Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Enough about Twitter 'Rights'. Twitter is a private company not an organ of the State.


As a tweeting enthusiast,  I have every sympathy for journo, Mr Guy Adams, having his account suspended by Twitter. Something to do with criticism of US Broadcaster NBC.

And yet the way the 'twitterati' have been carrying on, you would think that Twitter was a state organisation, owned by the taxpayer and that every Twitter user had 'rights' that must not be infringed.

But Twitter is not owned by the State. It is a private company providing a FREE service.   Just as a pub landlord has the right to ban someone from his Bar, so Twitter is justified in preventing individuals from using its FREE product.

It is true that Twitter has a de facto social media monopoly -  at least as far as 140 characters are concerned - but that it is because it has an entirely FREE service - of great quality - that millions sign up to VOLUNTARILY.

If enough of us believe that Twitter is behaving arbitrarily, that there are too many 'Guy Adams'  episodes for our liking, then simples: we just go back to Facebook or start using Google Plus.   A newer - fairer - social media product might even emerge. Did I hear the word Menshn anyone?

But enough please of the faux outrage. Lets get away from this idea that we have rights and entitlements - even when it comes to free  social media. Twitter can do what it likes and us tweeters can like it or lump it. Twitter owes us nothing - more the other way round.

P. S.  Apparently Twitter has reinstated Mr Adam' s Account.  All tweets well that tweet well.

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

The end of romanticism about the Internet and Free Expression?


There was a good article on modern censorship in last weekend's Observer by Denis MacShane MP. He reviews the new book on censorship by Nick Cohen, who explains that - contrary to popular belief - everything is not rosy in the Internet Garden of free expression.

Too often - instead of providing a forum for democracy - modern corporations, Governments, and advanced technology companies are seeking new ways in which to control the Internet. In China, for example, whilst there are millions using micro-blogging sites (Twitter is banned), there is a new requirement for all micro-bloggers to be "publicly registered". Anonymity is curtailed.

Even Twitter has succumbed. Often cited as the bastion of freedom of thought, the company now appears to have agreed to ensure that twitterers are subject to individual government laws. Although Twitter denies that this will have any impact, the effects of this 'ruling' have only just begun. Only yesterday it was reported that Brazil and Twitter have apparently agreed to prohibit twitterers from reporting police activities, such as police road blocks, speed checks and the like.

The logical extension of this is enormous: after Twitter censorship, then what about mobile phones? There is little difference between banning phone conversations that report 'police road blocks', as there is to banning twitter for doing the same.

The message here is clear: whilst the Internet is a great source of liberation, at the end of the day, we are subject to the whims and decisions of Governments and the huge corporations that control it - whether it be Google, Microsoft, Twitter or Facebook.

It is a bit like being a regular at a wonderful pub to have a drink, until the Landlord decides he doesn't like the cut of your jib, restricts what you drink and then throws you out. What all this means is that the alluring romanticism of the Internet is coming to an end. Yes it brings enormous benefits, but we are naïve if we think we are living in an Internet libertarian's utopia.

This blog was also published on Conservative Home HERE.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Opening the Freedom Zone: Social Media and the Riots


This morning, I opened the official fringe of Conservative Party conference: The Freedom Zone, hosted by the excellent Freedom Association.

On a panel with Mark Wallace, Sam Bowman, and Christian May, I spoke about the importance of a free social media - however bad the riots this summer may have been.

However bad the riots were, I am deeply uneasy about the Police restricting Blackberry messenger and other social media.

In August, the Government hinted that they would “look to ban people from major social networks” if they were suspected of inciting violence online. They were under immense pressure to do this. But it is a slippery slope. In fact, Chinese state media welcomed the news, and agreed that censoring the Internet was a “positive new attitude” that would “help appease quarrels between East and West”. Interestingly, Mubarak’s last tactic in the Arab Spring was to shut down the Egyptian Internet; the Syrian Government is currently doing the same, as it tries to choke off any news that is hostile to Bashar al-Assad; and Robert Mugabe is trying to ban Blackberries from Zimbabwe.

