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Maybe we shouldn't want a fully decentralized web

179 pointsby talhahover 4 years ago

65 comments

amadeuspagelover 4 years ago
Until now censorship advocates have restricted themselves to demanding that institutions that already have the power to censor use this power. The idea that we should systematically centralize information, to make it possible to censor it, is new and worse. And why stop at IPFS? What about HTTP? Maybe it&#x27;s not such a good idea to allow everyone to have a website. Look at 8chan. Maybe it would be better if all discussion happened under the benevolent moderation of facebook and youtube.<p>I would have thought that even people who are in favor of some censorship recognize that most censorship is not &quot;benevolent&quot;. That even though they might dislike that IPFS will make it harder for facebook and youtube to decide what people are allowed to think, they would like that it will also make it harder for the governments of russia and china, and that this would more then make up for it.
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winstonstimesover 4 years ago
I am actively developing tools for the purpose of evading censorship. I find it disturbing that people have stopped supporting free speech when they stopped liking its content. Disturbing because either these people have caved to yet another mob thought or never believed in the concept at all. I don&#x27;t agree with most of the content I see on my platforms. The content doesn&#x27;t change me, however-- and I refuse the premise that we tech workers know best and therefore must protect the fragile little minds of everyone else.
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dash2over 4 years ago
Interesting. The analogy I reach for is the invention of the printing press. It saw an explosion of pamphlets in Germany, around the Reformation. Luther was one of the great authors. But by the 1520s the ideological opening had led to the Peasants War, and the disaster of Münster (think Waco on a larger scale). Luther himself became disillusioned, and turned more towards the power of the civil authorities and away from unrestricted Bible reading.<p>Yet, in the long run, societies that embraced this chaotic power did better than those that tried to repress it.<p>Will the same be true this time?
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amadeuspagelover 4 years ago
It&#x27;s always curious that the same people who see fascists everywhere want corporations and governments to have the power to censor, without considering that fascists might gain control of these institutions.
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nootropicatover 4 years ago
A very strong argument for free speech is that it&#x27;s the only schelling point that allows for stable peace. When one side in power starts censoring its opposition, the other side rightly sees that as an attack and is likely to react with violence.<p>Eventually the group in power loses it, and the cycle is likely to repeat, only with sides switched. Identical mechanic occurs with religious tolerance. It appears western societies are going to be forced to learn old lessons all over again, paying with blood, again.
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int_19hover 4 years ago
I disagree with the author in very strong terms - but only with their premises, not with their conclusions. The conclusions are accurate - if you believe that the ability to censor public discourse is necessary to maintain a stable and desirable society, then of course IPFS and similar projects are counter-productive.<p>(FWIW it&#x27;s refreshing to actually see this being argued openly and honestly, instead of the usual &quot;of course we support free speech, but ...&quot; tripe.)<p>The parade of horribles presented as evidence is not particularly convincing, though, although bias (either way) can make a big difference here. But while we&#x27;re at it, since the blog post mentioned the Christchurch shooting in 8chan context as an example of the case where censorship would be desirable, I want to talk about the censorship that happened <i>after</i> - specifically, the attempts to take down copies of the terrorist&#x27;s manifesto that were floating around. NZ apparently had some emergency legal powers to criminalize distribution outright, which is bad enough. But the real mess was Australia; they didn&#x27;t have any legal pretext to ban it, but there was a strong social consensus - among people who make decisions, anyway - that &quot;somebody ought to do something&quot;.<p>So, the Australian ISPs made a synchronized <i>private</i> effort to censor it, to the point of domain-blocking several large forums where the manifesto was posted and not removed by the local admins (because it didn&#x27;t violate their lax rules, nor local laws!), while the government caught up on legislation. Effectively, it was a private censorship cartel, and the citizens that didn&#x27;t like the outcome had no recourse - not even the usual democratic mechanisms to repeal the laws etc, since there were no laws involved. This is the kind of stuff that the present non-decentralized structure of the Internet makes possible, and the inherent power makes it a near certainty that it&#x27;ll be abused eventually, whether for cynical political suppression or a do-gooder witch hunt. I&#x27;d rather take my risks with more decentralization - some parts might stink more than others, but at least I&#x27;ll have a choice.
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stnoaeusosnthover 4 years ago
&quot;Islamophobia&quot;, that term which criminalizes religion criticism ... Can&#x27;t wait to live in a world where blasphemy is forbidden again !<p>I guess nowadays: diversity is great, except for opinions. Can&#x27;t wait to see the left crashing itself trying to compose with opposed sides, against homophoby on one hand and against islam criticism on the other, but islam is like christianism and probably other religions: homophobic.<p>Oh, shouldn&#x27;t I be allowed to state that anymore ? Funny world you want to live in, but I guess that&#x27;s what it is when you get confused and believe that your CS degree is worth a pol sci or law degree.
