twitter was well within their rights to refuse to allow their website to be a vector for what they considered to be foreign meddling in an American election -- something that they've been criticized for in the very recent past.
    • TwoBit 1250 days ago
      If it wasn't a foreign meddling attempt then it was a domestic one. To me this is less a question about Twitter's right to block stories (which it absolutely has) but rather a question of whether election meddling attempts should be recognized on their own as blockable or censorable content.
      • jberryman 1250 days ago
        The most recent OTM had a segment about the way conservative groups have been following the Russian playbook, creating fake local news sites, taking advantage of underemployed journalists to seed real content as cover for disinformation articles etc.
  • pron 1250 days ago
    I think there's a fundamental difference of opinion about the notion of fairness. Some people think that fairness is defined as something that affects everyone equally in some clean-slate world, while others think of fairness as equalizing the effect of something in an already unfair situation in the world as it is. To the first camp it seems that "suppressing" a particular story on a particular platform is unfair regardless of circumstances because it is not done to other stories; others think that if that particular story has a de facto unfair advantage of being amplified by an army of bots on that particular platform, then "suppressing" it is the fair thing to do. The question is, is it always unfair to tip the scales or does fairness depend on whether or not the scales are already tipped? Should the fairness of laws, rules and regulation be judged with or without consideration to existing circumstances?
    • bassman9000 1250 days ago
      That's a really long way of trying to justify unfairness under some arbitrary criteria.

      If Twitter's policy is to surpress under some criteria (e.g. data illegally obtained), and they're not doing so every single time (they don't), then they're unfair on the arbitrary application of that criteria.

      • pron 1250 days ago
        The criterion can be that stories that are unfairly promoted are penalised. HN does something similar.
        • bassman9000 1250 days ago
          Thus paving the way for being arbitrary. Because the decision of what's fair is hidden. That's not criteria: is lack of.

          I understand you can't 100% define what's fair. That's why judges interpret. But if Jack has to come out to state they screwed up, something's not right. And they're not fixing it, by design: decisions will still be made by highly biased Twitter personnel.

  • sleepysysadmin 1250 days ago
    If your father is rich and powerful like Biden, you are inevitably going to find yourself in positions of privilege. Someone whose intent is to gain access to your father will bring you money bags.

    Hunter Biden has a bachelors degree in history and no real life experience. He got himself a very nice position that he clearly didn't earn.

    During the primary when this Burisma thing came out originally; NYPost no doubt investigated it and found much more information. Then sat on it until the most damaging moment. Very unlikely that these are lies and really the Biden campaign hasn't denied it. The reality is that Joe Biden was probably too busy to see his son selling his influence. Joe Biden is probably quite innocent, his silver spoon son on the other hand...

    Then Twitter pulled the censorship trigger a little too fast. You can see the bias for yourself. Wikipedia calls this whole Burisma thing an unevidenced conspiracy theory. Is it really unevidenced? An objective viewer can see the evidences. Is it really a conspiracy theory? I really don't think so.

    MSNBC's response to this burisma ordeal is to assert that the NY Post is a tabloid that regularly reports known false stories. They never really attacked the evidences or story. They just outright attacked the ny post calling it unreliable.

    This is such a great story though. You can use it to identify your echo chamber. the polls seem to be saying biden is going to win HUGE. My echo chambers I am in seem to think Trump is literally hitler who is killing mexicans. https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-is-trailing-so...

    November 4th is going to be an exciting day to see if my echo chambers are right or wrong.

  • ed25519FUUU 1250 days ago
    I pretend for a minute that the shoe is on the other foot. If the special counsel’s office got ahold of Hunters laptop, I have zero doubt that it would have been an absolute blood bath. There would be wall-to-wall MSM coverage and Hunter would probably already be under arrest.

    Common people really do see the two tiers of justice happening here. Anyone who looks will see, especially if they have no dog in the culture war. The connected and political elite do whatever they want. The true whistleblowers and challengers are destroyed, either financially or via character assassination/slander or both.

    It can’t be ignored forever, something will give.

  • RhodoYolo 1246 days ago
    One line hit me right in the gut.

    > “If you get a piece of information in the hands of the right American, it can absolutely spin out of control and make the national news in a couple of days,”

    We laugh about Chinese censorship, but our reliance on a few outlets to get our news has made us no worse.

    At what point is it Okay for people to start to die? History has proven (With a few caveats i'm sure) that real change happens with force. Has America lost it's ability to rebel against tyranny?

    America was built where small pox had a much higher death % - Were they forced to wear masks and stay inside? People die, it's a fact of life. Now we the people are forced to deal with the economic backlash that any idiot could have told you was going to happen. The media blocked any 'misinformation that relates to corona virus' and labeled them 'Anti-maskers'.

    Alot more people are going to die than the corona virus could have ever killed. The amount of mental health problems exacerbated, jobs lost, lives ruined is immesurable, but the one KPI we can all rely on is total number of coronavirus infected. It's a joke and we haven't even gotten to the fun part yet where we have a 34% debt surety rate based on the two massive stimulus' that are going to be passed.

    America was built on free-press and if say some entity tried to bury a story, it'd result in people dying, publisher being burned, or boycotted.

  • cryptica 1250 days ago
    The way Facebook and Twitter censored the Biden story was a bit too obvious. Makes me think that they probably want Trump to be re-elected. They're just riding on the rhetoric of the last election; people will vote for the candidate which Big Tech doesn't want to win. So if it looks like Big Tech hates Trump (I.e. helping Biden), then people will vote for Trump.

    Or maybe I'm overestimating the intelligence of people who work for Facebook and Twitter?

    Maybe they're not very smart and they think that censoring the Biden story will help Biden.

  • ravenstine 1250 days ago
    I'm convinced that a corporation could usurp the government and most people would accept having it throwing away the constitution if it billed itself as a "private company".
  • chkaloon 1249 days ago
    GYOFP - Get Your Own F'ing Platform. That's what so-called non-mainstream ideas have used for decades/centuries. Used to be pamphlets. Recently it was local weeklys. Now it's social media. That's what the First Amendment is all about. Amazing how this is getting twisted inside-out.

    This is all just so much whining by folks whose ox happened to be gored. GYOFP for cripe's sake.

    • java_script 1249 days ago
      I’d rather these ride-or-die Joe Biden-heads splinter off onto their own network instead. They could make it so whenever you start to even type “Hunt-“ you get a modal that says “Did You Know: Actually Energy Expert Hunter Biden added way more than $50,000/mo worth of value to Burisma.”
  • zozbot234 1250 days ago
    It's sad to see what's very clearly partisan politics (and not from just one side, either) on HN comments in the run-up to an election. We should try to refocus the discussion here on the actual HN-relevant issue, viz. the broad implications of this sort of content moderation by prominent websites.
  • 54351623 1250 days ago
    How to set up your own Mastodon instance.

    https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/social-network-set-mastodon-in...

    Or of course there is always 4chan if you are so concerned about censorship.

  • mark_l_watson 1250 days ago
    Interesting that this one is showing up here. I pay to subscribe subscribe to Matt Taibbi’s opinion piece/investigative thoughts via occasional emails. This was a good read, but other recent ones have been better. Perhaps this one was free?
  • galaxyLogic 1250 days ago
    If Twitter must publish all posts then doesn't it mean that New York Post must also publish all the letters that are sent to its "From the Readers" -page (assuming there is such)?

    Twitter is like a newspaper whose content comes only from its readers. It does not mean it has to publish everything.

    It does have a moral prerogative to not spread misinformation. Misinformation hurts the public. Twitter must make the decision about what it thinks is misinformation and should not be publish it.

    This has nothing to do with censorship. Because Fox News does not cover certain stories we are not accusing it of censorship. Free Press means the press is free to publish or not.

    • jsu32 1250 days ago
      Twitter has been claiming it's not a newspaper or editorial organization. They are legal benefits for Twitter to NOT be a newspaper. That's why they need to claim an objective reason for censoring/fact checking a specific story.

      So, I understand what you say but Twitter would beg to differ with you.

      Also network effects are harder to come by in newspapers. Imagine if there was one newspaper that had 100x the readership of the second most popular one. That'd be considered a threat to democracy.

      • drewrv 1250 days ago
        They don't need to claim any reason, they can take down any content they want for any reason.

        The only legal protection they have is not being held liable for the speech of their users. Newspapers don't have that because the writers are on their payroll.

