It is true that removing and demonetising Nazi content wouldnât make the problem of Nazis go away. It would just be moved to dark corners of the internet where the majority of people would never find it, and its presence on dodgy-looking websites combined with its absence on major platforms would contribute to a general sense that being a Nazi isnât something thatâs accepted in wider society. Even without entirely making the problem go away, the problem is substantially reduced when it isnât normalised.
the weirdest thing to me is these guys always ignore that banning the freaks worked on Redditâwhich is stereotypically the most cringe techno-libertarian platform of the lotâwithout ruining the right to say goofy shit on the platform. they banned a bunch of the reactionary subs and, spoiler, issues with those communities have been much lessened since that happened while still allowing for people to say patently wild, unpopular shit
Yep! Reddit is still pretty awful in many respects (and I only even bother with it for specific communities for which I havenât found a suitable active equivalent on Lemmy - more frogs and bugs on Lemmy please), but it did get notably less unpleasant when the majority of the truly terrible subs were banned. So it does make a difference.
I feel like âdonât let perfect be the enemy of goodâ is apt when it comes to reactionaries and fascists. Completely eliminating hateful ideologies would be perfect, but limiting their reach is still good, and saying âremoving their content doesnât make the problem go awayâ makes it sound like any effort to limit the harm they do is rendered meaningless because the outcome is merely good rather than perfect.
Iâd argue that it still broke Reddit.
Back in the day, I might say something out of tone in some subreddit, get the comment flagged, discuss it with a mod, and either agree to edit it or get it removed. No problem.
Then Reddit started banning reactionary subs, subs started using bots to ban people for even commenting on other blacklisted subs, subs started abusing automod to ban people left and right, even quoting someone to criticize them started counting as using the same âforbidden wordsâ, conversations with mods to clear stuff up pretty much disappeared, application of modern ToS retroactively to 10 year old content became a thing⌠until I got permabanned from the whole site after trying to recur a ban, with zero human interaction. Some months later, while already banned sitewide, they also banned me from some more subs.
Recently Reddit revealed a âhidden karmaâ feature to let automod pre-moderate potentially disruptive users.
Issues with the communities may have lessened, but there is definitely no longer the ability to say goofy, wild, or unpopular stuff⌠or in some cases, even to criticize them. There also have been an unknown number of âcollateral damageâ bans, that Reddit doesnât care about anymore.
imo if reddit couldnât survive âpurging literally its worst elements, which included some of the most vehement bigotry and abhorrent content outside of 4chanâ it probably doesnât deserve to survive
Youâre literally on a platform that was created to harbor extremist groups. Look at who Dessalines is, (aka u/parentis-shotgun) and their self-proclaimed motivation for writing LemmyNet. When you ban people from a website, they just move to another place, they are not stupid itâs pretty easy to create websites. Itâs purely optical, youâre not saving civilisation from harmful ideas, just preventing yourself from seeing it.
When you ban people from a website, they just move to another place, they are not stupid itâs pretty easy to create websites. Itâs purely optical,
you are literally describing an event that induces the sort of entropy weâre talking about hereânecessarily when you ban a community of Nazis or something and they have to go somewhere else, not everybody moves to the next place (and those people diffuse back into the general population), which has a deradicalizing effect on them overall because theyâre not just stewing in a cauldron of other people who reinforce their beliefs