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FreeTradeover 4 years ago
I&#x27;ve been working on a decentralized discussion platform for the past 2 years or so. My view is that the issues that the OP is concerned about arise from an absence of functioning reputation and trust systems. After all, fake news and conspiracy content proliferates on centralized platforms such as YouTube, Facebook and Twitter.<p>While these platforms do moderate some of the worst content, they are reluctant and the problem is too large for them to solve. Only a decentralized approach to trust and reputation will scale well enough to regulate decentralized content. I believe it is the decentralized platforms that will solve this problem first - they need to, while the centralized platforms will continue muddle on with half measures.
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yuvalr1over 4 years ago
I don&#x27;t agree with this article. Every tech can be used for the right and the wrong. The fact something is used in a bad way should not prevent us from building the tech so we can reap the benefits of the good uses it can offer.<p>One example for a decentralized web benefit that I see promising: wouldn&#x27;t it be just amazing if you had something like Facebook, but all the posts were not owned by Facebook? Just think of the possibilities to use your own UI, have your own recommendation algorithm etc... This can be amazing. I deeply want something like. However it cannot be done as long as the data is owned by Facebook.
sixdimensionalover 4 years ago
So what education do we need to know how to utilize total freedom of speech in a civil manner?<p>In other words, what needs to be taught&#x2F;learned that everyone can understand globally and across cultures which helps humanity understand how to get the maximum benefit from this technology and protect oneself from the negative impacts?<p>I mean this honestly and literally, what would you tell or teach people? What would an educational program for this look like? What would it look like for all ages, and cultures and how could we make it universal? Is it even possible?<p>I feel the best way to harness the power and control the outcome in the longest run is to evolve our understanding with intent.<p>Because absolute freedom means without restriction and can tend towards chaos, how do we train humanity???<p>Maybe I&#x27;m on a tangent but I am not sure how to answer this question myself.<p>One thing that came to mind was secular ethics but that is far too complicated to teach directly. And I am not sure if there is any cultural bias in that idea as well.<p>I guess I&#x27;m thinking.. teach, learn and evolve while trying not to force control. I realize even writing it how impossible that sounds, but should we put our energy into cracking this problem?
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timeeaterover 4 years ago
The idea that conspiracy theories transported via the web cause so much damage (&quot;wreak havoc all over the world&quot;, according to the article) is in itself a conspiracy theory. And one that makes for good newspaper articles.<p>9&#x2F;11 happened in 2001 - was it already the result of internet conspiracies? Are there really more incidents now than before?
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cromwellianover 4 years ago
The problem with the idea that &quot;the answer to bad speech&#x2F;misinformation is moar speech!&quot; is that people aren&#x27;t bayesian belief nets who update their beliefs in propositions based on new information.<p>Instead what happens is, information that confirms people&#x27;s existing beliefs is not only heavily weighted, but it is reshared with others. Information that contradicts existing beliefs is filtered.<p>This has the overall effect of reinforcing the bias of a person and their existing social network.<p>So conspiracy theories, propaganda, racism, just flat out wrong information, once it takes root, is very hard to dislodge.<p>We have huge chunks of the population now believing in COVID conspiracies, that hospitals are misreporting to make money, that it&#x27;s a psy-op, that mask and distancing directives were either purely to disadvantage their favored candidate, or exist for some nefarious purpose, and on and on.<p>Maybe this is the real answer to the Great Filter&#x2F;Fermi Paradox -- civilization drowns in a sea of mutually reinforced misinformation.
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toxicForkover 4 years ago
I can empathize with not wanting to be involved with this anymore, which is fair enough, your choice, but there are solutions to the mentioned problems.<p>There are social or technical solutions to the problem of &quot;too much free speech&quot;.<p>There can be decentralised filters set up that can be moderated by communities like democracy. You can have curators of content that can guarantee to bring safe and healthy content to you. You can have decentralised reputation, authority and reward systems for the content creators and the validators. And so on.
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floatingatollover 4 years ago
I agree with the author of this article.<p>HN is a moderated community, which means that various social mores are enforced through behavioral nudges, through voting and flagging, and through ostracism of those who refuse to comply. These constraints upon speech offer a net positive value for participation that a forum of unconstrained speech cannot match.<p>I participate in HN because this forum&#x27;s guidelines refuse the precepts of unconstrained freedom of speech, resulting in a healthy and vibrant community. If HN were an unconstrained speech forum, as many other forums are, then I would not desire to be part of this community — my participation would be of net negative value, and any controversial view I hold would be immediately overrun by abuse, personal attacks, and even doxxing.<p>The first full page of comments on this post are rejecting the viewpoint that a decentralized web would be harmful. I appreciate the cognitive dissonance of such views being posted here in such stridency and quantity, and each other time I see it occur. The passionate participation by those who believe in unconstrained speech demonstrates, through their own participation, that compromising one&#x27;s idealism for the sake of social inclusion is considered acceptable — even when their viewpoint as presented indicates otherwise.