        • Mikhail_Edoshin 1250 days ago
          The payroll is not the reason. Libraries and newsstands and post service are free from that liability either, but they don't have writers on their payroll. Newspapers that publish readers' letters normally don't pay for that. What makes them publishers is that newspapers choose what to publish. According to the court decision of 1995 [1]:

          "By actively utilizing technology and manpower to delete notes from its computer bulletin boards on the basis of offensiveness and "bad taste", for example, PRODIGY is clearly making decisions as to content, and such decisions constitute editorial control. (Id.) That such control is not complete and is enforced both as early as the notes arrive and as late as a complaint is made, does not minimize or eviscerate the simple fact that PRODIGY has uniquely arrogated to itself the role of determining what is proper for its members to post and read on its bulletin boards. Based on the foregoing, this Court is compelled to conclude that for the purposes of Plaintiffs' claims in the action, PRODIGY is a publisher rather than a distributor."

          [1] http://www.tomwbell.com/NetLaw/Ch04/Stratton.html

          Section 230 was written after that court decision. Yet for the law to be consistent its provisions must agree with this reasoning.

          • galaxyLogic 1249 days ago
            Right so it would seem Twitter is a publisher. I'm fine with that. Who wouldn't be? But whether it is or not it has the right to take down content. And I think it should do so if it thinks such content is misleading the public.
    • bzbarsky 1250 days ago
      Note that there is a difference between "publish all posts" and "deliver direct messages", and Twitter is blocking the latter as well, as far as I can tell.
      • galaxyLogic 1245 days ago
        Depends on what you mean by "deliver direct messages".

        Does it mean "deliver a direct message to one or more named recipients" or does it mean "broadcast/publish a message to the public"

  • rootsudo 1250 days ago
    I agree, twitter suppression made the story bigger.

    The NYPost has issued much fewer retractions than NYT and CNN, yet, Twitter does not attack those institutions.

    Ironic, considering the founder of the NYPost and his opinions on market economies.

    • darkerside 1250 days ago
      I would consider retractions a mark of respectability, and the failure to issue them a tacit admission of failure in accountability.
      • rootsudo 1250 days ago
        A sign of respect, but the NYpost was never given that option and immediately went into suppression, and it did not turn out to be false information.

        Meanwhile, CNN and NYTIMES post content and retract it in higher amounts, and they never were surpressed, locked out of their account or even had twitter force to fix "itself" by now agreeing that they'd "wouldn't" remove content but now just "flag it."

        That, is not respect, that is an alliance.

        • matthewdgreen 1250 days ago
          A story that contains the claim “someone who didn’t leave their name dropped a random laptop off at a store and we’re going to pretend it was Hunter Biden without evidence” can’t ‘turn out to be false’ because there’s no assertion there to begin with. It’s like claiming that an unsigned int set to zero hasn’t gotten any smaller.
        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          What exactly is the information that was reported? Is there an actual claim in here, or is it just an information dump, so that someone can point to it and say, "just look at all the corruption" without actually making any disprovable claims?
        • tchock23 1250 days ago
          Can you provide a source that confirms it was not false information?
      • beaner 1250 days ago
        That, or, of course, the Post's original reporting has been more accurate.
        • darkerside 1250 days ago
          Sounds like software with no bugs, if you ask me
          • beaner 1250 days ago
            Sure, but people mostly only say this when they don't like that the other guy has written better software.
            • darkerside 1250 days ago
              I'm sorry, but you must not be familiar with the Post. It's a sensationalist tabloid. The reason they don't publish retractions is NOT because of the airtight integrity of their reporting.
              • beaner 1250 days ago
                Your comment contains no information about the veracity of the content in question. It's a straight-up ad hominem.
                • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
                  It's not anyone's job to inform you of easily available history. Pointing out that someone is a known liar goes to credibility, and is not as hominem. Calling them "Republican" or would be an ad hominem argument against credibility..
                  • beaner 1250 days ago
                    This is a very roundabout way of expressing inability to accept that such a paper may still be more accurate in its reporting than other papers that you prefer.
                • darkerside 1250 days ago
                  Correct, it is ad hominem, which is appropriate in a discussion about the respectability of a journalist institution, which this is.
                  • beaner 1250 days ago
                    This is a clever shift from discussing the respectability of the reporting at hand, to discussing the respectability of the reporting institution.

                    Your claim that a failure to issue retractions is an admission of failure in accountability is true - when the reporting needs retractions.

                    So far, there's no evidence that the reporting does.

                    • darkerside 1250 days ago
                      > The NYPost has issued much fewer retractions than NYT and CNN, yet, Twitter does not attack those institutions.

                      Yes, I claim the reason is a lack of accountability. You claim the reason is impeccability of reporting. I think the reputation and style of reporting is relevant to deciding which of those factors is more relevant. You're free to disagree with that.

                      But please don't call it a clever shift. I'm having your conversation here.

                      • beaner 1249 days ago
                        You're really not.

                        How can you call the lack of a retraction a lack of accountability, when there is no evidence that a retraction is necessary?

                        • darkerside 1248 days ago
                          I'm the absence of a specific story, we are estimating based on our assumptions about how many retractions your "average" paper would make. Knowing what I do about incentives, any paper without rigorous principles of going to tend to issue fewer retractions. It's time consuming, doesn't drive revenue, personally embarrassing for people. It actually takes a lot of journalistic integrity to issue any retractions at all (how many have you personally published to a large audience?).

                          It's fairly clear to me that the burden of proof lies with the extraordinary claim that the NY Post is even close to the level of journalistic rigor as the NY Times, let alone so far surpasses it that they issue fewer retractions because of the accuracy of their reporting.

                          You're asking me to prove water is wet. You're showing me a dog in a trench coat and telling me it's an accomplished neurosurgeon. Have you ever even read the Post or the Times? Have you lived in NY, and are familiar with either publication? I'm pretty sure I'm done arguing because you've presented nothing of substance on your side, besides the claim that I have not provided logical evidence, which is correct, but I reject that burden. Feel free to offer any information of value you might have.

                          • beaner 1247 days ago
                            I think you're the pot calling the kettle black, I'm sorry. We are not estimating anything about average retractions about papers. We're talking about a specific story.

                            As it stands, there is no evidence that the specific story requires retractions.

                            You ask for evidence. The evidence is the laptop, and the text messages, and the emails. If you disagree that these things are evidence, the burden of disproof is now on you. That's how it works.

                            And so far, there have not even been as much as basic denials by the Bidens.

                            Yes, I have lived in NYC for several years, and I still read the Times more than the Post. But this is, once again, meaningless criteria.

                            You keep trying to make it about the paper, when the discussion is about this specific story.

                            And you're wrong.

                • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
                  If you're going to obstinately insist that the NY Post is serious journalism, just because they happen to publish an unfounded accusation that you happen to like, maybe you should investigate the history of the publication.

                  Wikipedia [1] for example cites several sources critical of the paper's veracity. Here [2]'s an article citing employees of the NY Post complaining about the flimsiness of the reporting.

                  [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Post [2] https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/10/new-york-post-inside...

    • Ma8ee 1250 days ago
      That NYPost has issued fewer retractions just means that they lack the integrity to take responsibility for its misinformation.
    • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
      The NY Post is not a serious source of journalism. Like the other Murdoch properties, it's primarily a propaganda outlet. Even its own employees will tell you that [1].

      Retractions are an indication of journalistic integrity. So of course they don't issue retractions, that would imply commitment to the truth. Who else doesn't issue retractions? Fox, The Sun, The Times (UK).

      No one would argue that Twitter does journalism, but their content policy does prohibit spreading of deliberate, dangerous misinformation, which the Post reporting obviously is.

      [1] https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/10/new-york-post-inside...

    • TwoBit 1250 days ago
      It may well have made the story bigger, but also it may have benefitted Joe Biden anyway due to (e.g.) the education many people got regarding this attempt at election meddling. The polls didn't seem to get significantly worse for Biden as this unfolded.
      • dlp211 1250 days ago
        And why should it. According to the WSJ news side, Joe Biden had nothing to do with anything in that story.

        If there was an actual story here, the DOJ and FBI are more than capable of launching an investigation. The NYTimes, WaPo, LaTimes, WSJ, would all have no issues reporting on this either through investigation or a leak from those former orgs.

        And maybe in the past, this would have mattered, but don't be surprised when after 4 years of norm breaking and corruption, people don't care about this except those with a specific ideology.

  • lookalike1974 1250 days ago
    When suppression is defined as other people having the common sense you didn't to either vet or invalidate a political hit-job, sure. But we're moving away from that now, it seems. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/25/business/media/hunter-bid...
  • gadders 1250 days ago
    You think this is spicy, wait until people start talking about Malia Obama's credit card being in one of the Hunter Biden videos.
  • known 1250 days ago
    And TRUTH is suppressed in the name of trust/loyalty/discipline/patriotism/sedition/job/national security/intellectual property

    https://yts.mx/movies/citizenfour-2014

  • addicted 1250 days ago
    Ah yes, the story which even the writer of the story did not want to put a byline on and kept getting passed from outlet to outlet because no one wanted to pick it up since it was so badly sourced.
  • joyeuse6701 1250 days ago
    It seems that suppression is the only choice in this prisoner’s dilemma of right vs left media right now.

