Winding Down Our Latest Greenhouse Panel: Content Moderation At The Infrastructure Layer

Winding Down Our Latest Greenhouse Panel: Content Moderation At The Infrastructure Layer

3 years ago
Anonymous $BH0TGXkyPe

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20211005/06472747699/winding-down-our-latest-greenhouse-panel-content-moderation-infrastructure-layer.shtml

When Mike introduced our latest Greenhouse series on content moderation at the infrastructure layer, he made it abundantly clear this was a particularly thorny and complicated issue. While there's been a relentless focus on content moderation at the so-called "edge" of the internet (Google, Facebook, and Twitter), less talked about is content moderation at the "infrastructure" layers deeper in the stack. That can include anything from hosting companies and domain registrars, to ad networks, payment processors, telecom providers, and app stores.

If and how many of these operations should be engaged in moderating content, and the peril of that participation being exploited and abused by bad actors and governments the world over, made this Greenhouse series notably more complicated than our past discussions on privacy, more traditional forms of content moderation, or broadband in the COVID era.

Winding Down Our Latest Greenhouse Panel: Content Moderation At The Infrastructure Layer

Oct 8, 2021, 7:43pm UTC
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20211005/06472747699/winding-down-our-latest-greenhouse-panel-content-moderation-infrastructure-layer.shtml > When Mike introduced our latest Greenhouse series on content moderation at the infrastructure layer, he made it abundantly clear this was a particularly thorny and complicated issue. While there's been a relentless focus on content moderation at the so-called "edge" of the internet (Google, Facebook, and Twitter), less talked about is content moderation at the "infrastructure" layers deeper in the stack. That can include anything from hosting companies and domain registrars, to ad networks, payment processors, telecom providers, and app stores. > If and how many of these operations should be engaged in moderating content, and the peril of that participation being exploited and abused by bad actors and governments the world over, made this Greenhouse series notably more complicated than our past discussions on privacy, more traditional forms of content moderation, or broadband in the COVID era.