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US Will Not Sign Christchurch Call Against Online Extremism (axios.com) 503

The U.S. will not sign onto the "Christchurch call to action" against online extremism expected to be released Wednesday, citing concerns that the pact would violate free speech protections in the First Amendment, the Washington Post reports. From a report: The document, negotiated by New Zealand and French officials as a commitment to study and stop the spread of online extremism that motivated the Christchurch mosque shootings earlier this year, is expected to be signed by Australia, Canada and the U.K., among others. It also has the support of major U.S. tech companies, including Facebook and Google, whose platforms were used to livestream and host videos of the attack.
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US Will Not Sign Christchurch Call Against Online Extremism

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  • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @12:52PM (#58596786) Homepage Journal
    Who in this accord is the authority over what speech should be banned?
    • Maybe that could be determined if there was some sort of link to said accord. But that would require journalism.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The never-ending sliding scale of the left.

      What's normal speech now can be labeled as hate speech in 10 years.

      • by Archangel Michael ( 180766 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:09PM (#58596952) Journal

        The "OK" hand signal (Horrible, awful, disgraceful) is now a "white supremacy" symbol. But only for certain groups. Other groups can flash it no problem.

        Hell, I wouldn't be surprised to see the White Supremacy groups adopt the Chicago Cubs Stylized "C" as a symbol (Caucasian), just to piss off everyone in Chicago.

        The problem with silencing certain forms of speech is twofold. It can be gamed (see my example above), and substitute speech will replace the banned speech, leading to increasingly fewer forms of communication. Example, You really can't say "retard" any longer without people getting upset, however it was a perfectly good word before (and still is). But now, we can't use that word, so we start using new words ... like "special" (with air quotes).

        The point being, those that think they are changing anything are only fooling themselves. Speech needs to be free from interference. Even speech we don't like, which is the kind that needs the most protection.

        • Unfettered freedom of speech can also be gamed, as Facebook has routinely demonstrated. So, we need a third option.

        • > You really can't say "retard" any longer without people getting upset,

          That's fucking retarded.

          Didn't South Park make fun of this stupidity in S19E8?

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Solandri ( 704621 )

          The "OK" hand signal (Horrible, awful, disgraceful) is now a "white supremacy" symbol. But only for certain groups. Other groups can flash it no problem.

          Hell, I wouldn't be surprised to see the White Supremacy groups adopt the Chicago Cubs Stylized "C" as a symbol (Caucasian), just to piss off everyone in Chicago.

          The problem with silencing certain forms of speech is twofold. It can be gamed (see my example above), and substitute speech will replace the banned speech, leading to increasingly fewer form

          • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @03:45PM (#58598220) Journal

            It even goes beyond just what is spoken. For example, David Webb [politicon.com] is a nationally syndicated conservative radio commentator. He was called out by CNN's Areva Martin [arevamartin.com] about his white privilege [usatoday.com], because he was taking the conservative stance. Never mind that Webb is black.

            Now what a person says automatically creates a biased image in their mind. Only "white men" can be conservative... And thus, to shut down "white supremacy" you just need to shut down conservative discussion and opinions. Because - white privilege, even if you're black.

        • The "OK" hand signal (Horrible, awful, disgraceful) is now a "white supremacy" symbol. But only for certain groups. Other groups can flash it no problem.

          It's been a while since I dove but I do wonder if every SCUBA diver ever is now considered a racist, as the OK sign in several variations is part of the standard means we communicate status and intent. (https://www.sportdiver.com/scuba-diving-hand-signals-every-diver-should-know)

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @03:35PM (#58598134) Homepage Journal

          The OK hand signal is used unironically by white supremacists. That means two things:

          - If someone uses that symbol in a context where it would seem to suggest support for white supremacy, they are probably a white supremacist. Or, at the very least, a 4chan edgelord.

          - If there is any danger of you being mistaken for a white supremacist, maybe because you are hanging around other white supremacists for some reason or because of the things you say, it's probably best to avoid making that gesture.

          Nothing to do with freedom of speech, everything to do with idiots and actual white supremacists.

    • Easy algorithm (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If the speech advocates violence against others because of their beliefs and not their actions, then it's hate speech.

      For example, hating all Jews because of some fairy tales and advocating their extermination, is hate speech.