    Now I don’t like censorship.

    Chinese media censored the COVID-19 outbreak in the beginning, which cost lives.

    Right wing media in the west censored ‘liberal bias’ which cost lives.

    The left’s censorship here is a recognition that the other side doesn’t play “fair” and they’ll take their chances on this morally grey choice because lives are immediately at stake.

    It’s hard to even consider this a scandal. It’s hard to defend censorship here knowing that one might have a better chance of survival in a draconian Orwellian state that is modern China over the bastion of freedoms that is supposedly the United States.

    It’s disappointing.

  • Synaesthesia 1250 days ago
    >On the other hand, if you want to assert without any evidence at all that the New York Post story is Russian interference, you can essentially go straight into print.
  • diebeforei485 1250 days ago
    I agree. The platforms will regret this sort of censorship.
  • scoot_718 1250 days ago
    "suppression" of a story based on a faked pdf? Isn't that just the journalistic editing we've been asking for all these years?
  • strangattractor 1250 days ago
    A blind computer repair person just happens to get Hunter Biden's computer. He conveniently cannot ID the person but is able to search emails. Bill Barr with the resources of the US government seems unable to provide clear evidence of Joe Biden's breaking the law. Sound's plausible to me.

    Freedom of speech is not Freedom to lie. The Constitution only states that Congress shall pass no law prohibiting free speech. Corporations can legally choose what is made available on there site. Fox News does it daily. Nobody seems upset about that.

  • firebaze 1250 days ago
    Simply stop taking twitter seriously. If there's something posted which interests you, read it. If not, ignore it. Whatever emotion it causes in you, just walk around the block and ignore it.

    Just don't give a s..t, and twitter will get back to normal in the long run.

    • neonate 1250 days ago
      What Taibbi is writing about in the OP goes far beyond Twitter.
    • nwienert 1250 days ago
      So you argue elsewhere this article was worthy of suppression, and yet here you are discussing it? Hypocritical.
      • firebaze 1250 days ago
        Just trying to give insight into the reasoning. If this is considered hypocritical by you, what would not be?
        • nwienert 1250 days ago
          If you think it merits discussion and your discussion is merely some opinion that doesn’t cross any of the site guidelines (sums to “I don’t care about this topic much so you shouldn’t either”), then there’s no basis for flagging it.

          Flagging means it’s either off topic, inflammatory, or not worthy of discussion. It’s on topic, and obviously not inflammatory. So you’re left with worthy of discussion... and you obviously are discussing it.

          Put it this way: if this is worthy of a flag, why are you here giving soft opinion as to why you personally would ignore it, as opposed to arguing why it shouldn’t be allowed period?

  • gnusty_gnurc 1250 days ago
    The left is obsessed with suppressing anything that’s “dangerous” cause they think the lowly under-class can’t be trusted to review information and form opinions.

    If they had less authoritarian instincts, they’d realize that prohibitions generally spectacularly fail. I suspect any of the things they wanted to ban just got attention they never would have otherwise due to the Streisand effect.

    • joejohnson 1250 days ago
      The left did not suppress this story, liberal media did. You’re responding to a post criticizing this suppression written by a leftist.
      • akvadrako 1250 days ago
        In the USA liberal and left are closely related - it basically means votes Democrat.
        • joejohnson 1250 days ago
          This is incorrect. Just because the two party system has suppressed anything to the left of the democrats does not mean liberals are in any way “the left”; there are many leftist voices in the US (Matt Taibbi, author of the post you’re replying to and presumably read, being one of them) and they are often critical of liberals.
          • akvadrako 1250 days ago
            The terms are not well enough defined in common language to claim what you’re claiming.

            If you polled all Democratic voters, 90%+ would say they are left and liberal.

            • dragonwriter 1250 days ago
              > If you polled all Democratic voters, 90%+ would say they are left and liberal.

              Or, in the real world, a bit fewer than half would say they are “liberal” or “very liberal”. Because that's something that's polled on quite frequently, so there is real data:

              https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/01/17/liberals-ma...

              It's true that in popular, as opposed to politically sophisticated, conversation in the US, a one-dimensional spectrum where the left and right poles are liberal and conservative is popular, and it's true that partisans on both sides like to portray the opposing party as more ideologically unified and extreme on that axis than it is, so that if you polled Republicans, they'd probably come close to identifying Democrats as consistently both left and liberal.

              • joejohnson 1250 days ago
                It would seem the commenters on this site are mostly Americans who don’t know that their two-party system only represents two flavors of pro-capitalist neoliberalism. But left and right political spectrum and the corresponding terms have meaning outside of the limited political window of centre-right US mainstream discussion.
                • dragonwriter 1250 days ago
                  > It would seem the commenters on this site are mostly Americans

                  Probably.

                  > who don’t know that their two-party system only represents two flavors of pro-capitalist neoliberalism.

                  It's impossible to know something that isn't true. From about the late 1980s to sometime in 2016-2017 (the end was more sudden than the beginning), the dominant factions of both parties supported pro-capitalist neoliberalism, it's true, but each has had significant factions not focussed on that position the whole time, and the neoliberal faction of the Democratic Party has been weakening for most of the last decade or so, and the neoliberal faction of the Republican Party was overthrown for dominance by a party that, insofar as it has a coherent economic policy at all, would be more populist protectionist than neoliberal (if one is being generous; kleptocratic opportunist if one is less generous.) American political parties are much more diverse than is the case of parties in systems that is typical in either proportional or parliamentary systems (and, especially, systems with both PR and parliamentary systems.)

                • akvadrako 1250 days ago
                  They don't have meaning in terms of "liberal media" vs "left media" though, at least how the poster you replied to was using the term.

                  It doesn't do any good to introduce jargon to people who are unfamiliar with it without defining your terms.

                  • joejohnson 1250 days ago
                    There is absolutely a distinction between liberal media (the NY Times, MSNBC, etc) and left media (Jacobin, Democracy Now!, Current Affairs, etc) and this distinction is made by Taibbi. Your ignorance on the subject is not shared by everyone.
                    • akvadrako 1250 days ago
                      NYT and MSNBC are left of center in the USA. As is Twitter, which is what's relevant here. Which is what makes them left-wing media.
                    • nl 1250 days ago
                      This distinction is neither as clear nor as absolute as you appear to believe.

                      Classical liberalism[1] is an economic stance somewhat similar to the economic views of libertarianism in the US. This is distinct from social liberalism which is what "liberal" commonly means in the US, which mostly overlaps with what could be called "progressive politics".

                      "Classical Liberalism" is confusing in the modern context, so it is rarely used execpt by people trying to confuse people (eg, right wing commentators who claim to be "classical liberals"). The biggest exception to this is the (right-wing, conservative) Liberal party in Australia, which was founded on the ideas of "Classical Liberalism"

                      There's also "liberal" in the "liberal democracy" sense. This is where multiple parties contend for power under known, written down rules.[2]

                      And then there is "left-[wing]". Left wing can refer to a social view, where it is used as a close-synonym for social liberalism or progressivism. Or it can refer to an economic view, which is much more context (and country) specific.

                      In the context of US politics the Democratic party is the most left-wing major party in both an economic and social sense.

                      In terms of media sources, the NY Times is definitely a proponent of "liberal democracy", but in a social and economic sense it is fairly centerist (despite the claims to the contrary by populist).

                      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_liberalism

                      [2] https://www.cs.mcgill.ca/~rwest/wikispeedia/wpcd/wp/l/Libera...

                      • jessaustin 1250 days ago
                        All this yacking about "well in America words have different meanings" (as if anyone on earth has been able to escape the onslaught of USA media) only makes it clear how unfamiliar all these nerds are with Taibbi's work. Taibbi is an actual leftist, and therefore has been attacked by liberals. If you search you can find absolutely ridiculous slander written about him in HN comments in the last several years.
      • gnusty_gnurc 1250 days ago
        Is there an issue with saying left-libertarian? Cause it's hard for me to believe that all these tech/media/etc employees aren't left, if it's reasonable to describe them as "progressive."
    • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
      > If they had less authoritarian instincts, they’d realize that prohibitions generally spectacularly fail. I suspect any of the things they wanted to ban just got attention they never would have otherwise due to the Streisand effect.

      If that's true, why oppose censorship?

      • gnusty_gnurc 1250 days ago
        Because it’s a tool of authoritarians - and morally wrong?

        Would you say the same thing about the drug war?

        Just because it fails to achieve its goals, doesn’t mean I should support it. There’s destruction in its wake.

