New court decision reinforces that there is no public interest in speech that exposes vulnerable groups to hate
Other right-wing accounts variously reacted by describing the move as Orwellian, lamenting the death of free speech and even contemplating leaving Canada for good.
Do you even have the first clue what you're talking about or are you just spouting right wing talking points? Censoring the internet (banning hate speech as it is known outside of the right wing echo bunker) has nothing to do with privacy. Calm down, give yourself a bit of time to adjust. You will find that reality is FAR less scary than the right wing echo bunker would have you believe.
But privacy matters, and the only way to “censor hate speech” online in the way they describe would be an unimaginable loss to privacy.
And you won’t see that until it happens.
Everyone was ecstatic that Apple created a “child porn filter” on your phone, and in theory it’s great, but then all of a sudden governments wanted to use the tool to censor images that they didn’t like.
……and Apple quietly dropped the feature.
It’s rage bait to get you to support something that is bad for you.
Why make a big fuss out of it?
Why big news stories?
What makes this one special?
Oh, right, they’re trying to push a censorship bill that forces companies to allow the government to audit your communications.
This is the 4th time they’ve done the same thing, and I need people to realize that while this case was an absolutely correct ruling, using the EXISTING infrastructure and legal framework to prosecute, we don’t need new tools to destroy privacy.
That train of thought doesn't make sense. "We need to pass this new law because [gestures at this case] existing laws already work"? If anyone were trying to drum up public support, they would want cases where people got away with it, and this ain't it.
I might also add that if everyone is misunderstanding what you're trying to say here, you're either not explaining it very clearly or your theory simply doesn't stand up.
To identify the defendant, Judson obtained court orders requiring Meta and Bell to produce subscriber information and IP addresses linking the anonymous Facebook page to Webster.
How is that anything to do with a privacy destroying censorship bill?
But just to clarify they aren't asking for better tools to combat the epidemic of it yet, that's just something you've invented out of whole cloth and are now getting mad about it?
Last year, the government sent its initial plans for the bill back to the drawing board in after facing criticism. Virani now says he hopes to bring the final bill forward sometime next year. He is taking over the bill from Canadian Heritage, which shepherded two highly controversial media bills on online streaming and compensation for news media.
The group of experts the government tasked with reworking the bill recently published an open letter saying it was time for the Liberals to bring it forward. They said Canadian children are less protected than kids in countries where similar laws are already in effect.
Sounds like people had concerns so they got a group of experts in to rework the previous bill.
Is that an issue to you because it looks to me like it is the opposite of what you just explained.
Because of significant backlash, they were forced to abandon the efforts.
The “experts” just reworded the same problems. The issues still exist in the bill. In fact the bill itself is the issue. They were able to change the guy in the article on this post, why didn’t they need the “new law” for that??
Which countries have this law? They didn’t mention?
Curious.
The root of the problem is that the proposed law itself requires the government to be able to see/audit all your online communication. That hasn’t changed. They make their intentions in “look at this awful case”, but they ignore that the new law wasn’t required for that case, so then what’s the reason for needing the new law?
Why did privacy ever matter?
Wouldn’t they find more murders if they had cameras in everyone’s house?
Yes, that argument is extreme, but it’s intended to make you think about “if” and “why” privacy matters.
I said this was coming, you called me out for not having any sources and I gave you sources.
I worry that nothing I could say or prove would change your mind.
According to the news article you sent me, a group of experts asked the government to bring the bill forward.
Why was this case written into a big news story when defamation cases halted every day? (Can you try this again because I don't understand the question)
Canada's laws for the expectation of privacy is judged on 'the degree of privacy needed to maintain a free and open society, not necessarily the degree of privacy expected by the individual or respected by the state in a given situation…'
Do you feel this infringes on ability to maintain a free and open society?
If you aren't allowed to defame and slander people in real life why do you think you can do it freely on the internet? There are consequences to breaking the law.