avivoover 4 years ago
I&#x27;ve written about this a bit — might be helpful perspective:<p>&quot;I’ve had many conversations recently with very well meaning people who believe that if we just decentralize everything, it will fix the internet—and perhaps all of society! Decentralize social networks, decentralize money, decentralize the world…if only it was so simple.<p>This is the “magical decentralization fallacy” — the mistaken belief that decentralization on its own can address governance problems.&quot;<p>...<p>&quot;decentralization is clearly helpful in cases where governance and policing infrastructure are tyrannical. But often that isn’t the crucial problem or threat. It definitely isn’t the case in democracies where misinformation and harassment are being used to harm public discourse. In those cases, decentralization just turns a hard centralized problem into a harder coordination problem.&quot;<p>...<p>&quot;There are ways to avoid tyranny while maintaining centralization and monopoly. Most notably, constitutions are specifically structured to avoid tyranny — and are generally based on a system of “overlapping centralizations” with checks and balances. The legislative, executive, and judiciary all “monopolize” governing the same people—and together also have a monopoly on violence.&quot;<p>...<p>&quot;How can we create the competing powers of a multi-centralized social network and [online spaces]?&quot;<p>Full text here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aviv.medium.com&#x2F;the-magical-decentralization-fallacy-69b426d16bdc" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aviv.medium.com&#x2F;the-magical-decentralization-fallacy...</a>
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cblconfederateover 4 years ago
I think the author is objecting to the idea that his content is hosted in the same system and on exactly the same terms as content he finds abhorrent . So he chose to move his stuff elsewhere so he&#x27;s no longer associated with them. But that&#x27;s not a good argument why there shouldn&#x27;t be a space for those voices in the first place.<p>If he s advocating for the latter, that&#x27;s a totalitarian idea.
tjoffover 4 years ago
Decentralization of the web (has also come to?) mean that we shouldn&#x27;t centralize everything to FAANG. And I think it is important to keep those notions separate.<p>And I don&#x27;t necessarily see how decentralized has that much to do with the issues described regarding IPFS. The issue there was more with it being more anonymous and resilient. And I do agree with the author on the downsides, I haven&#x27;t really been a fan of IPFS but it is a neat idea.<p>Though I do believe that keeping internet open and away from google et al. is paramount.
mawiseover 4 years ago
&gt; One of the problems with defending free speech is you often have to defend people that you find to be outrageous and unpleasant and disgusting. - Salman Rushdie<p>As soon as you get behind censorship, you are preventing things like critique of your government that are really really important. The same is true for defending things like encryption to prevent online eavesdropping. It&#x27;s easy for a pro-censorship individual to point to 8chan which is part of why this is such a struggle.
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dweberzover 4 years ago
So freedom of speech is the problem? What the world has become...
richardfeyover 4 years ago
I disagree with the author: tucking away our head from the future is not how we deal with the challenges of such future. We need new perspectives and ideas to cope with the unknown.
heeebeeejeebeesover 4 years ago
as if the regular web doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier. as if the telephone doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier. as if the telegram doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier as if the printing press doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier as if the trained pigeon doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier as if the ink quill doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier as if the smoke signal doesn&#x27;t make illicit activity easier<p>the man is shell shocked, needs a break, thank you for your service, lets keep moving forward!
oscargrouchover 4 years ago
I can see a newspaper in 1994 writing a piece of how they dont want internet because this will give power to the ordinary man. &quot;Internet will do more harm than good&quot; they say. &quot;Stick to whats working, centralized media with centralized control protecting you from all evil there is in the world&quot;. Its fine that you are afraid of the future, but the future will become present whether you want it or not, and i rather have a decentralized future beyond control of big techs and governments, even if this mean giving voice to hate speech.
dweberzover 4 years ago
The fact that they assume that decentralized web equals immutable and global by default shows ignorance. You should take a look at SSB and Radicle, if you want a different dweb than IPFS.
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auganovover 4 years ago
On a purely technical note, something being &quot;fully decentralized&quot; would usually imply low reach. To amplify voices a platform has to be conceptually centralized enough to allow for a common experience. Which comes with the ability to impose rules. People may disagree on what the rules should be, but the great majority do want some.<p>The notion of huge swaths of people being sucked into some totally anonymous decentralized platform with no rules and nobody in charge sounds implausible.
dpc_pwover 4 years ago
Oh, look, another omniscient person protecting all the lesser human beings from the crime of wrongthink. So virtuous, moraly superior. What would we all do without them.