      On the other hand, calling for other Palestinians to fight Israel's apartheid policies and their excessive use of force and their tendency to steal land from Palestinians and justify it because of "security", then that's a call to defend the downtrodden and those who are themselves be

      • If the speech advocates violence against others because of their beliefs and not their actions, then it's hate speech.

        So what if someone were to advocate arresting and jailing (which is technically a form of violence) people up who believe that western civilization should be destroyed and its citizens killed? I might disagree with that statement on the grounds of freedom of conscious (providing this was only a belief and there were no actions taken against us in the west) but I would never regard this idea as "hate speech".

        That's the problem with laws against hate speech. They are designed to target truly vile individu

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Why ban speech, that already exists, take it to court and ban it there, each and every time.

      Just make social media sites and the corporations behind them criminally and civilly liable for the work they publish on a for profit basis. Simply declare real name social media platforms legal liable as 'PUBLISHERS' of that content. Do that, and they will become a whole lot more careful.

      This could be claimed to curtail free speech but pseudonym sites could remain as inherently with an imaginary name, an imaginar

      • The US leads the world in online growth because it protects web sites from being liable for things customers post.

        A senator proposed what you suggested, and his reason can be summarized as facebook "doesn't hide what the government wants them to hide", so the government will take away their safe protections.

        This is government censorship, when laws are motivated by politicians twisting the arms of citizens to adhere to speech codes. The SC has overturned seemingly constitutional laws before when it discover

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:28PM (#58597078)

      If you read the actual cal https://www.christchurchcall.c... [christchurchcall.com] then you will see that they do not say that anything should be banned that is not already so.

      Ensure effective enforcement of applicable laws that prohibit the production or dissemination of terrorist and violent extremist content, in a manner consistent with the rule of law and international human rights law, including freedom of expression.

      So they are not forcing any governments to ban stuff, just that each country actually applies the laws, on the Internet, that they already have. Nothing more.

    • I can't find the text online, but the articles I find make it sound like a pointless feelgood resolution that at best will have a couple of studies come out of it.

      So far the only real action I could find is facebook is banning streamers for 30 days after 1 infraction. The only trouble I see with this is abuse. A YouTube I like, Cult of Dusty, lost his Facebook & Twitter accounts to anti-SJW trolls after he pushed back on the YouTube atheist community's shift in that direction (seriously, 2/3rds of t
  • Good (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @12:53PM (#58596792)

    Free speech needs to stay free. Regardless of one nut.

  • good (Score:4, Insightful)

    by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @12:56PM (#58596816)

    I'd argue that plenty of mainstream speech is even deadlier extremist speech, for example in the USA our government and media spread propaganda to attack those that didn't attack us, destabilize governments, support oppressive regimes, etc.

    Worse by far than most "hate" speech in terms of body count of innocents and those maimed or put into destitution.

  • Good! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by pecosdave ( 536896 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @12:59PM (#58596838) Homepage Journal

    International accords are often international conglomerate power-grabs.

    Some of you folks in Europe can relate, it's like one day you went to bed in your own country and woke up in the EU......

    More or less a trade agreement right?

  • Good (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:04PM (#58596902)

    Here's the text:
    https://www.christchurchcall.com/call.html

    Here's some of the stuff it means if a government signs on:

    "Accelerate research into and development of technical solutions to prevent the upload of and to detect and immediately remove terrorist and violent extremist content online, and share these solutions through open channels, drawing on expertise from academia, researchers, and civil society."

    Is this something you want the federal government doing?

    How about:

    "Develop effective interventions, based on trusted information sharing about the effects of algorithmic and other processes, to redirect users from terrorist and violent extremist content."

    There's a bunch of stuff there about "terrorist and violent extremist content", but obviously no legal definition.

    There's also a bunch of conditions whose only interpretation is "governments will fund giant technocracies to develop... stuff".

  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:07PM (#58596930)
    This is one of the few controversial issues on which I agree with the current administration. I don't know when liberals abandoned the principle of free speech and conservatives embraced it, but I consider myself an "old-fashioned liberal" (i.e. pro free speech) on this issue.

    I also think slashdot handles this better than any other site I have used - allowing anonymous commenting, leaving offensive posts up, but requiring you to push a button to see them.

    • Originally, I was on your side but after actually reading what they would be agreeing to, [christchurchcall.com] I disagree that it would infringe on free speech because it explicitly states it would be for shoring up, "terrorist and violent extremist content". You may claim that is vague but in fact it has some very specific legal definitions per the FBI and DHS.