    • nextstep 1250 days ago
      I think you’re confused about what or who “the left” is; corporate media and the liberal party in the US (the Democrats) are not leftist in anyway; a writer like Matt Taibbi is a leftist or has leftist leanings. But as is very clear from this article, there is clear disagreement between leftists and the party they are forced to vote with if they want any semblance of representation.
  • beaner 1250 days ago
    Why is this flagged? Even if you disagree with the assessment, the relationship between the press and big tech described here seems very relevant to HN.

    Isn't removing it making its point?

    • dang 1250 days ago
      Users flagged it. That's usually what happened.

      Please see https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24890813.

      • beaner 1250 days ago
        Ah, I always figured flagging put it in be a queue for review by a mod. Didn't know it happens automatically.
        • dang 1250 days ago
          For some reason people seem to be assuming that more lately (i.e. that "flagged" means mods did it). I'm not quite sure how to correct that notion. I suppose we could hyperlink "[flagged]" to an explanation...but would people click? It's not as if this isn't in the FAQ: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsfaq.html. Explanations don't seem to help much.
          • nkurz 1250 days ago
            It wouldn't explain a recent change, but the label "flag" does imply calling something to someone's attention, and that someone would presumably be a moderator. Whether or not not stories are killed immediately by flagging (and it makes sense to me that they are), would it be reasonable for a moderator to eventually review everything that is flagged, or at least everything flagged by more than one person? I don't have a good sense of what the volume would be, but I think it would lead to better results than allowing a tiny number of of users to suppress stories without administrative review.
            • dang 1250 days ago
              We do review all of them. But there are so many that I can't say we review them all equally closely. A lot of the time we're tired and just skimming. Vigilant users' contributions are extremely helpful.
          • dredmorbius 1250 days ago
            "user flagged" and "mod removed" might be clarifying, on stories.

            For comments that may be overly verbose.

            The distinction really isn't transparent.

          • lazugod 1250 days ago
            Or change the text itself to [flagged by users]?
            • dang 1250 days ago
              That would indeed be unambiguous. But it would also be verbose and there's something about that which doesn't fit the HN spirit.

              I don't know that unambiguousness would even be all that helpful. I have a feeling that all the same complaints would continue, they'd just route around it, as the old internet adage goes.

              • beaner 1249 days ago
                How about [user flagged] and [mod flagged]?

                Just throwing 'em out there.

  • rootsudo 1250 days ago
    So all discussion regarding this is going to be flagged?
  • tmaly 1250 days ago
    LOL this post got suppressed ( flagged )

    I think the post definitely has some merit on the discussion of free speech on the modern platforms that have become the new town square.

    • dang 1250 days ago
      Users flagged it. That's usually what happened.

      We sometimes turn off flags when an article is able to support a substantive discussion. I don't know if this one can or not but it seems worth a try.

    • nwienert 1250 days ago
      Even my post trying to discuss suppression of suppression articles, just got suppressed!

      How suppressing :(

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24889835

      • dang 1250 days ago
        Users flagged it. That's usually what happened.

        Probably in this case it's because metadrama threads like that are a dime-a-dozen and never lead anywhere new - they just become generic hodgepodges.

        • nkurz 1250 days ago
          > Probably in this case it's because metadrama threads like that are a dime-a-dozen and never lead anywhere new

          I think that's unlikely. While it would be great to know why users flag the stories that they flag (feature request?) in this case I'd wager heavily that it was flagged by people who feel the underlying story is false and unworthy of public discussion, and not out of concern that the discussion would be boring.

          Separately, I'll note that this story was submitted yesterday, quickly got to 38 votes and 7 comments, and then was flagged off as well: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24881000. I vouched for it, which brought it back briefly, but then it was killed again.

          Oddly, that version doesn't appear when one clicks on 'past', or with search terms for "taibbi" or "suppression". Any idea why this might be? Are flag killed stories always omitted from searches?

          Edit: This post discussing the flagging of this story is flagged as well: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24889835. Should it be? It seems like it raises reasonable issues. Vouching for it did nothing.

          • nwienert 1250 days ago
            Thanks for vouching, that was the thread I linked in the GP post dang was replying to. Constructive ideation on fixing a community problem of censorship is now "metadrama", Orwellian. I'm open to it not being a problem, but we can't even have that discussion.

            Taibbi frequently gets flagged, he's not liberal enough for the site. I don't have the motivation to now but if someone wrote a "HN has a flagging problem" and got lucky with timing, maybe they'd listen? I may have to just accept one of the last decent sites for discussing tech events is going down the same path as the rest of them, though tbh it's been on the path for a long time now (I've noticed at least 15 decent articles in the last year flagged for essentially being "not liberal" despite high quality content).

            • dang 1250 days ago
              You're talking as if there's some new development here but HN has operated this way for many years. People are prone to interpret normal fluctuation as catastrophic decline. They were saying similar things about HN over a decade ago. It reminds me of what Voltaire said when told that he drank too much coffee and that it was a slow poison: "It must be very slow". [1]

              Taibbi pieces have had more significant threads here than most political commentators. If HN did as you seem to be suggesting and disallowed flags on any articles like this—the ones that you like, plus the ones that everyone else likes, since why should one user be privileged over another?—then the site would consist of nothing but articles like this. That's obviously not its mandate. I don't see how this is "Orwellian", but it's not always easy to know WWOD (what would Orwell do).

              [1] Actually it was Fontenelle but Voltaire makes for a better story. https://quoteinvestigator.com/2018/11/22/coffee/

              • nwienert 1249 days ago
                So many strawmen! Dang maybe you’re just burnt out or something, because you’re not replying to anything I said.

                I would never and didn’t at all ask for privilege. I set out suggestions to avoid majoritarianism, systemically. One - make flags “cost”, for less brigades. Two, make vouches cost more, but also have more weight, as vouching can protect a minority view.

                I never said disallow flags on articles “like that”? I’m not even a big fan of Taibbi, I’m just a bit disgusted by people who would flag away things they just don’t like politically. It’s a problem, but my guess is it suits your politics and your bosses, so it’s not very pressing.

                What’s Orwellian is that you can’t seem to grapple with anything I’m saying and instead or twisting it all to totally different arguments, while using quite creative yet generic words to hide behind authority. Read your initial reply: The reason you give for why it’s valid to dismiss an article on simple suggestions to fix flagging was... “it was flagged”, it was “Metadrama”, and it would (in your psychic wisdom) lead to a “generic hodgepodge” discussion. Could literally apply to any HN submission about the site itself, and in this reply you seem to had misread it as some beg for privilege for myself or something weird like that.

                I’ve also been on HN for over a decade. I’ve seen a ton of controversies, I never waded in really. I’ve held my tongue for years on the suppression one, it’s been obvious for years. I’ve seen many claiming it went downhill. In fact at my first job a decade ago I remember multiple co-workers warning me how it’s gone downhill. I know it’s always been that way.

                But the reasons it was going downhill before and now are categorically different. Before it was due to incessant flame wars, bad faith pedantry, lack of openness to new ideas (but within discussion).

                Now - it’s literal flag brigading.

                To be honest, this happened near the election last time. People lose sanity, and then they see abuse of power as “popular” and therefore justified, and then after the election the tide will naturally turn and you’ll forget the problem for a bit.

                Censorship, majority rule, there aren’t the same as the critiques I’ve seen many many times over the years. Before it was about quality of discussion, now it’s about banning discussion entirely.

                • dang 1249 days ago
                  I didn't think or mean to imply that you were asking for special privilege. I just wanted to make the logic explicit that if we were to disable the flagging system, we'd have to do it across the board, and that would turn HN into a political site.

                  It's true that I'm using somewhat generic terms to describe these situations but there's a simple reason for that: there are hundreds of users asking (and sometimes outright demanding) answers and only one of me to answer them. If there's something specific that I said that you feel is unclear I can try to clarify it.

                  I don't find words like "suppression" super helpful because they mostly just add negative emotional valence to something that's not secret and is rather benign. If we have more political opinion pieces and/or inflammatory political stories on the front page, then we have less room for discussion of the topics that HN primarily exists for. You can call that suppression if you want. Is a florist suppressing chocolate by only offering a small selection of the latter in their flower shop?

        • nwienert 1250 days ago
          Of course they flagged it.

          Even more ironic is you missed the point of the post anyway, and your core reply here off: it wasn't meta-discussion, it was an entirely different discussion on the overuse of flagging on this site with examples of how it's happening + call for comments specifically on how to change flagging. In fact it was constructive, and the tone tempered.

          Not being able to discuss changes to the flag system itself because it gets flagged is a big... red flag.

          It's become used for "I personally don't agree with this" instead of "this is off topic, inflammatory, illogical, etc". Once you go down the path of allowing flagging for personal distaste, you've lost.

