Stop Using Content Moderation Demands As An Effort To Hide The Government's Social Policy Failures

Stop Using Content Moderation Demands As An Effort To Hide The Government's Social Policy Failures

3 years ago
Anonymous $LNMzUc6XNz

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20210617/10341847010/stop-using-content-moderation-demands-as-effort-to-hide-governments-social-policy-failures.shtml

We've been seeing over and over again lately that politicians (and, unfortunately, the media) are frequently blaming social media and content moderation for larger societal problems, that the government itself has never been able to solve.

In other words, what's really happening is that the supposedly "bad stuff" that shows up on social media is really indicative of societal failures regarding education, mental health services, criminal law, social safety nets, and much much more. All social media is really doing is putting a spotlight on those failures. And the demands from politicians and the media for content moderation to "solve" these issues is really often about trying to sweep those problems under the rug by hiding them from public view, rather than looking for ways to tackle those much larger, much more difficult societal questions.

Stop Using Content Moderation Demands As An Effort To Hide The Government's Social Policy Failures

Jun 25, 2021, 5:22pm UTC
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20210617/10341847010/stop-using-content-moderation-demands-as-effort-to-hide-governments-social-policy-failures.shtml > We've been seeing over and over again lately that politicians (and, unfortunately, the media) are frequently blaming social media and content moderation for larger societal problems, that the government itself has never been able to solve. > In other words, what's really happening is that the supposedly "bad stuff" that shows up on social media is really indicative of societal failures regarding education, mental health services, criminal law, social safety nets, and much much more. All social media is really doing is putting a spotlight on those failures. And the demands from politicians and the media for content moderation to "solve" these issues is really often about trying to sweep those problems under the rug by hiding them from public view, rather than looking for ways to tackle those much larger, much more difficult societal questions.