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tomc1985over 4 years ago
This dude&#x27;s issue isn&#x27;t the open web, it&#x27;s social media. There are and will always be those fringe elements, but things really didn&#x27;t start getting bad until the masses adopted Facebook and Twitter
MrsHippyover 4 years ago
Censorship is a conduit to ignorance and is more harmful than &quot;misinformation&quot;. I suppose you believe there is some infallible authority which can sort the truth from lies, but this isn&#x27;t true. The censored will legitimize any information conducive to it&#x27;s own power. You&#x27;re advocating the foundation of &quot;thought crime&quot;, go away.
julianmarqover 4 years ago
&gt; it has also brought out the worst in people<p>I had liked his other article, the one he linked there about the spying app. Showed an ethical baseline of concern for the users that every developer should have, in my opinion.<p>But this, this is <i>not</i> a result of any sort of concern for any user. This article was written clearly out of a self-righteous desire of the author to declare his own morality, and the result is that he ends up looking like he would be okay with <i>controlling</i> the users of whatever he builds.<p>So, as usual for people who make that claim I quoted, he fails to see how his own approach has clearly made <i>him</i> an example of his own words.<p>&gt; [Unrestricted speech in the internet is worse than] criminal activities, terrorism and child pornography<p>Not a good start if the first implication is &quot;online agitators&quot; belonging to the fringe and extremes are somehow worse than actual crimes.<p>They aren&#x27;t.<p>&gt; All these extreme ideas have divided societies and increased social tensions. And they’re responsible for a number of acts of terrorism which caused the death of too many people.<p>This is pretty damning, in that those extreme believes he listed before this are far from the only ideas increasing tensions and leading to terrorism.<p>The more one reads, the more obvious it becomes—as seemingly always happens with defenses of censorship—that his problem is not so much with &quot;unfiltered speech in the internet&quot;, but unfiltered speech in the internet <i>that he disagrees with</i>.<p>&gt; It won’t be because of my help.<p>And here I feel lies the root of the problem, at least in its modern form, and what often causes good intentions to pave the road to hell nowadays: <i>Some</i> people are no longer content with merely having &quot;opinions&quot;; they need to have &quot;stances&quot; now.
chosen1111over 4 years ago
Just ignore people like this and continue to build. There is no reasoning or arguing with them. Eventually there will need to be a micro fork of the internet as it is today that is used like freenet, deep, ipfs etc. eventually sovereignty itself will need to be forked. This will need to exist at hardware level as well. Though this will be moot once you REALLLY want that neura link. But expect a fight from gov and alphabets to ban people using alt tech. And expect non kyc wallets and cryptos to be banned. Expect kyc to be needed to even access the internet regardless of your concent or knowledge of your consent. Expect your DNA sequence to also be stored in goog or elsewhere regardless of your consent. The virus has accelerated this process. If you value your speech use alt tech.
DubiousPusherover 4 years ago
Let me tell you a story of a society which built a liberated but centralized information system.<p>The main TV and radio stations uncritically report the progress of an unprovoked foreign war until one night, one man on one station uncharacteristicaly editorializes against it.<p>Media organizations through their leiason with foreign intelligence report falsely the atrocities of one side of a conflict, ensuring support for the other side which is actually committing atrocities.<p>The most heralded media organization in the nariona suppresses a story through an election which provides irrefutable proof that the state executive is running an illegal spying operation against the citizenry.<p>Is this Soviet Russia? Communist China? Tito&#x27;s Yugoslavia? No, it is the United States prior to ubiquitous internet news.<p>Respectively I refer to Walter Cronkite&#x27;s turn against the Vietnam war at the Tet Offensive, the misinformation campaign levied at the Nicoroguan Sandinistas and the New York Times decision to hold the warrantless wiretapping story until after the 2004 election.<p>I&#x27;m not sure that is a better world. I&#x27;m not sure if we aren&#x27;t just looking at trade-offs, moderated media having its flaws and virtues, unmoderated having its own.<p>It is no wonder we shrink at the trials and tribulations of unmoderated information. They are new. But I think there is a tendency recently to overlook the costs our gatekeepers previously imparted to our society.
askl56over 4 years ago
The issue i find with viewpoints like this are these comments:<p>&gt; In the last few years, completely unregulated online speech has given rise to fake news and conspiracy theories that have actually killed people. It’s offered a megaphone to those promoting dangerous ideas like white supremacy, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, homophobia and other anti-LGBTQ positions, and sometimes outright Nazism. It has tilted many democracies towards right-wing populism and fascism.<p>Perhaps that&#x27;s what people actually think and would have thought regardless of the internet? Every thing listed is well below peak popularity, and anti LGBTQ sentiment for example is the lowest it has ever been with LGBTQ view enjoying widespread grassroots and estalbishment support.<p>Authors like this are simply yearning for the ecstasy of ideological conformity; the dream that they will one day open their web browser and find a world of people who suddenly share their enlightened world view. Instead of criticising others, perhaps they should question their own worldview and whether it would be even remotely normal for everyone to share it.<p>There is nothing more likely to grow those beliefs than to ban them outright. Goebbels was prosecuted for hate crimes in Weimar Germany in 1928[0], and to say such laws were ineffective is to put it mildly.<p>[0] Longerich, Peter (2015). Goebbels: A Biography. New York: Random House. ISBN 978-1400067510.