Fundamentally, I believe in a free Social Media, because...
- Social media is a measure of our freedom. Just as The Economist uses the price of a MacDonald Big Mac to measure a country's prosperity, so too, the level of a country's democracy could be determined by the level of its Blackberry usage. During the Arab Spring, one of the first actions by Middle Eastern autocracies was to ban Blackberries, because the regimes could not access user's details such as messaging and other data.

- We can be tough on crime, without being totalitarian. Now before I go on, I just want to say that I am no namby pamby on recent events.  I favour the toughest measures possible (whether it be plastic bullets, water cannon or whatever) and the harshest punishments possible, in order to ensure that we never see a repeat of the riots. But, I feel deeply uneasy about 'the Government' or 'the authorities' regulating, restricting - in effect  controlling - the use of social media or the use of Blackberries - both on grounds of political precedent and on practicality.

- We should be worried about the ratchet effect. Let's look at political precedent first: the problem with every curtailment of liberty - however noble the intention - it always has a ratchet effect.  Once you start restricting the Internet in this way, it becomes so much easier to restrict it for other reasons.  We may have a benign government now, but a future government might seek to use these powers to restrict social media on simple grounds of legitimate criticism.  You might think that such a course of action is far-fetched - and you may be right - but the problem is that any curtailment opens the door to further infringement.  As the saying goes, liberty is hard won but easily lost.

- Banning social media just wouldn’t work. Second, let's look at practicality.   How on earth do you ban the use of Blackberries et al in this way?  Can you really curtail specific people from using Blackberry Messenger (BBM), given that they will just obtain another Blackberry with a different identity, or use other mobile networks, or other Internet services? True, you can block off mobile phone signals in a particular area, but that hits not only the innocent, but also can be dangerous for those caught up in riots trying to contact the emergency services.

- Banning social media is censorship, by another name. Is the state really going to expand its power to such a degree to monitor every Facebook account, or force Research In Motion (the maker of Blackberries) to hand over trillions of gigabytes of data)?  It is just not feasible. Bad people will always take advantage of technology for evil purposes. Ban BBM and they will soon find another method to try and destroy our society.  Technology - especially mobile technology - is Hydra's head writ large.  We have to face the fact that it is pretty difficult to contain:  instead let us do all we can to make sure that more people are using it as a for good rather than a force for bad.

- Social media isn’t the root cause of the riots. Blaming social media for the riots is a bit like banning beer, because some people get drunk in Town Centres on a Saturday night. Another example is the Molotov Cocktail principle. We don’t want Molotov Cocktails, but does that mean we should ban glass bottles? It would be much better to deal with the root causes of the riots, and prevent these individuals from abusing social media in the first place.

- The UK needs social media: to boost our democracy, and our economy. It was a big loss last week, when Twitter announced that it would establish an international headquarters: not in London, but in Dublin. We need to prove that Britain wants to be a hub for social media, with competitive tax rates, and to prove that the Government can see social media as a force for good. Let's remind ourselves of the good that social media and mobile phones can bring in terms of empowerment, communication and the portabilty of the Internet.

- Social media was used by our Emergency Services and communities, to organise the clean-up. This was one of the main points made in evidence heard by the Home Affairs Select Committee, after the riots – particularly that Blackberry has revolutionised email across the world - to make it accessible without the need for any computer, and affordable for the many. Why not strengthen our democracy, by encouraging mobile communication rather than stifling it?  It is a challenge, yes, but one well worth taking.

by Robert Halfon - www.roberthalfon.blogspot.com

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Responses on Twitter to my two Articles on the Trade Unions



Frances Coppola 
 Raheem Kassam 

 Conservatives voice 
 Anthony Painter 
»
 Emily Knight 
 HEATHER WAKEFIELD 
 
 Anthony Painter 
»
 Emily Knight 
 HEATHER WAKEFIELD