          • dang 1250 days ago
            By meta I mean Hacker News threads about Hacker News. Meta is the crack of internet forums. Users tend to flag such threads and moderators tend to moderate them because they're mostly all the same, they breed like rabbits if allowed to, and they're not actually interesting—they're internet drama, which feels interesting but isn't. Such pseudo-content pleases/riles the self-obsessed minority (I mean the minority of HN users who are fascinated with HN, which certainly includes me) but leaves the majority of the audience cold. Self-referentiality is one way for a forum to lose its audience, and our #1 job is to prevent that happening to HN.

            This is bog standard HN moderation, btw, and has been the same for many years: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu.... Even my analogies have been the same for years: https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=false&qu.... Everyone who rushes to post such a thread feels like this is the one that changes everything, but that's the crack talking.

            I realize that your intention was good and that what I'm saying here must sound cynical and heavyhanded, but you have to understand what it's like to see these things a hundred times and realize that they're never different and never lead anywhere. If they don't make you feel weary and slightly nauseated, that's because you haven't seen too many of them yet.

            • nwienert 1249 days ago
              I think there's a difference between meta-drama and discussion of improving the algorithm itself to avoid meta-drama.

              I'd actually honestly like to hear your reply on the proposals for flag rule changes. I think they would work, and would improve the discussion quality. We'd get more "out of the box" stuff - far left or right, but also just more out there ideas.

              Finally - you spend a ton of time on the meta stuff. I read over a few pages there. You say often you don't have time for it. Perhaps it's time to try making some changes that would reduce the burden? And not ones that further lock it down, but instead add some transparency?

              You guys already have vote brigading rules, flag brigading seems natural. Adding cost will improve the quality. Making vouches more precious would improve the quality.

              Perhaps add a meta column to the topbar and direct/move all meta discussions there? I know your reply will be "this will only further it" but I doubt it, they could then avoid the home page altogether.

              Only trying to help here, but I think you're now so meta-tired you've forgotten that meta discussion can be constructive and there's perhaps really simple changes that would reduce a good chunk of these complains.

              Final note - seems like a lot of the complaints are all going the same direction. Maybe they're valid and not just drama.

              Edit: let me reframe it in a way that may be helpful: if you could reply to every meta thread with a single link to a static page on HN, a small write up that included a changelog of the latest rule changes you've implemented, a clear policy enumerated, and a link to a "meta" area where you'd automatically move comments/threads, you'd save yourself a ton of time going forward, and I think you'd gain a ton of positive goodwill on the site. You'd conquer the meme thats been building for years as well.

              • dang 1249 days ago
                Of course the rules prohibit flag brigading. If you're saying that political stories are getting flagkilled because politicized users are organizing to kill the ones their cause opposes, then either you have evidence I haven't seen (and I need to see it) or you are vastly overinterpreting the data. Certainly such behavior would be abusive, and we would either penalize such accounts or ban them outright. Just keep in mind that evidence means something objective, such as a post on some external site organizing people to flag something on HN. Posts getting flagged when you think they shouldnt've is not evidence of brigading. It's just evidence that other users disagree with you.

                A separate meta section would be a disaster—it would create a dedicated place for the problem to metastasize, and the demands on moderation would go up not down. I once had a conversation with the founder of a forum much larger than HN, who told me that creating a meta section in the hope that it would help contain such complaints was the biggest mistake they ever made.

                The meme that HN is declining is more or less as old as HN itself. Maybe HN is declining and we're doomed unless we make major changes (though the prescriptions for such changes are perennially contradictory). I think you're missing a more likely explanation though: internet users just like to complain a lot. Moreover there's a nostalgia bias that always makes it feel like the site was better when you first joined it. (I don't mean you personally, I mean any of us.) Like tree rings, each cohort dates the decline from approximately when they joined the site. It's always the later users, the hoi polloi, who are the invasive species ruining everything—in conjunction with the feckless and ignorant mods.

                How about we make this into a positive this way: if there's a specific article that you feel was intellectually interesting, and capable of supporting a substantive discussion on HN, and which was flagkilled unfairly, let us know at hn@ycombinator.com. So far you've mentioned two. In one case we'd already turned off the flags before we saw your complaint (and I think that was because someone emailed us—which is what the site guidelines ask you to instead of making meta posts). In the other case we simply didn't agree that it was an intellectually interesting article that was capable of supporting a substantive discussion on HN.

                Moderators have to make these calls in the end because if we don't, the site will be consumed by flamewars. That's a different issue from getting any particular call wrong. If we get one wrong, I'm happy to be persuaded, to admit it, and to correct the error in that case. But I don't agree that the system is malfunctioning and needs an overhaul. I think it's basically functioning the way an immune system has to, which includes being overzealous at times.

                I spend a ton of time on the meta stuff and I spend a ton of time on all the other stuffs too. As you'll gather from my several lengthy replies to you, I don't have any problem engaging with specific users' concerns about the site. But I prefer to do it either in situ, or by email. Making meta submissions to complain about downvoting or flagging doesn't have good effects. It just stirs up mobs, in which everyone with a complaint shows up to make it, the discussions turn into the same thing they always do, and it's simply impossible to respond. Don't forget that there's currently only one mod (me) who's in a position to respond publicly.

                • nwienert 1249 days ago
                  I appreciate the replies. I've noticed at least a couple handful over the last year, some more unfortunate than others, but I'm not keeping close score so I don't have them on hand. I don't actually even follow flaggings really, I assume there are many I miss.

                  Is there a place to see flagged-but-highly-upvoted articles? That would be another helpful area to let users check and report false negatives.

                  When I notice more, I'll just shoot you an email.

                  I am agreeing on the complaint meme, by the way. As I see it, the meme used to be that it's a bunch of assholes and closed-minded-pedants/contrarianistas (and to be honest, it kind of was for a while, and I think mods have fixed it a bit), and now the meme is that it's getting a bit groupthinky and quick on the flag button (and I suspect that meme is true as well, and can be fixed).

  • r00tanon 1250 days ago
    Drivel. No sensible person believes blocking QAnon nonsense is a "scandal." For many reasons, not the least being that it is also the very definition of "unsubstantiated" as is this Hunter Biden story.

    Applying editorial standards (finally) to some of the more outrageous content posted on social media platforms is no more controversial than that of print media's choice to do so.

    The term "social media" is a complete misnomer to begin with. It started socially, but the sheer number of posts from advertisers and other organizations compared to the number of friend and family posts just goes to show how far from "social" these platforms have become. But that's another can of worms.

    EOD private companies can do whatever they want to do with their products. Everyone has a choice of the products they use. Not controversial.

    • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
      > Drivel. No sensible person believes blocking QAnon nonsense is a "scandal.

      The fact that you conflate QAnon with this story indicates an extremely myopic and unrefined understanding of the world. This story was first published by the NY Post, not by someone on 8chan. These are completely unconnected things in terms of which communities are the source of this story.

      • ketamine__ 1250 days ago
        Let's not pretend that stealing a laptop and publishing its content is journalism that is worthy of protection. Yes, it is illegal and unlike baseless conspiracy theories this is a crime that should be prosecuted.
        • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
          My understanding is that it wasn't stolen. The repair bill was never paid and after 90 days under Delaware law it became legal property of the repair shop owner.
        • mjfl 1250 days ago
          unlike stealing tax returns?!? or wikileaks?!?! which US courts said was treason?!
    • Sophistifunk 1250 days ago
      > Applying editorial standards (finally) to some of the more outrageous content posted on social media platforms is no more controversial than that of print media's choice to do so

      This is both true, and fine. However, they must give up their section 230 safe harbour protections.

    • Covzire 1250 days ago
      Where does the article mention QAnon?
    • mjfl 1250 days ago
      > No sensible person believes blocking QAnon nonsense is a "scandal."

      It's not QAnon, and the fact that you made that statement betrays your political biases. Think of the harm you could be causing by your attitude. If the Jeff Epstein story broke during Bill Clinton's electoral run, would you also dismiss it as a conspiracy?

      https://www.the-sun.com/news/1330253/bill-clinton-massage-ep...

  • lumpenprole 1250 days ago
    Oh look, a rare political post on Hacker News that doesn't get downvoted to oblivion. I wonder why.
  • Marazan 1250 days ago
    Matt "No Collusion, No Collusion" Taibi comes out in favour of publishing obvious disinfo campaign?

    Colour me shocked.

    • Clubber 1250 days ago
      I believe he is successfully pointing out the hypocrisy.
  • alphite 1250 days ago
    And for the comments of people saying it's a non-story, you need to check your beliefs and look at the facts.

    This is pay for play, and corruption at it's finest. After attacking Trump for 4 years for falsehoods, you shy away from addressing issues with the opposing candidate?