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nathiasover 4 years ago
People like that will returns us to the dark ages, every year propaganda for censorship is getting stronger and if in the past censorship was limited to actually published works, this time around it will be ubiquitous.
forgotmypw17over 4 years ago
In the end, someone has to host the content.<p>Building a decentralized web puts the choice whether to enable and propagate whatever content in the hands of the user, rather than the &quot;cloud&quot;.<p>I think that&#x27;s a good thing.
INTPenisover 4 years ago
I feel it&#x27;s hard to comment this without getting political but trust me, I am not the type to force anything on people.<p>Just imho all systems are flawed and a big centralized system is flawed in a catastrophic way.<p>At the same time I want humans to work together. That&#x27;s why federation seems like the best way. Not just how the fediverse speaks between AP instances, but also how nations speak to each other in fora like the EU parliament and the UN.<p>Just like IRL I want us to keep our little bubbles of sub-cultures online, but to federate with other bubbles and sub-cultures.<p>For example I do not believe Mastodon did the right thing by implementing a hard coded ban of certain instances.<p>That&#x27;s a discussion for another day but I&#x27;ve met several converted neo-nazis who might not have changed if it wasn&#x27;t for activists making contact with them and not giving up. Something made impossible by a global ban. Each instance should be allowed to ban what they want.<p>A centralized anything suddenly means we&#x27;re making big decisions centrally on who to exclude and who to include.
Ericson2314over 4 years ago
Blaming the current situation on unmitigated free speech is such a blatantly non-materialist take I&#x27;m just left agape.
kbrwnover 4 years ago
The holier than thou these ideas are bad and we must deplatform them from the left is getting old quick.<p>The sense of entitlement to other people&#x27;s servers and code by the right is just as annoying.<p>90% of this issue could be solved by forcing social media companies to clearly identify when an account is a bot or follow mainly by bots.
kunfuuover 4 years ago
IMHO alternative solutions are possible.<p>All effects aren&#x27;t caused by a single factor. Free speech as a causal factor may enable an unfortunate causal path, but we can weaken this path by attenuating or removing its enabling antecedents, or by adding or amplifying its mitigating decedents. As such, multiple solutions to a problem that corresponds to a causal path exist.<p>Our values and understanding decide what solutions we seek. If a person doesn&#x27;t recognize or underestimate the benefits of free speech, this person may accept or prefer a large degree of censorship as the straightforward solution.<p>Of course, finding an alternative solution needs insight and broad knowledge, which perhaps isn&#x27;t that commonplace, even in academia.
slx26over 4 years ago
I like that people write about this kind of things, as it shows they care about the direction they are walking towards. The essay is more an exposition of uncertainty and personal preference than actual arguments, but it&#x27;s a good start to get more people talking about it. So let&#x27;s do that.<p>I&#x27;d like to focus on one point: when you have millions of people interconnected, even &quot;radical&quot; ideas can find a place and resonate with others, and even become amplified. Gwern&#x27;s &quot;the melancholy of subculture society&quot; [0] might be a good introduction to the topic. This is not inherently good or bad. We might be afraid of nazis of whatever, but the same dynamics also benefit oppressed groups and minorities for whom anonymity and this opportunity to connect with other people in similar situations is highly beneficial. I recently watched a video where Diana Fleischman presented this argument in favor of anonymity: without it, there might be no escape from certain totalitarian and manipulative regimes. Now, you might pick a side if you want. The truth is that we see examples of both in today&#x27;s world. You might say that education could help with extremist views, so we shouldn&#x27;t give up on decentralized, anonymous, uncensorable networks. You might say the same about totalitarian regimes or centralized monopolistic powers.<p>From a practical perspective, I think a good start is to acknowledge that decentralized and uncensorable networks already have good proofs of concept, and that in the future they will indeed become accessible to everyone. The question is not whether they will become mainstream or not, but what are the challenges we have to prepare ourselves for in case they do become mainstream. And to do that we need a deeper understanding of the dynamics of these small groups, and, in general, of online interaction. And again, this is already happening, even if decentralized networks could make this even more common. So I think the best path forward is to start educating people on the &quot;dark sides&quot; of online interaction: how the lack of eye contact and physical presence allows you to express yourself with less consideration of others (they can&#x27;t punch you back even if you are rude), how echo chambers work, how extremist views are amplificated online because it&#x27;s almost the only medium where they can expand through (and how that&#x27;s not an accurate reflection of the average perspective on a topic), how conversation is highly decontextualized, how addiction, FOMO and infinite scroll impair our attention and might even induce a feeling or sense of detemporalization in our lives, etc. Summarizing, how online conditioning makes us act as different creatures than in real life, and the need to be able to tell those creatures appart, both in others and ourselves. Of course, real life has its own share of conditioning too. What&#x27;s even the real you. Have fun.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gwern.net&#x2F;The-Melancholy-of-Subculture-Society" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.gwern.net&#x2F;The-Melancholy-of-Subculture-Society</a>
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Lammyover 4 years ago
&gt; When I first read about IPFS, my mind immediately saw it as an exciting new platform I could build my apps for.<p>Person who sees IPFS and immediately thinks &quot;Oh boy, untapped market!&quot; wants to tell me why free speech is bad.