      Additionally, had the White House agreed, there would be no additional action by the government beyond encouraging companies to keep things in check which is arguably f

      • by thereddaikon ( 5795246 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:55PM (#58597310)

        Please tell me who gets to determine what is and isn't violent and extremist content? Today people are being called Nazis for having the same political opinions they had half a decade ago. You can't make legally binding agreements on such loose wording. The agreement in effect gives the signatories a blank check to censor anything they deem extremist.

      • by OYAHHH ( 322809 )

        What this really boils down to is the current US President doesn't want to take any actions that may upset his supporters.

        Really?

        Have you noticed what Twitter and Facebook and Google and Apple have been doing to Conservative accounts they don't agree with recently?

        It ALL boils down to, if this legislation were agreed to, who decides what speech is okay and what isn't okay. And that in any context is unacceptable.

      • Problem is that on many campuses today the concept that words are violence has started to gain credibility.

        https://www.nationalreview.com... [nationalreview.com]

        By redefining violence to include speech with which you disagree you effectively give free reign to censor anything. While I'm certainly opposed to things like 'beat that guy up', the term has been redefined to include hate or offensive speech. With hate speech having become a dog whistle for right of center speech your effectively giving someone the right to shut down a large portion of the populations free speech rights. That's the issue.

    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      "If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor." --Desmond Tutu [wikiquote.org]

      Stay classy, America!

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      Maybe you were just a libertarian who voted liberally? To some, Free speech is only important when you are the underdog trying to get your voice heard. Once you feel you're the majority its time to quash and oppress anyone who contradicts or disagree's with you. This is the basis of fascism, but don't tell them that, they think being part of a group labeled ANTIFA makes them exempt from behaving fasciously. There has been quite the power-grab lately with all abandon to the 'principle's claimed to value. New

      • Maybe you were just a libertarian who voted liberally? To some, Free speech is only important when you are the underdog trying to get your voice heard. Once you feel you're the majority its time to quash and oppress anyone who contradicts or disagree's with you.

        I'm not libertarian, because there are too many problems that can't be solved without coordinated action. However, I basically agree in that I've realized most of what passes for liberalism is not people fighting for common sacrifice for greater c

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      I don't know when liberals abandoned the principle of free speech and conservatives embraced it,

      Both of them have. They just both want to censor something different.

      It changes every 5 minutes. I have friends on both sides of the spectrum, and they all seem to want to censor someone. My right-ish family wants to FaceBook to censor ISIS terrorist propoganda, celebrities who take a knee at football games, and I forget what the most recent example was. My left-ish friends want to censor anything that they think is too violent, like the videos of the Christchurch killing. I forget which side wanted to

    • See here [vox.com].

      The right wing has a very large, very well funded media apparatus whose job is to make their constituents feel like they're under continuous attack. Once somebody believes they're under attack you can talk them into damn near anything if you offer to protect them.

      Take a look at who actually runs the gov't and you'll find it's overwhelmingly right wing, especially where it matters like in Economics. For example, the same Goldman Sachs folks have been running our Treasury and setting economic
  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:15PM (#58596980) Journal

    Our rules for free speech and free press stem from documents put together long ago ... our Constitution and Bill of Rights.

    Most countries in the world have their own standards which are typically far less forgiving than ours, but I find we've already made plenty of exceptions for speech that's deemed a risk of causing physical harm to others (the proverbial yelling "Fire!" in crowded theaters and so on).

    We're good.

  • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Wednesday May 15, 2019 @01:30PM (#58597092)
    New Zealand, France, Google, Facebook, etc are not encumbered by the first amendment to the US constitution. The US government has to allow ugly, disturbing and ignorant speech up to the point that it attempts to incite violence. Not metaphorically incite, but actually incite. Not "hurt my feeling" violence, but actual physical violence.
  • So in the United States I have free speech protections that insure I can suggest the president should be killed, and the government won't retaliate against me in any way? Or is it okay to suggest that Muslims be killed, just not politicians?
  • Lets all become homeless and unemployed.... there lowest common denominator solution across the board. Now isn't that better than the widdeling down slowly to get to the point called despotism?

  • If this accord had specific language about "muslim extremism", Trump would approve that shit in a heartbeat.

    He's afraid that if he does anything to slow down the bloodthirsty white supremacist domestic terror groups that it would shrink his base.

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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