  • senectus1 1250 days ago
    it's not like the suppression has stopped the story. if anything it's spread it further for longer
    • TwoBit 1250 days ago
      Probably true, though much of the focus following the suppression is on Twitter and Facebook and not Biden.
  • lawwantsin17 1250 days ago
    This is a Russian op. It's not real information based on anything illegal happening. It's just smoke BS. Get it off YC.
  • sagichmal 1250 days ago
    I personally have no problem with platforms choosing to squelch lies. If they over-step their authority then the market will correct them, right?
    • ed25519FUUU 1250 days ago
      I hope in this world you don’t let the politically connected and rich decide what’s a lie and what’s a truth.

      What if the shoe were on the other foot?

  • linuxhansl 1250 days ago
    Meh... Call me unimpressed.

    Twitter refrained from forwarding a story to which there is no factual basis. You can of course still read it with the New York Post if you so desire.

    That's all there is to it.

    • jsu32 1250 days ago
      Was the story that the NY Post article was the result of Russian 'disinformation' based on facts? Because Twitter did nothing to stop that, not a fact check, not a block, nothing. Twitter was certain that 'story' was true, but the FBI (who said they have no evidence the Russians did it) was clueless?

      If I may, the reason you are unimpressed is that you are on the political side that benefited from Twitter's selective bias this time around. Next time you may not be as lucky tho.

      • nearbuy 1250 days ago
        Twitter's objection was that the New York Post article contained hacked or illegally obtained material (personal intimate photos, etc.). Publishing those materials is a legal grey area.

        I don't think Twitter ever said that article was Russian disinformation.

        • jsu32 1250 days ago
          Trump's taxes were illegally obtained (hacked or leaked.) For all we know, the Chinese may have given it to the NYT, as the NYT never bothered to tell us how they got their hands onto them. But Twitter did nothing about them.

          If Twitter was honest, every time the figure $750 appeared in a Tweet it should be blocked.

          If you feel my statement above is absurd, that just shows how normalized the double standard has become.

          ps I think there should be a law that all Presidents disclose tax returns and financial information. If you run for President you deserve a lesser right for privacy. It's not about that though. Twitter shouldn't censor based on its opinions.

          • nearbuy 1250 days ago
            Twitter was entirely consistent between this and Trump's tax returns. What you're proposing is a double standard.

            The rule is they blocked links to hacked content. They did not block reporting on either issue. Any discussion of Hunter Biden or the hacked content is allowed on Twitter. You just can't link to the actual hacked content.

            The NYT has not released Trump's tax returns. They only released an article discussing some of what they found. The New York Post included actual stolen content in their article.

            Blocking all tweets mentioning $750 would be like blocking all tweets mentioning Hunter Biden.

      • linuxhansl 1250 days ago
        > If I may, the reason you are unimpressed is that you are on the political side that benefited from Twitter's selective bias this time around. Next time you may not be as lucky tho.

        You may. I'm on no one's "side", though.

  • rootusrootus 1250 days ago
    I certainly hear a lot more talk about the suppression than the actual story (excluding the non-stop spew from Trump, I tuned him out a long time ago), so Twitterbook's attempts at suppression seem to have backfired. Taibbi may think it's under-reported, but even my non-tech acquaintances know about this scandal.
    • acituan 1250 days ago
      > even my non-tech acquaintances know about this scandal.

      Baudrillard talks about this regarding the Watergate scandal. The word scandal implies this is a one and done thing, you've seen the thing, and there is absolutely nothing else to see. This was an outlier.

      But was it? I think this one story itself is a canary in the coal mine. Extrapolate this to the long tail of stories for which their potential suppression won't make enough waves, and this is a much much bigger problem than what your non-tech acquaintances might hear.

      This concentrated of a narrative shaping power is certainly not unprecedented but is something we would normally associate with totalitarian regimes. And even then it would be easy for people to assume the suppression from state channels. What we have today is a much knife-edge mixture of truths, non-truths and missing truths, coming from hundreds to thousands of micro channels with people's faces attached to it. I think the grand total of its effects will indeed be unprecedented.

    • srtjstjsj 1250 days ago
      That's just bad math.

      You're hearing more about the supression than the suppressed story? That suggests the suppression worked.

    • hackinthebochs 1250 days ago
      Awareness of the story in the context of potential disinformation and twitter's attempt at stopping it is entirely different than awareness without this extra context. The downstream effects of the two scenario are likely to be very different.
    • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
      You hear a lot more talk about the suppression than the actual story because the news media you follow isn't covering the content of the story.

      There are emails being released constantly detailing various business dealings with CCP linked companies including undisclosed loans from Chinese banks that the Bidens continually roll forward.

      • sagichmal 1250 days ago
        > because the news media you follow isn't covering the content of the story.

        That's not surprising, because it's manufactured and bogus.

  • mmsmatt 1250 days ago
    This has got to be Taibbi click-baiting pro-Trump subscribers. He buries his admission that Trump's Biden/Burisma narrative is a lie so deep in the piece, you really have to trudge through a lot of hand-wringing drivel to find it. You can read 90% of this piece thinking that Taibbi is clearly sympathetic to the Republican narrative, and he gives no indication otherwise!
    • kodah 1250 days ago
      I didn't get that vibe at all. To me Taibbi sounds like someone like me: a resident of the Democratic party who is willing to criticize the ends as well as the means of both parties. This sort of conviction is not looked upon very highly by our "free" society.
      • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
        I think your reading of Taibbi is correct. Unfortunately, articles like this feed into the currently fashionable victim mentality of the Republican party, wherein they contend that big tech unfairly suppresses news from conservative sources, and that there's a grand conspiracy afoot to protect Biden. I don't think that's true, but that is how this will play out in that particular fever swamp.
        • kodah 1250 days ago
          "The other side is worse!" cannot be perpetually be the answer or response. Politics is not everything; at some point we have to understand that politics does not make a society, a society makes politics.

          Ask yourself this: if these same mechanisms, that again are used by autocratic governments, get taken advantage of by a future administration and we somehow defeat them will you be willing to admit accountability and culpability for the outcome? If not, then walk cautiously, because this future is very real and discounting people that raise the flag does not age well.

    • slimed 1250 days ago
      It's not a surprise that you can't understand Taibbi if your only lens of analysis is Red Team vs. Blue Team.
      • ed25519FUUU 1250 days ago
        Unfortunately I think this really nails why the content of the laptop is so difficult for many people to come to terms with.

        We all know corruption happens at all levels in Washington, but if the contents of the laptop are true, it means a serious loss of ground in the culture war (potentially game over). It can’t be true and must not be true. To keep the game going we need to shut our eyes and wait to be rescued by a comfortable escape hatch narrative.

    • rashkov 1250 days ago
      This is something he does in all of his recent political writing, to the point that I had to go and search for articles where he’s unambiguous about his political stances. Even after finding those, I never quite felt like I’m looking at the same political reality as him, and ended up unsubscribing. I’m sympathetic to the substance of his writing, so maybe that’s just what non-partisan writing looks like and it’s too strange to read in this media environment? I don’t know, but if anyone has more thoughts on this, then I’d like to hear them.
      • rendall 1250 days ago
        "maybe that’s just what non-partisan writing looks like and it’s too strange to read in this media environment"

        This.

        One must get beyond the idea that one team is unambiguously worse. In a way, Taibbi writes almost exclusively about the tendency of Americans to ignore the misbehavior of their own side and exaggerate that of the other.

        There are lots and lots of articles informing the rank-and-file how to interpret contemporary events; how to discuss the Bidens' corruption, for instance (usually: bring up the Trumps' corruption, but often outright denial and shaming anyone who discusses it)

        People who appreciate Taibbi are those who can hold at least two narratively contradictory facts in mind at the same time; eg that both the Bidens and the Trumps are corrupt; without leaping to defend one or the other.

    • 23B1 1250 days ago
      I read the whole article, though.
  • gotoeleven 1250 days ago
    Yeah the censorship is bad and further reduces trust in the media and tech companies (though its already at zero for many people). But isn't the story here that the vice presidents son was being paid millions of dollars by chinese, ukrainian, and other companies for .. something? It's not his business accumen, right? What could they possibly be paying him for other than access to his dad? Is there any other reasonable explanation for these "business arrangements?"
    • jokethrowaway 1250 days ago
      I doubt anyone is surprised by another plausible case of corruption (or depravation / or pedophilia if you address the other allegations). There is also the story that the FBI was sitting on this since December (potential for blackmail in case Biden is elected? who knows) which is scary as well.

      In the end, I think it's endemic in having human corruptible politicians who can accentrate power. We will minimise this problem only if we decentralise the structure of powers in our society.

      Not that any mainstream party has an interest in promoting that (unless you consider Jo Jorgensen and the libertarian party)

    • thebigblueguy 1250 days ago
      They paid for introductions to “the big guy”.

