[liberationtech] Fw: [progressiveexchange] Facebook interfering with activism Pages

Jen Savage savagejen at gmail.com
Tue Sep 21 12:14:37 PDT 2010


So, some sort of trust ring server that also handles routing information?

Potential scenario (could be improved on):
SuzieQ signs up for an account with SocialNetworkQ and is assigned a
unique identifier SuzieQ at SocialNetworkQ. She chooses either to
associate SuzieQ at SocialNetworkQ with some subset of her email
addresses for future lookup, or she can just distribute her identifier
to her friends.

SocialNetworkQ sends a notification to SocialNetworkTrustRingServerX
with SuzieQ's registered information.

SuzieQ enters either the unique identifiers or the email addresses of
the people she wants to keep up with into her following list on
SocialNetworkQ.

SocialNetworkQ looks at SocialNetworkTrustRingServerX and checks to
see how trustworthy the networks of her friends are. Additionally, if
any of the networks of her friends are unreachable, it can find
routing information for retrieving the data from other servers through
the SocialNetworkTrustRing. If SocialNetworkQ allows it, SuzieQ has a
chance to accept or reject connecting to followers on untrustworthy
networks.

???
-Jen

On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 2:06 PM, Sky (Jim Schuyler) <sky at cyberspark.net> wrote:
>
> Although those who control the ISP "turtles" can cut off traffic, there are many well-meaning individuals within these organizations who can respond to the needs of the other orgs and individuals who are doing "good things" online and have simply been caught up in the trawlers' nets.
> There is movement afoot to better connect these innocent and valuable orgs and individuals to those who can throw the technological switches to get them back online. It involves solving a policy-application-through-ham-handed-technology-application problem by talking to a human to get the thing corrected.
> Sometimes it won't work, but many times it will, or it can lead to someone stepping up to provide a solution for the org that is more resilient than the one they were using. This is one reason we need to keep mixing up the DNA - experimentation and diversity can yield unexpected results, and sometimes they're positive.
> This is about discovering and utilizing the self-correcting mechanisms within the system - and they do exist in some, if not most, cases but aren't well-known.
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Sky (Jim Schuyler, PhD)
> Protecting free speech online -> http://cyberspark.net
> Blog: http://blog.red7.com/
> Phone: +1.415.759.7337
> PGP Keys: http://web.red7.com/pgp
> On Sep 21, 2010, at 10:14 AM, Jim Youll wrote:
>
> There is a problem with the market approach:
> The Diaspora market exists inside another market, the ISP market, which is again contained within corporations with self-interest and top-down control structures.
> It's still turtles all the way down. There is no escape from that in the current network structure. There used to be, when the Internet was really "hands-off" and content-agnostic. But 1995 was a long time ago.
> Everything at the Application layer and up is subject to control by the layers below, and these layers are out of the hands of application distributors. ISPs can cut off spammers who originate non-locally-damaging traffic to meet the policy objectives or good-neighbor requests of peers. This power exists and can't be overcome. Worse, sometimes "we" good-hearted, well-meaning people /like it/ when traffic is choked off somewhere in the stack because it's not traffic we want.
>
> On Sep 21, 2010, at 9:58 AM, Lauren Gelman wrote:
>
> ahh. The question that launched a thousand debates.  There is *never* a quick answer to this question (i.e., does freedom in iraq mean free speech or free elections?) For your question, I believe in the former (substantive requirements) but their are many firmly in the latter (procedural equality) camp. I'd prefer to see affirmative privacy protecting features in Diaspora but they are banking instead on the "market" approach-- that as long as users can take their data elsewhere, activists will be able to create/find a provider that meets their needs. Time will tell.
> On Sep 21, 2010, at 9:44 AM, Mary Joyce wrote:
>
> Would it be appropriate to create a list of policy recommendations/standards for social media platforms that host political content or is it as simple as "ToS should be applied equally to all users"?
>
> Mary
>
> On Tue, Sep 21, 2010 at 11:26 AM, Yosem Companys <companys at stanford.edu> wrote:
>>
>> This is why we need peer to peer solutions like Diaspora to provide a platform for activists.  Otherwise the corporate structure of these tech firms can always interfere in one way or another to direct activity.
>>
>> On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 9:58 AM, Jillian C. York <jilliancyork at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi - Jillian York here (have been lurking for a couple of weeks).  I was interviewed for that article and would like to add this just-released paper I wrote on the same subject: http://bit.ly/8ZN8PH
>>> The paper ("Policing Content in the Quasi-Public Sphere") looks at the content regulation policies of 5 social media platforms--Twitter, Flickr, Blogger, Facebook, and YouTube.  I won't give away the ending ;)
>>> -Jillian
>>>
>>> On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 5:28 PM, Katrin Verclas <katrinverclas at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Thoughts, colleagues!
>>>>
>>>> ------Original Message------
>>>> From: Colin Delany
>>>> Sender: Progressive Exchange
>>>> To: Progressive Exchange
>>>> ReplyTo: Colin Delany
>>>> Subject: [progressiveexchange] Facebook interfering with activism Pages
>>>> Sent: Sep 20, 2010 3:34 PM
>>>>
>>>> Activists upset with Facebook
>>>> http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0910/42364.html
>>>>
>>>> Claims they've violated terms of service.  Discuss.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --cpd
>>>>
>>>>
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> --
> MARY C. JOYCE
> Founder | The Meta-Activism Project  | Meta-Activism.org
> "Digital Activism Decoded"  |  New Book Drops in Summer 2010
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