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> It doesn't matter what YouTube, or any other company or person, restricts. It matters what our government restricts

If there is a monopoly - what the monopoly owner restricts matters just as much as what the government restricts. More in fact - because youtube has more influence over what people watch than any single government.

These monopolies should be broken up, obviously - but internet is the perfect example of network effects and there's no regulation - so of course it's monopolized to a degree unimaginable before.

Governments should break up such monopolies, obviously - but they aren't, so far.



If YouTube is legally a monopoly that's a separate issue that already has defined legal solutions (well, responses at least since they may not solve it).

Considering it a monopoly and putting a higher bar to their moderation policies takes away agency from the public though. We don't have to use YouTube and there's nothing stopping competitors from entering the market. If people cared that YouTube was a monopoly, or if people cared enough about the moderation policies, they would go elsewhere.

The reason we have to specifically be protected from government censorship is because we don't realistically have that option. Those with the means could move to another country, but that would only dodge one problem for another. When you live in a country ruled by a single government you can't escape their censorship.


> We don't have to use YouTube and there's nothing stopping competitors from entering the market.

There is - network effect.

> If people cared that YouTube was a monopoly, or if people cared enough about the moderation policies, they would go elsewhere.

They would not, because of network effects. Coordination effort required to jump ship from a billion user website is impossible to overcome. You could have all of Americans stop using youtube, and it would still have more content than whatever competitor they turn towards.

> The reason we have to specifically be protected from government censorship is because we don't realistically have that option.

There's more examples of people overthrowing a government than people succesfully boycotting a social media platform once it gets big enough.


You're conflating the risk of a monopoly in a market and the absolute monopoly of a government.

I'm not arguing why people choose to use YouTube, I'm arguing that it is a choice. Staying in a country is technically a choice, but as long as you live there you have no choice in your government and can't opt out of their rule.

Its very different. Our speech is protected specifically from government censorship because their control over us is a monopoly by design and their will is enforced through mechanisms like prison and military.


There's 200 countries. You can move. There's democracy in many of them - you can vote people out.

How many youtubes are there? How do I vote for the people running it?

I'm not conflating, I'm abstracting from artificial distinction designed to keep the loophole safe from regulation.


You can move countries, I've done it myself. You can't escape the control of whatever single government claims authority over the land you live on though, and you likely can't/won't move to land that isn't claimed by a single government.

YouTube can censor what they want, you don't have to use it and they can't send police or military after you. You can't move to a land where a single government has control and can send police or military to impose their will on you.


Who controls the media - controls the population. Who controls the population controls the government.

Every democracy will become oligarchy eventually if we don't regulate social media. Most of them won't even be controlled domestically (because the media are global).

There's like 50 people who decide 99% of information people consume worldwide. Or at least what algorithm should decide.

These people know what power it gives. That's why it was worth it for Elon to buy Twitter. It was trading money for political power. And there's nothing anybody can do. This IS oligarchy.


An oligarchy is only one of many outcomes. We could end up with a totalitarian state, feudalism, or a monarchy to name a few.

I do agree, though, that media plays a large role and (should) hold a strong responsibility for where we end up.


So you're thinking we shoud just hope they will do the unprofitable but noble thing?




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