      I’m surprised HN keeps this story up given the overlap of philosophies between the tech bubble and Democrat politicians.

      • cmdshiftf4 1250 days ago
        The reason stuff like this gets flagged is, in my opinion, that while the underlying issue is of relevant interest (stinking tech companies caught poisoning yet another thing), it’s too close to simple politics to prevent a thread full of hyperpartisan bickering.
    • darkerside 1250 days ago
      It's a lot of money for a person, but it's not a lot for a business. It's a cheap insurance policy to stay on the "good side" of someone who operates, even privately, in the quid pro quo seeking way that Trump does very publicly.
      • thebigblueguy 1250 days ago
        4 years of investigations and the best they got on so called Trump Quid Pro Quo was him asking Ukraine about this specific grift by the Biden’s.

        Either he’s better at hiding his crimes than Muller and the Democrat party is able to investigate them, or gasp they can’t actually find anything because there is nothing...

    • chowchowchow 1250 days ago
      And? I don’t think the NYP story was supposed to be a bombshell that Hunter Biden got jobs because his last name was Biden.

      That may be unfair but that particular point is not even the subject of the New York Post story.

      Companies hire people in useless positions all the time you know.

      • luckylion 1250 days ago
        > Companies hire people in useless positions all the time you know.

        Yeah, they're called princelings, it's very common in China. If you want to do business, you hire the child of a high-ranking party member, pay them large sums of money for zero work and then you get all the permits you need.

        • chowchowchow 1250 days ago
          Mmhmm. I said it’s unfair. Again I don’t see how reiterating that Hunter Biden probably got some jobs because of his name proves the more salacious allegations that were the center of the story...
          • luckylion 1250 days ago
            It doesn't, of course. Just as Mercedes paying Chinese princelings millions doesn't prove that there's corruption in China.
            • chowchowchow 1250 days ago
              Well there’s other evidence of that! And the trouble here is the evidence from the story is not verified (the FBI has not confirmed its HB’s laptop, has it? The screenshots of the Russian blackberry seem... dubious...). And that’s the sort of thing that most news organizations would gate reporting on.

              I do agree it’s a bit strange for Twitter to step in and try to apply editorial standards where NYP didn’t when they otherwise disclaim responsibilities of being a publisher. I dunno; there’s an interesting discussion here if you can tone down the fire in your belly about conspiracies.

              • luckylion 1250 days ago
                > And that’s the sort of thing that most news organizations would gate reporting on.

                I don't think that's true. The Steele Dossier ("Trump pays Russian Hookers in Moscow to pee on him") wasn't treated special in any way, and it was much more questionable at the time than this story (where the unclear part is what they got for their bribes, not whether they payed his son for access to the VP). Of course, one argument might be "we've learned from our mistakes", but I believe that's a bit too obvious.

                > I dunno; there’s an interesting discussion here if you can tone down the fire in your belly about conspiracies.

                I don't think it needs a conspiracy theory, the coordination was very public. That there's political corruption in the US is also not news, it's the reason why children of politicians are making giant sums of money, politicians being paid tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars to give a speech etc. That's normal, there's not much to be found, I believe.

                Discussion of the suppression is not encouraged here: even a story about the suppression of the story was pretty much immediately suppressed on HN.

                • chowchowchow 1250 days ago
                  You’re making my point aren’t you? You think the NYP story is as reputable as the dossier ?

                  All the same, I don’t know of any newspapers which published stories treating the dossier as a source. As an object of the story, IE this thing exists, yes. As corroboration: please share if you have any.

                  Actually I think what happened is Rudy etc got a little too desperate and excited and blundered tactically: surfacing the contents of the hard drive as continual leaks, like the DNC emails, would’ve allowed for a similar dynamic to 2016. Wouldn’t have mattered politically if the contents were real or not.

                  By reaching and trying to drop the story as “real news,” the dubiousness of the source material got thrust directly into the spotlight. Blaming twitter, liberals, or whoever, for their poor smear tactics is just a coping mechanism at this point if you ask me.

                  • luckylion 1250 days ago
                    > You’re making my point aren’t you? You think the NYP story is as reputable as the dossier?

                    My impression is that it's less made up than the juicy parts of the dossier. The dossier contained more truth though, but it was lame stuff that nobody cared about or reported on.

                    > As an object of the story, IE this thing exists, yes.

                    That's just moving goal posts. It's essentially "Now, I'm not claiming A did Z, but I hear a lot of people saying that A did Z. Did A do Z? What do you think, dear viewer?" Of course they're running the story, even if they throw a "this hasn't been independently confirmed" in the footer. That's the beauty about propaganda, you don't need to claim that it's true for the effect to be achieved.

      • thebigblueguy 1250 days ago
        That’s exactly the point. Your attempt to pretend paying a drug addict $83k per month is fine, nothing to see here, is definitely not the same opinion of most voters.

        That alone is worth the tech companies risking their reputations and livelihoods of all their employees / partners! Trump cannot win! He’s eeeeeeeevil!!!

  • joejohnson 1250 days ago
    This story has “62 points” and was posted 43 minutes ago (at the time I’m posting this comment) but as soon as I read the story and hit back in the browser, it was pushed off the first three pages of articles. What happened? Did this story get flagged? There’s lots interesting discussion here.
    • dang 1250 days ago
      Users flagged it. That's usually what happened.

      It also set off the flamewar detector as as1mov described, but flags were the dominant factor.

      See also https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24890813.

    • as1mov 1250 days ago
      I think that's just HN's flamewar prevention method. Any story with a low score and a large number of comments are pushed down quickly, this is in addition to the fact that the post is getting flagged which pushes it down further.
  • cwhiz 1250 days ago
    It is the people who want suppression of information. Twitter and FB are responding to user demand.

    This post has been flagged. People don’t want to see or hear about this. HN may, or may not, remove it. Either way, there are HN users who want this removed.

    • luckylion 1250 days ago
      That's just some users though, and I'm 99% sure they don't want others to see it, because they believe knowing about it might damage their political side. I'm sure they have good intentions and believe that the end justifies the means and if suppression of truth is required to let the good guys win, then so be it.

      Of course, everybody generally thinks they are the good guys, and once you're going down the road of "everything is allowed because my goals are good", you're not going to stop until somebody else stops you.

      • SirHound 1250 days ago
        It’s not the truth though as far as we can tell.
        • cwhiz 1250 days ago
          You could say that about lots of news that FB and Twitter allow. If FB and Twitter are strictly blocking unverified news then they would have also blocked things like the NYT tax return story. You also wade into some hairy territory of who is verifying news, and why.

          Facebook and Twitter are effectively acting as editors for select news organizations.

        • matthewdgreen 1250 days ago
          The one comment in this thread making an utterly factual statement is downvoted.
    • dang 1250 days ago
      Users flagged it. That's usually what happened.

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24890813

      • cwhiz 1250 days ago
        I know that users flagged it. That’s exactly my point. Users wanted to bury this.
  • alphite 1250 days ago
    I think the fact that this is flagged shows that ycombinator is part of the same problem.

    Freedom of speech is what's great about this country, and big tech is about suppression of it. I look forward to my post getting deleted by the mods, reinforcing the simple truth.

  • diego_moita 1250 days ago
    The only "scandal" here is that Russians and Republicans are once more trying to recreate the "leaked emails" hitjob that worked so well against Hilary Clinton. This is classic F.U.D.[1], just 2 weeks before election.

    If the media gives credibility for this kind of cheap hack, what morals do they have to criticize QAnon? If they want to have credibility then they should act responsibly.

    It is not censorship because it is not imposed by government. It is called editorializing and that is exactly the job of a newspaper editor.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fear,_uncertainty,_and_doubt

    • kkarakk 1250 days ago
      tbh the people who are gullible enough to believe this would believe anything. if it's not hunter biden, then it's creepy joe, if it's not creepy joe it's something else. the republican trump smear circus never ends.
  • nl 1250 days ago
    > from the similarly-leaked “black ledger” story implicating Paul Manafort, to its later-debunked “repeated contacts with Russian intelligence” story

    It's astonishing to me that Taibbi (who's work I've always enjoyed) isn't aware that - far from debunked - this has been confirmed. The Republican led Senate Intelligence committee report[1] was released in September and covered this in extensive detail. It's a long read, so reporting from The Intecept's summary[2]:

    One of Manafort’s closest aides during his time in Ukraine was Konstantin Kilimnik, who the Senate report identifies as a Russian intelligence officer. Kilimnik also served as Manafort’s liaison with Deripaska.

    While he was working for Trump during the 2016 campaign, Manafort stayed in contact with Kilimnik and gave him the Trump campaign’s internal polling data, which showed that the key to defeating Clinton was to drive up negative attitudes about her among voters.....

