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comment by benjamincosman · 2022-09-16T22:02:11.698Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

All I can see on this page are the (sub)section headers but no other content??

Replies from: green_leaf, noggin-scratcher
comment by green_leaf · 2022-09-17T03:08:45.273Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

The content has been deplatformed. /j

comment by noggin-scratcher · 2022-09-16T22:25:54.342Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Same. Also most of the comments section is dated January 2021, but the post just came up as new in my RSS feed (presumably a result of whichever edit/update also set the post date to today)

comment by Viliam · 2021-01-27T20:17:10.412Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Congratulations on making your first Less Wrong post about a relatively current political topic and not being downvoted! You may be the first person in history who achieved this!

I agree with Ericf that the Americans you meet (as a non-American) are not a representative sample. In my opinion, there is still a chance your observation might be valid, only less strongly.

On the other hand, coming from former USSR, maybe it is more about your culture, where people who had strong political opinions and couldn't resist the desire to express them publicly, were killed for a few generations. Then again, who is the neutral party we should compare both USA and former USSR to? Western Europe is probably different from China, which is different from India, etc. I guess my question is whether the proper adjective for the "Activistocracy" should be "American" or rather "non-post-Soviet" or... what?

Internet has become mainstream, this has caught some people by surprise, and it is not going away. This part is obvious. The non-obvious part is whether and how some parts of the internet could remain non-mainsteam in long term. (So far, 4chan is doing well. But tomorrow, it may be cancelled, who knows. 8chan is already gone.) Uhm, "non-mainsteam" is not the right word here; you can have debates on obscure topics as long as they don't trigger the public. Perhaps "offensive to mainstream" is what I am trying to point at; especially the kind that makes someone pick up the phone and call your boss, and at some moment can make someone at Visa or MasterCard pick up the phone and call your ISP telling them it is a nice business they have and it would be a shame if in the future they couldn't accept credit card payments. Maybe the future of controversial discussion is private invite-only networks. Which feels uncomfortable, but it kinda makes sense: you cannot have something 100% user friendly and keep the public away. At the very least, the content should not be linkable, and screenshots should be deniable, otherwise you are one tweet away from publicity.

Shortly, there is a difference between "large parts of internet have become mainsteam" which is okay and inevitable, and "anything on internet can get into the spotlight of public opinion, and be destroyed if deemed unacceptable" which seems wrong, considering that a few decades ago, Less Wrong itself would be similarly socially unacceptable (either for atheism or for debating polyamory). The problem is not normies coming to internet, but normies judging the entire internet.

The "Bible Belt Valley" sounds interesting, but first they need their own credit card company, then their own ISPs, and only afterwards their web pages will be sustainable in long term. Which leads to the question: what are the forces that drive Visa and MasterCard on "the right side of history"? Without knowing the correct answer to this question, it is difficult to predict the future of the "Bible Belt Valley".

Replies from: betulaster
comment by betulaster · 2021-01-31T20:54:20.759Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

Congratulations on making your first Less Wrong post about a relatively current political topic and not being downvoted! You may be the first person in history who achieved this!

Hah, thanks. At the risk of stroking my ego one too many times - can I ask you to speculate on why that might be the case?
What I mean is - I'm sure what I wrote has some meritoric value (I would've kept it to myself otherwise), but I expected this post to do similarly to how other comparable posts do on LW (first-time post, political topic, not a lot of hard analysis and abstraction, not a lot of sources linked to). Hearing that this isn't the case is surprising.

I agree with Ericf that the Americans you meet (as a non-American) are not a representative sample. In my opinion, there is still a chance your observation might be valid, only less strongly.

Possibly yes, I agree. But as I had noted responding to Ericf, some (American) decisionmaking seems to be driven by exactly the same sampling bias error I made. Indeed, the Twitter letter to Dorsey that apparently spurred him to act on deplatforming Trump was reported as signed by 300 people - Twitter employed around 4600 as of 2019.  Cancel culture seems to follow the same pattern at least sometimes - Kevin Spacey definitely got tried in the court of public opinion (and boy did he lose) faster than any accusations made it into court of law. 
I wonder if it's the sampling bias again, though - that is, only the minority of cases when people got cancelled by a minority of politically active Americans gets reported. I guess to verify, it would be useful to have a "cancel watch" to trace a large number of shitstorms on Twitter and see which ones followed up with some real-world action. But that would be a lot of handiwork. Any idea as to how this could get verified more elegantly?

I guess my question is whether the proper adjective for the "Activistocracy" should be "American" or rather "non-post-Soviet" or... what?

Yeah that's a good one. It doesn't seem to me that Western Europe is like that, but I don't have good exposure  to that culture. Hobbes definitely had more influence on European politics I think, with European governments being a lot more socially oriented (public healthcare, education, transportation...), "big" and leviathanish, compared to the US. The leviathan-ness is a very heavy factor in post-USSR politics - I wrote a pretty long comment on my model of it here [LW(p) · GW(p)]. So that would leave a lot less space for such citizen activism in both cases.
Canada and the UK could be interesting cases to verify - Canadian and UK governments have some more public initiatives I think. Have there been any high-profile Canadian/British cancellings?

