Twitter had a hell of a last week, banning a sitting U.S. President from posting on the platform after said President incited a mob of supporters which ran riot over the Capitol, with the incident ending in five deaths and various people being investigated by the FBI for domestic terrorism.
On Wednesday, Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey explained and defended the move in a lengthy series of tweets, arguing that the action taken was necessary, but also adding that it sets a dangerous precedent.
"I do not celebrate or feel pride in our having to ban @realDonaldTrump from Twitter, or how we got here. After a clear warning we’d take this action, we made a decision with the best information we had based on threats to physical safety both on and off Twitter (...) I believe this was the right decision for Twitter," he wrote.
Tweet may have been deleted
Dorsey then argued that banning an account from Twitter divides the public and places too much power in the hands of one corporation. "The check and accountability on this power has always been the fact that a service like Twitter is one small part of the larger public conversation happening across the internet," he wrote. But "this concept was challenged," Dorsey argued, when other companies, such as Facebook and Snapchat joined in on banning Trump, and when companies like Amazon banned pro-Trump service Parler to operate on their virtual servers.
Ultimately, having a bunch of major companies banning someone from the internet is a dangerous thing, Dorsey claims. "This moment in time might call for this dynamic, but over the long term it will be destructive to the noble purpose and ideals of the open internet."
SEE ALSO: Twitter permanently suspends Donald Trump's accountDorsey wraps up, somewhat strangely, by mentioning Bitcoin, which he calls "a foundational internet technology that is not controlled or influenced by any single individual or entity." Twitter is working on a decentralized standard for social media through its bluesky project, and Dorsey hopes it could "be a client of that standard for the public conversation layer of the internet."
Tweet may have been deleted
Dorsey’s assessment of Twitter’s Trump ban raises some interesting points, but it feels as though Dorsey would rather be heading a decentralized network where he ultimately doesn’t have to (or cannot) make that decision. The problem is, that decentralized network appears to still be very far in the future (Twitter’s bluesky is described as an independent team with just five members), and the company might have to make many similar decisions before it can afford not to make them. Twitter should work on a clearer, more easily enforceable standard of what is permitted on its network right now.
文章
63223
浏览
1547
获赞
843
This year's PSAT memes are here to anger the College Board
On Wednesday, high school students across the country took the PSAT and NMSQT (National Merit ScholaThe 'absolute unit' UK museum found a cute lost bat, named him Merlin
The Museum of English Rural Life is already internet-famous because of its animal tweets. The thiccCongress is 'deeply troubled' by Apple's FaceTime bug, and it wants answers
Receiving a stern letter from Congress is never going to be a pleasant experience, but for Tim CookTikTok isn't Vine, but it's a beautiful mess all its own
TikTok is on the rise two years after Vine's tragic demise, but don't expect it to fill the void thaThe new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro are powered by Apple's own M1 chip
Apple has officially unveiled two new pieces of hardware: the MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. Both MacBApple is teaming up with Goldman Sachs to launch a credit card later this year
Apple is jumping into the credit card business with Goldman Sachs.According to a report in the WallJohn Boyega dancing to Vanessa Carlton is instantly cheering to watch
Sometimes, all you really want is for the DJ to put on an old-school banger.And if there's one trackHow to celebrate Facebook celebrating 'Data Privacy Day'
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, don your fanciest of caps and bust out your most invasive of aBig Tech readies itself for two very distinct grillings at Senate hearing
Get ready for some Senate questioning whiplash. On Wednesday morning, the CEOs of Twitter, Facebook,Microsoft announces Hololens 2 at MWC 2019
Mobile World Congress is a show primarily for phone announcements, but Microsoft used it to unveil iNike's new app
This is the future we deserve. Owners of the newly released $350 Nike app-connected Adapt BB self-tyAmazon's QVC
Even in these dark online times, there are places on the internet that manage to shine through and oGoogle rebrands G Suite as Google Workspace, gives Gmail a new logo
Google is once again reshuffling its portfolio of productivity apps.On Tuesday, the company announceThe Duolingo owl is out for vengeance in these threatening memes
If you're learning another language, it's time for your daily reminder — have you practiced yoGreat Scott! Tesla hides 'Back to the Future' Easter egg on app.
Where we're going, we don't need roads... The latest Tesla Easter egg discovered this weekend is exp