    The Senate report says that the intelligence committee “obtained some information suggesting Kilimnik may have been connected to the GRU’s hack and leak operation targeting the 2016 election.” The report adds that “this information suggests that a channel for coordination on the GRU hack operation may have existed through Kilimnik.” The report adds that in interviews with Mueller’s prosecution team, “Manafort lied consistently about one issue in particular: his interactions with Kilimnik.” Manafort decided to “face more severe criminal penalties rather than provide complete answers about his interactions with Kilimnik.”

    In Taibbi defense this report was released in September, and there was a lot of news happening then. Prior to this report, I don't think any official source was willing to call Kilimnik an intel officer.

    [1] https://www.intelligence.senate.gov/sites/default/files/docu...

    [2] https://theintercept.com/2020/09/03/trump-russia-senate-repo...

    • nl 1250 days ago
      Whilst it is anti-HN policy to comment on downvotes, I think on this particular story the irony of being heavily downvoted with no responses should be noted.

      Suppression is a bigger scandal indeed.

  • michaelmrose 1250 days ago
    The actual story is the election of a monstrous moron to a post where his actions can materially negatively effect the future survival of civilization as we know it.

    His reelection would be likely to be the end of democracy as we know it as he corrupts the entire apparatus of government on which undoing the damage he has done depends.

    Unable to win fairly we have seen unprecedented voter suppression and an entirely expected smear campaign.

    Faced with a situation where this smear campaign endangers our nation and its people fighting it isn't scandalous it is noble.

    • harpiaharpyja 1250 days ago
      Right, so you scapegoat your opponents so everything evil becomes justifiable.
      • michaelmrose 1250 days ago
        noun a person who is blamed for the wrongdoings, mistakes, or faults of others, especially for reasons of expediency.

        How is this applicable?

  • nabla9 1250 days ago
    There is no clear principles or policies for censorship or suppression for economic or political reasons. Until there is, we must look each case as single instance.

    That case was hilariously crude attempt at influencing and creating false narratives. The whole thing collapsed quickly but it still had huge impact. Mixing something real and something false makes people accept falsehoods.

    Censoring obvious falsehoods like in this case is not the scandal. The lack of policy principles is. Twitter could have reduced the frequency the links show in the feeds dramatically and nobody would notice. It would be there when you look at it, but it would not propagate. In fact, that's what Twitter and Facebook are doing for commercial reasons.

    • gotoeleven 1250 days ago
      What obvious falsehoods are you talking about?
    • gotoeleven 1250 days ago
      Could someone just explain in simple words why everyone keeps calling this story false or debunked or whatever? Everyone keeps downvoting me and I don't know why. It seems like to debunk this story you'd have to have a journalist do some journalism and figure out why all these companies were giving hunter biden money.
      • PaulAJ 1250 days ago
        The problem is that the whole thing is basically an unsupported allegation. It might be true, but for the time being we have no way of knowing.

        * The material was provided via two of Trumps henchmen, who may or may not have altered it along the way.

        * They gave it to the NYP after Fox News (never one to miss an opportunity to bash the Democrats) turned it down due to lack of provenance.

        * It was originally derived from a laptop that may or may not have been dropped off by Hunter Biden or someone associated with him.

        * The computer repairman at the centre of this has given contradictory explanations of the timeline, how many laptops were involved, and whether he contacted the FBI or the FBI contacted him.

      • akvadrako 1250 days ago
        Nobody can discredit it so they suppress it. It’s the same thing Twitter did for the same reasons.

        For starters it doesn’t even need to be discredited — it just needs to be denied, which it hasn’t been. I mean the basic facts like the authenticity of the laptop/emails or the meeting.

      • nabla9 1250 days ago
        The Burisma story have been repeatedly found to be false.

        Trump Revives False Narrative on Biden and Ukraine https://www.factcheck.org/2020/10/trump-revives-false-narrat...

        Trump's conspiracy theories thrive in Ukraine, where a young democracy battles corruption and distrust. We talked with two dozen leaders and investigators in Ukraine. They all agree the claims against Joe and Hunter Biden are baseless. Yet they persist. https://eu.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/world/2019/10/10/trump...

        The facts behind Trump’s bogus accusations about Biden and Ukraine - Trump claims Biden threatened Ukraine to aid his son’s business interests. The facts suggest otherwise. https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/9/23/20879611/j...

        ----

        The latest NY Post story is just crazy.

        Man Who Reportedly Gave Hunter’s Laptop to Rudy Speaks Out in Bizarre Interview https://www.thedailybeast.com/man-who-reportedly-gave-hunter...

        Hunter Biden’s alleged laptop: An explainer https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/10/14/hunter-bi...

        What we know — and don't know — about Hunter Biden's alleged laptop https://www.cbsnews.com/news/hunter-biden-laptop-new-york-po...

        • akvadrako 1250 days ago
          Most of what you wrote is irrelevant.

          If the basic facts of the story are wrong, like the laptop or emails are not genuine, why don’t the Biden’s deny it?

          • eyeball 1250 days ago
            Some pretty genuine looking video floating around from it.
          • hackinthebochs 1250 days ago
            Repudiable media outlets will generally avoid writing stories about unverifiable claims. But once you deny the claims, then repudiable media outlets can bypass the need for corroboration and write stories on your denials, while also detailing the claims you are denying, which just further spreads the content of the claims.
    • mmastrac 1250 days ago
      Yeah, Twitter managed to kneecap a false narrative before it took hold and influenced an election. If there's a 48h waiting period for questionable stories like this, I'm all for it.
  • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
    [I posted this comment as a child of another comment below, but I think it's important enough to this discussion that I'm reposting it here.]

    To have a sensible conversation, we have to acknowledge what the alleged Biden emails are: at best, stolen information; and at worst, intentionally manipulated or fabricated information. In either case, the information is being released now for the explicit goal of altering the outcome of the election in favor of those who are releasing it.

    We haven't had this issue in history before: it's never been so easy to reach so many people with such bad information. This places intermediaries, including Twitter, in an awkward situation: they can "censor" by restricting access to intentionally misleading information; or they can release it, and thereby become pawns of the bad actors who propagate it.

    As has been pointed out, this is a moral issue. We should step pretending that all censorship is bad, and that compelling intermediaries to publish literally everything is a moral good.

    • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
      At "best" they're evidence of extreme corruption that compromises US national security. The allegations and evidence points to many insider dealings with CCP linked Chinese companies including what appear to be unreported loans from Chinese banks.
      • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
        A cursory reading of the both the data itself and the circumstances by which it came to light will reveal that your interpretation is highly improbable.

        You can believe what you like. But don't ask me to believe that a person took 3 laptops to a repair company in a state where he doesn't live; that the said company was operated by a blind person; that the security camera footage of the delivery of the laptops was erased; that the laptops were unintentionally forgotten there; and that they somehow found their way into the hands of one Rudolph Giuliani.

        To believe that story, you have to be gullible or complicit.

        • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
          Where are you getting this idea that 3 laptops were dropped off to this repair company? There was one laptop.

          The repair shop is in Delaware, where Joe Biden was a senator for many decades and where the Bidens have held various political positions for many decades.

          I suspect that you really don't understand the story that well. That is understandable considering the insane amount of gaslighting, misinformation, and censorship that is going on around it.

          • hackyhacky 1250 days ago
            My apologies: one laptop, three hard drives. My point stands.

            He had been a senator in Delaware, but no longer lived there at the time. Why would he travel across the country to visit a repair shop in the middle of nowhere with a conveniently blind owner and conveniently erased camera footage. There is no universe in which this story is plausible.

            Before accusing me of not understanding the story, please take a moment to read what I wrote. You are contributing to the gaslighting around this topic.

            • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
              They made copies of the hard drive in the laptop? As a software engineer I can assure you that that it is very easy to make copies of a hard drive and I expect that a computer repair guy would know how.

              > He had been a senator in Delaware, but no longer lived there at the time.

              The Bidens have multiple houses in Delaware. There are many pictures leaked from Hunter's laptop that have Delaware in the geocode. If you want to be weird about it you can go look up the Biden family's social media accounts (still up) and see pictures of them at their houses in Delaware.

              It really sounds like you just don't want to believe this. Very cult like behavior.

              • jounker 1250 days ago
                The reporters at the New York Post thought the story was so dubious that they refused to be named in the byline, and the basic premise directly contradicts the historical (and easily verifiable) facts surrounding the Shokin’s removal.
                • googthrowaway42 1250 days ago
                  The reporters who wrote the story were so skeptical of what they wrote they didn't add their names to their own story... that they themselves wrote.

                  That's pretty stupid and unlikely. More likely, people were concerned about the real world ramifications of having their names on the story (e.g. getting killed or harassed).

                  I understand that this is a talking point but use your brain.