deftover 4 years ago
Oh dear. This blog needs to stop being posted here. Two straight days where all he says is &quot;this tech is actually bad I&#x27;m not going to use it anymore and neither should you&quot;
laretluvalover 4 years ago
Discussions about censorship like this tend to take a sort of God’s eye view—-should we have censorship or not, as if ny of us get to decide and implement whatever we want.<p>Here’s a more practical question. Suppose there are two alternative social networks, one censored and one uncensored. Which one would gain market share?<p>Which is to say, this debate may not be settled via argumentation. But rather, the technical viability of uncensored networks, plus people’s free choices, may mean that we don’t get to decide at all.
timdaubover 4 years ago
From where I am, free speech is with a few exceptions (Germany: Holocaust denial) implemented.<p>&gt; I have seen, and I am seeing every day, the dangers of completely unrestricted speech<p>IMO, it&#x27;s important to point out that from a simple definitions standpoint, speech can only be free when it&#x27;s unrestricted. And also I believe that free speech isn&#x27;t dangerous when speech is free. Speech starts to become dangerous when it gets constraint e.g. by force or power.<p>And then another comment as a software dev that worked since 2014 in crypto: Just because we have decentralized technology that can be used by the badys and the goodies, doesn&#x27;t mean we&#x27;ll have to consume both their content.<p>Centralized&#x2F;controlled views are always possible and work well today already (e.g. what Google displays vs what is the actual content of the web).
enriqutoover 4 years ago
Just ten years ago I would have found impossible to believe that the american left would be champions against freedom of speech and cold-war style russia blaming.
cinquembover 4 years ago
For every technically competent blog author out there that (was, but no longer) into IPFS &#x2F; decentralized web, probably many more who just want to make one aspect of their decentralized web they experience today better for themselves without the need to evangelize (against) it, thus slowly make it more powerful for more people rather than the few who control the central nodes today.
Animatsover 4 years ago
Most of those problems come from anonymity. Especially from the ability to generate large numbers of fake identities. This is the fundamental problem with fully decentralized systems. Email and telephony suffer from this. It&#x27;s why Facebook has a &quot;real names&quot; policy, although they&#x27;re soft on it.<p>Non-anonymous free speech is much less of a problem.
txmachineryover 4 years ago
&quot;Maybe we shouldn&#x27;t want&quot; is a strange statement. It simultaneously appears to acknowledge widespread desire for something, along with an apparent minority view that wanting that thing is bad. In the context of a democracy, the argument ends before it begins.<p>Maybe we shouldn&#x27;t want to write &quot;maybe we shouldn&#x27;t want&quot;?
betwixthewiresover 4 years ago
&gt;I have seen, and I am seeing every day, the dangers of completely unrestricted speech, and I don’t want to be the one enabling that.<p>Sums it up. I hate to be the guy to say that. If you do not agree with the quote I posted you&#x27;re probably going to have a fundamental disagreement with the title and just about everything in the article.
seibeljover 4 years ago
&gt; <i>I have seen, and I am seeing every day, the dangers of completely unrestricted speech, and I don’t want to be the one enabling that.</i><p>No thanks, I like choosing my own information, I don’t need an expert to filter “safe” information for me.
_a1_over 4 years ago
I think this blog post should be taken down or at least mostly censored, because it promotes depression. I don&#x27;t want to see posts like that on the internet. Children can stumble upon it and find links to nazi content.
cutemonsterover 4 years ago
&gt; I understand that my opinion is somehow a minority one<p>I for one age with you, and I have noticed these things myself on one or more decentralized anonymous discussion sites (and that made me lose interest and leave)
fulafelover 4 years ago
What are some p2p platforms and techs that have the best content &#x2F; productive uses? BitTorrent, email, Mastodon, DNS, WebRTC and Tor come to mind for me. What makes them different?
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jjk166over 4 years ago
The irony of using a personal blog to warn of the dangers of letting people freely voice their opinions without centralized moderation.
bitcuriousover 4 years ago
&gt; It’s offered a megaphone to those promoting dangerous ideas like white supremacy, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, homophobia and other anti-LGBTQ positions, and sometimes outright Nazism.<p>One should note that every one of these ideas flourished in times and regimes with strict and sometimes totalitarian control of speech. From the anti-Islamist Crusades to the criminalization of queerness to the damn Holocaust, all of the cited problems of free speech had their hay day in times and places without it. What progress has been made to fight these ills only occurred because of the right to say the unpopular.
vmceptionover 4 years ago
In the IPFS model, you can regulate the pins.<p>The nodes can have software that lets them know a pin has been flagged and they can decide what to do automatically or manually.
