Oh? Let's see.
EA wrote: "I think connecting the political desire to use anti-trust legislation against Facebook and Google with pressure to adopt "cancel culture" policies is somewhere between wildly ignorant and dishonest. The closest that comes to this is when some liberals who want anti-trust action against big tech connect not doing enough to censor dishonest ads like they incorrectly imagine occurs in other media to anti-trust action, and those arguments either never or almost never make it into the policy arguments."
Article: On one side is the progressive left, whose members have been appalled by Facebook’s handling of pro-Trump Russian disinformation campaigns and Silicon Valley’s consolidated power. On the other side is the Trumpist right, whose members see the power of social media companies to ban content as censorship and worry that the arteries of communication are controlled by young liberals.honorentheos wrote:Both sides want to see political discourse regulated in a way that favors their own political positions. Liberal advocates want to see more moderation of content that aligns with what some might call "cancel culture", demanding they be regulated or broken up through anti-trust laws. Conservatives want to see big tech broken up because they argue the people in charge of writing search algorithms and other decision makers are biased against conservative views. They argue there need to be alternatives to Google or Twitter where a conservative publication or group isn't being financially punished because the big players are antagonistic to their political views.
Hmm.
On Tuesday, that alignment will be evident at an antitrust hearing on Capitol Hill featuring executives from Facebook, Google, Amazon and Apple, as well as policy experts like Mr. Wu. The hearing, held by the House Judiciary subcommittee on antitrust, will examine “the impact of market power of online platforms on innovation and entrepreneurship.”
“To the bewilderment of many observers, the ascendant pressures for antitrust reforms are flowing from both wings of the political spectrum,” Daniel A. Crane, a law professor at the University of Michigan, wrote last year in a paper called “Antitrust’s Unconventional Politics.”
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Regulation of online speech is not exclusively an antitrust concern, but today these threads are becoming interwoven. Critics argue that big tech companies need to be broken up or regulated because they are suppressing speech.
I guess the article can speak for itself. Oh, wait...
There it is. It reflects your views except it doesn't because it's also naïve of what people who know things know. Right.EA wrote:The article also displays naïvété or indifference about conservative motives taking by them at their word which skirts exploring underlying motives that don't take much scratching at the surface to see.