Today, Facebook banned Alex Jones, Infowars, Louis Farrakhan and Milo Yiannopoulos among others, as being dangerous. It is, unambiguously, the rise of the nanny state within the company whose motto used to be 'move fast and break things'.
A great read about the early days of computers is Steven Levy's Hackers, going back to the earliest days of digital computing at M.I.T., when geeks would stay up all night to spend a precious hour at a PDP-1. Levy synthesized the hacker ethic he observed at follows:
Access to computers should be unlimited and total.
Always yield to the Hands-On Imperative
All information should be free.
Mistrust authority–promote decentralization.
Hackers should be judged by their hacking.
You can create art and beauty on a computer.
Computers can change your life for the better.
It is not too difficult to see the connection between the early hacker ethos and Zuckerberg's 'move fast and break things'. There was and is a very strong libertarian ethos in computer culture (See Peter Thiel).
The medium is the message, and by its nature the internet affords the outcasts of the world a place where John 3:16 signs can pop up as digitals ads all over the world for the fraction of the cost of a ticket behind home plate. The internet is a great place to be a 'fisher of men'.
But unfortunately, a lot of bad men go fishing on the internet.
Facebook is the High School Yearbook of the world. What should be allowed?