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iyotaover 4 years ago
If you won&#x27;t do it. Others will =(
gorgonzolachzover 4 years ago
I wonder if there will ever be an answer to this question, at least in regards to free services on the internet[0].<p>Centralized services will always have incentives that are orthogonal to their users, because anyone who isn&#x27;t paying for a product with cash is &quot;paying&quot; by allowing their data to be harvested. They may provide strong moderation at their discretion, but that will never be one-size-fits-all (see: the bipartisan section 230 repeal arguments in the US) - there&#x27;s not a balance here that people won&#x27;t find a way to politicize.<p>Federated protocols create perverse incentives to lock in users so they can&#x27;t switch providers and to differentiate their service from neighbours using non-standard protocol deviations. These moves create insular communities where self-hosted participants are left out to dry through entirely defensible actions such as spam prevention systems (like big email providers junking&#x2F;refusing to deliver mail from &quot;untrustworthy&quot; sources). Even relatively new protocols are wrestling with this problem - Matrix recently put out a document discussing a federated reputation system for servers to judge other servers. This will inevitably turn them into pseudo-centralized protocols, like email is today.<p>Decentralized protocols, like the ones in the article, are filled with all the people who&#x27;ve been banned from the centralized servers and kicked out by federated server admins. It&#x27;s not surprising to me in the least that decentralized servers host objectionable content; without any meaningful form of network-wide moderation you have no way to cut out the bad actors from your network&#x27;s discovery mechanisms. Anything approaching network-wide moderation would rely on some kind of network topology approaching a federated system.<p>I think part of it might be that humans are just inherently horrible. Not all of us, and not all the time, but enough to ruin the experience for everyone. I suppose it was easier when our ancestors lived in tribes of a couple of hundred individuals, but now that the entire globe is a text message away we&#x27;re coming to grips with the fact that there&#x27;s far more &quot;objectionable&quot; material out there than we previously thought. As with other problems of human nature, I don&#x27;t think the problem or the resulting solution will come from tech alone. Rather, I imagine it&#x27;ll take society as a whole a few decades to come to grips with the fact that everything is public for everyone, and power in the real world doesn&#x27;t necessarily mean a whole lot on the internet.<p>[0] Paid services obviously have a different calculus ascribed to them, but with the way the internet has evolved there&#x27;s a prerequisite discussion to be had about whether paid services will be able to catch on in the world today. Social networks, for example, rely on network effects, which are (to my understanding) a non-starter if your service isn&#x27;t free. This is especially true if prices aren&#x27;t adjusted for the developing world where people have even less discretionary income than in, say, California.
julienreszkaover 4 years ago
I can&#x27;t tell if this is satire. Looks very much like it. Does anybody else thinks the same?
throwitaway1235over 4 years ago
Controlling human thought at scale, shouldn&#x27;t be decided by humans. Too much responsibility involved, considering we&#x27;re all subject to biases.
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scottlocklinover 4 years ago
Imagining Marconi or Alexander Graham Bell storming off in a huff because someone said shit they don&#x27;t like using their technology. Technology which obviously has been used for far more horrible things collectively than the internet or .... IPFS.<p>This attitude, however popular it may be among the coddled infants of current year, is a form of barbarism. Being threatened by <i>ideas</i> is hilariously insecure unless you believe your ethical and ontological system is a network of lies. Hell current year ding dongs fall apart into a froth at the mere writing of <i>words</i> -let alone the formation of them into something resembling <i>ideas.</i><p>FWIIW IPFS is amazing, and fortunately doesn&#x27;t need the contributions of such people to thrive.
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AsyncAwaitover 4 years ago
Many comments seem to be fine with removing propaganda, which is fine, but historically states declare uncomfortable truths as propaganda, including Western democracies.<p>Would people saying Iraq doesn&#x27;t have WMDs in 2003 be pushing propaganda?
richardARPANETover 4 years ago
TLDR; Blog author is pro-censorship but was working on tech to prevent censorship, so decided to quit doing that.
