- Joined
- May 3, 2015
Jim weighs in on the new Youtube censorship program
At this point, why doesn't Youtube just make an entirely separate site for all the edgy videos they apparently don't want to be associated with?
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Jim weighs in on the new Youtube censorship program
Perhaps they don't see it as profitable to have a standalone site to waste server space on all those vids.At this point, why doesn't Youtube just make an entirely separate site for all the edgy videos they apparently don't want to be associated with?
At this point, why doesn't Youtube just make an entirely separate site for all the edgy videos they apparently don't want to be associated with?
Because they want to push an agenda. Same shit with Facebook and Twitter. These companies own our media and want to control that. As simple as that.
You mean...like a ghetto?At this point, why doesn't Youtube just make an entirely separate site for all the edgy videos they apparently don't want to be associated with?
You mean...like a ghetto?
You mean...like a ghetto?
Pray that the normies' disdain for the billionaire corporate web giants outweighs their susceptibility to the web giants' sociopolitical engineering. The lefties will probably win this round of the kulturkampf, but the war is far from over.What do you guys think the answer is to Jim's question?
What do you guys think the answer is to Jim's question?
Probably a bit of an internal civil war at Google. Which then spreads across the rest of the industry, and the internet itself.What do you guys think the answer is to Jim's question?
What do you guys think the answer is to Jim's question?
That part, unless the backlash is widespread enough that both the politcally charged and the casual people who use sites like YouTube get pissed, is sadly going to be correct.The real issue with alternatives is that, after the purges, regular apolitical people will still stay on twitter, youtube, reddit, etc. the only people who will move are those who are being actively persecuted. So any alternative website will only be able to draw from a conservative audience, and become dedicated to the groups they took in, and hence will ultimately fail to gain mainstream appeal. The old sites on the other hand, will become an increasingly fragile mixture of apolitical content and leftist extremism.
This is very bad for a number of reasons, most obviously because this will suppress conservative thinking, yet, even if you think that that in itself is a good thing, it will also result in the further balkanization of the web, and polarization of discourse. The viciousness with which disagreement is expressed these days will only intensify under these conditions, and no progress will be made by either side.
I don't know how this is supposed to be fought. There really will be no beating google at their own game, they're just too big. Maybe if these practices turn out to be bad for business, they will stop, but unlike niche businesses, google & co are big enough that consumer revolt will probably go unnoticed.
Not only that, but Google is the most used search engine out there. It'd be great if everyone just moved over to Yahoo or Bing, but that too, isn't easy. Google is still very convenient to use for many people. If the backlash is great, as in worldwide hatred, then theoretically they might back down.
The real issue with alternatives is that, after the purges, regular apolitical people will still stay on twitter, youtube, reddit, etc. the only people who will move are those who are being actively persecuted. So any alternative website will only be able to draw from a conservative audience, and become dedicated to the groups they took in, and hence will ultimately fail to gain mainstream appeal. The old sites on the other hand, will become an increasingly fragile mixture of apolitical content and leftist extremism.
I'm thinking that ultimately we just need to decentralize everything. Something along the lines of a system where the state of a particular site is stored between multiple users, and operations on that site are verified by multiple users. The locations where a site is hosted would also need to frequently migrate to ensure that no one gets an opportunity to sway things. No owners, no masters, no obligations.
Ugh, Jim's being boring again.