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In all my experience using wikipedia it has been successful at providing facts and accurate references.

I don't mean to attack the speaker here, but that former cofounder of wikipedia you just cited... isn't he an extremist neo-conservative? Why did he leave wikipedia in the first place? What are his proposed solutions?


Science is the result of the scientific method.

Whether you agree with science is up to you, and you can voice your opinion on it because in US we have the bill of rights ( thank you, founding fathers... )

But voicing an opinion and labeling it science, without using the scientific method, that's ignorance.


Tell that to the Indian government, who straight put US webtech corporations in their place recently. By the way, what is Variety.com ? It's a name I recall hearing before, but what corporation owns Variety?

Edit: Looks like variety is owned by PMC https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Variety_%28magazine%29


Well, I don't even want to touch the first part of this comment, there are smarter people than I that can put that logical fallacy to sleep.

Also, please don't be disingenuous, it is entirely feasible and reasonable to legally distinguish between a blog with 10 monthly visitors, and a corporation with 100 million monthly visitors.


> there are smarter people than I that can put that logical fallacy to sleep.

I won't claim to be smarter than you, but I will attempt to provide some justification for your assertion that "corporations need constitutional rights" is a fallacy.

Firstly, the idea of corporate personhood is a much later invention than the US Constitution itself, and seems to have developed almost by accident.[0] But regardless of its provenance, it is still clear that a natural person and a corporate "person" are two legally distinct classes of entity. To pick a trivial example, corporations are not entitled to vote (or be counted towards congressional representation).

More generally, corporations are not inherent features of the world, but rather legal fictions which exist at the discretion of the society that chooses to grant them existence. A society could, for example, require that all corporations be dissolved, without bumping into the constitutional issues that would arise if such a law was applied to natural persons...

Anyway, it seems to me that the argument for protecting "corporate speech" (such as the ACLU's support of Citizens United[1]) is that as long as corporations exist and are useful vehicles for natural persons to exercise their constitutional right to free speech, then the government can't help but infringe on the First Amendment by targeting that "corporate speech". To say that corporations need constitutional rights is to get the argument exactly backwards.

Instead, the government should put a positive duty onto social media to protect freedom of speech, by forbidding terms of service which ban users based on their (legal) political opinions. Such a regulation need only apply to platforms which are of a size where they are likely to have a disproportionate effect on the national political discourse.

This is not too far removed from existing First Amendment jurisprudence which does allow the government to force health warnings and correct labelling onto products. In fact I would say that a website shouldn't be able to present itself as "social media" if it systematically excludes views that are popular in that society, so the analogy to labelling laws isn't that much of a stretch.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_personhood#In_the_Un...

[1] https://www.aclu.org/other/aclu-and-citizens-united


Far be it for me to get sucked into politics, but I think the difference here can be explained that more evidence came out. It is only now becoming clear exactly how detrimental, and for how long the CCP has been obstructing investigations.

The more time that passes, the more clear it is that there is some obstructionism, and that makes the CCP look guilty.

I don't think either US political party said that no further scrutiny should be applied. Everyone wanted more investigation.

I also think that we should focus on the issue. If you want to make another issue about bias in the mainstream media, that's a much larger can of worms, and I definitely support that and agree with you.


Article is from 2017


This isn't a left vs right issue, it's a top vs bottom issue.


This is one of the biggest use cases for "crypto assets" that I can think of. Perhaps the only one, aside from ring of trust and public key distribution.


Nuclear is superior no doubt, but it's asinine to dismiss solar power outright.


nano to name one


The one that just suffered a massive spam attack despite having less than $1 billion of value accrued on it?

https://www.coindesk.com/nanos-network-flooded-spam-nodes-ou...


Why? Are you saying that countries should start adopting a crypto with a market cap of barely 1B$, that's been around for a less amount of time, that's significantly less battle tested and that never recovered to it's all time high value?

Do you think that the only thing that matters for crypto is speed and fees? You don't think trust/security/decentralization have any value?

Bitcoin chooses trust and security above everything else, as it should. Then you can have layers on top where you transact at the speed of network packets.


Monero or ethereum, both superior to bitcoin in every way.


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