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forest_dwellerover 4 years ago
&gt; Instead, I think that regular people’s writings on the Internet is hurting the world on a bigger scale. And the collective sentiment is often manipulated by some “agitators” that are exploiting anonymous online speech for their own agendas: that includes online militias–for example sponsored by foreign governments–whose goal is to destabilize a society.<p>People seem to think the censoring ideas makese them go away. Nothing can be further from the truth. It just moves it elsewhere. If people are motivated they will find a way to get their message out there.<p>&gt; In the last few years, completely unregulated online speech has given rise to fake news and conspiracy theories that have actually killed people. It’s offered a megaphone to those promoting dangerous ideas like white supremacy, Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, homophobia and other anti-LGBTQ positions, and sometimes outright Nazism. It has tilted many democracies towards right-wing populism and fascism.<p>Anti-semitism has been around 100s (if not 1000s) of years. Nazism was most prevalent in the 1930s to the mid 1940s. Homophobia and anti-LGBTQ views have been existed since the beginning of time I would wager. The last time I checked that was well before the internet was around.<p>AS for the the move towards populism (by the way there is left wing populism as well) and facism is because politicians don&#x27;t address valid concerns around thorny subjects like immigration, whereas people outside the overton window will talk about those subjects. This isn&#x27;t a problem with free speech it is a problem with these issues not being discussed and addressed by those in power in a serious manner.<p>As for propaganda (which is what meant by fake news) has been around since pen was put to paper.<p>&gt; Second, while almost everyone in the communities supporting a distributed web are good people, with good intentions, seeing some names in there is concerning to me. Regarding IPFS, advocates (at least for a while) included people like Nick Lim of BitMitigate and VanwaNet, companies responsible for rescuing, among others, pro-nazi website The Daily Stormer and the platform 8chan, a cesspool full of Nazi propaganda, child pornography, and other hate speech.<p>This is the same crap old crap from governments and traditional news outlets to justify spying on their citizens and other privacy violations, which I am sure many people on here are opposed to.<p>&gt; Gatherings on 8chan have been blamed for at least three mass shootings in 2019 alone, including the one in the mosque in Christchurch, all of them motivated by racial hatred.<p>The same can be said about more mainstream websites and communication services. IIRC the Christchurch shooter streamed the shooting on facebook.<p>&gt; The first real examples of the distributed web aren’t particularly encouraging either. Among some of the most popular apps (“popular” in relative terms, of course) for the distributed web is DTube, a sort of YouTube that is built on top of IPFS. As you can expect, the website is full of questionable content, including conspiracy theories, cryptocurrency scams, weapons, RT International’s Russian propaganda… and of course, porn.<p>Not porn! Porn has never got onto the web before, we better stop this right now. &#x2F;sarcasm<p>People used make the same criticism of large successful services we have today like Youtube, Reddit, Vimeo by saying the content was trite or dangerous. They used to same thing about novels in the 18th century.<p>-----------<p>Ultimately his lamentations will be meaningless. Someone will pick up where he left off and continue the effort.
SergeAxover 4 years ago
&gt; All these extreme ideas have divided societies<p>Ideas do not divide societies. Inequality do.
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tw25261371over 4 years ago
&gt; It has tilted many democracies towards right-wing populism and fascism.<p>&quot;Left-wing populism: OK. The right-wing flavor: not so much,&quot; is what I read out of pieces like this. That reading tends to be confirmed when you look at any given author&#x27;s other recent takes, esp. on social media, to try to get a sense for their total perspective, including where their blindspots are. Outside of the obvious concerns, the thing that bugs me most is that because this and similar pieces are (correctly) thought of as a &quot;left&quot; call-to-action, and the left in the US has been associated with the tag &quot;liberal&quot;, then people have become used to using the terms interchangeably, and they continue to do so, even when the new mainstream left&#x27;s philosophy is rooted in fundamentally illiberal desire to quash. I recently listened to a Glenn Greenwald interview where, even in the midst of a long, impassioned argument regarding his departure at The Intercept, he slipped into going along with the misapplied &quot;Liberal&quot; label when what he was referring to was the left. This ultimately leads to more newly minted opponents for liberals.<p>It&#x27;s easy to see what&#x27;s going on. The author of this piece and many others once upon a time purported to espouse a certain set of principles, because it was fashionable and a socially expedient thing to do for the time, especially in the context of what it was a reaction to. The author eventually puts some thought into it and subsequently adopts a public stance matching what was privately true all along—revealing how little they value the things they said they did. The author then uses public messages like this one to signal that the earlier reactionary phase is over. This indicates to other fairweather philosophers that they, too, should now move into the new phase and adopt the new reactionary stance.<p>The level of sophism involved is important to keep in mind when trying to have a discussion. Principles here don&#x27;t really matter, not even the ones which are said to underpin the new stance. Trying to have a principled discussion, therefore, or to attempt to work your way through a reasoned argument, is just going to be a waste of time and energy. It&#x27;s still important to do it, but it&#x27;s also important to understand what it&#x27;s (not) going to achieve and be conscious of how you can better spend your resources.
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i4kover 4 years ago
Imagine a world where you can create a blog and write anything, even discuss ideas against the &quot;status quo&quot;. That&#x27;s the world the OP lives now and he&#x27;s arguing against it.<p>The &quot;status quo&quot; in the dark ages was: bigotry, fanaticism, supremacism, conspiratorial theories, anti-science, slavery, and so on. At this time, writing anything against the masses beliefs would lead to persecution and death. People died trying to educate others and at the same time others extremist ideas were born but the society learned to ignore them. The good ideas were victorious.<p>Remember: On May 10, 1933 around 25,000 books from 34 university towns in Germany were burned! Some of those books were unique, their ideas will never be known by society.<p>If you go back in time, 50 years, 100 years, 1000 years back, whatever, the society always approved horrendous ideas and few people fought back. You should never trust the &quot;status quo&quot; or the &quot;justice warriors&quot; of the internet, as they could easily be on the wrong side of history. The access to information is the solution not the problem.<p>In my opinion, asking for censorship shows no respect for the ones that died trying to change the world.
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