The problem is not normies coming to internet, but normies judging the entire internet.

I'm not convinced these are different things, to be honest, not in the American (non-post-Soviet?) case. When normies believe it is upon them to take a moral stand about everything they see and do, because their government won't, whatever they come to will be judged. The internet included.

Which feels uncomfortable, but it kinda makes sense: you cannot have something 100% user friendly and keep the public away.

I agree, this maps onto some of my ideas about that. From what I know, Tor has become somewhat useless for "truly" illegal activity - pretty much all drug trade in Russia happens through it, drug related imprisonment rates are insane anyway - but it might become "the next internet" by virtue of being hard enough to configure and navigate for the general public. But obviously, that frontier is ultimately gonna get colonized too, so yeah, possibly it's gonna be invite only - or we're just going to be passing emails across heavily filtered mailing lists. 

The "Bible Belt Valley" sounds interesting, but first they need their own credit card company, then their own ISPs, and only afterwards their web pages will be sustainable in long term

A kind-of-sustainable alternative to this seems to exist, and this usually involves ISPs in countries that are ideologically opposed to whatever place is cancelling you. 
Consider The Daily Stormer, it's a neo-nazi blog that got under fire after Unite the Right. After hopping registrars and hosters for a year or so, they got set with a Chinese registrar/ISP and have been alive since. 
Parler seems to be following suit in some sense, they have moved to a Russian host. Reuters reports that whatever is left of 8chan, 8kun, is also hosted there.
Obviously, this will only work if whatever free speech you disseminate on that platform doesn't affect the internal politics of the country you're hosting in, so that's a factor. Here's The Daily Stomer's Andrew Anglin acknowledging pretty much that:


After the CDN ban and the registrar ban – which are both coming soon for Parler and a bunch of other MAGA related sites – they are going to be in “CHINA PLZ HALP” territory.

That was easy enough for me, as I’ve always been relatively pro-PRC, or at least not anti-PRC. I think these sites that have been promoting all of these idiotic theories about China being behind the problems in the US are going to be met with a lot less friendliness than I was.

 

Which leads to the question: what are the forces that drive Visa and MasterCard on "the right side of history"

Here's what seems interesting. Both the Eranet that hosts Daily Stormer and DDOS Guard that hosts 8kun and Parler are extant "clear" companies, and while I don't know for sure, I imagine they can work with mainstream payment providers. At the very least, Visa and Mastercard work in China and Russia very well in general, so it's not like the ideological opposition would cut you off per se.
I think it could be the absence of an opposing voice. There is enough people to coordinate in threatening to not use their Visas or MasterCards anymore if [insert badwrong company] is allowed to use it, but there isn't enough people to threaten the same if [same company] is deplatformed. And yes, that potentially implies a vicious circle - to potentially estabilish a platform to coordinate, you need a platform to coordinate. I think the kinda-sustainable platforms like Tor or hosting in ideologically opposing countries I mentioned above could serve as ways to break that circle.

Replies from: Viliam
comment by Viliam · 2021-01-31T22:42:20.607Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I expected this post to do similarly to how other comparable posts do on LW (first-time post, political topic, not a lot of hard analysis and abstraction, not a lot of sources linked to).

What? You expected to be downvoted and you had the audacity to post anyway?

From my perspective, it was the length of text, the dislaimer at the beginning, the fact that (at least how it seemed to me) you didn't obviously attack anyone, and the few interesting ideas in the article. Plus you had the luck that someone else didn't write a horrible comment "inspired by" your article, which could have also reflected badly on you.

it would be useful to have a "cancel watch"

No idea how to do that on Twitter (the amount of data there is insane), it just reminded me of a "cancel watch" for higher education.

comment by Ericf · 2021-01-14T20:46:10.371Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

I think your point 3 includes a sampling bias error. The thousands-millions of Americans who do not separate their political and professional make the news, and the tens of millions of examples of Americans separating the two generate only a few news articles. This also applies to personal connections: people who do not separate are way more likely to evangelize their position than those who do.

Also, too, there is a history of direct consumer activism stretching from the cancel culture of today, through the boycotts of the Civil rights movement, the prohibition movement, ::the 1800s, which I don't have a ready example for::, and the Boston Tea Party.

comment by ChristianKl · 2021-01-15T00:28:18.033Z · LW(p) · GW(p)

If one expects that politicians, even democratically (assuming one believes this to be the best process available) elected, are not to be fully trusted even when they are chosen based on their friendliness to a cause one believes in, voting and campaigning becomes simply not enough. 

I don't think that the high class view of what democracy happens to be in the West was at any time that it's just about having an election every four years.