As I understand it, no one's Freedom of Speech was blocked. Young demanded that Spotify choose between him and Rogan and Spot obliged by choosing the far more lucrative Rogan. No infringement of Freedom of Speech there.
Well, the "irrelevant" Neil Young's stance has made Spotify and Rogan make changes to how they do things.The Congress may pressure Facebook or Spotify to uphold a standard, but I doubt they feel obliged to follow it unless their customers walk out en masse
And yet, he managed to get spotify and Rogan to modify their practises.Neil young is giving up millions and millions of streams on Spotify!!! and $6.79 in income.
Mods should just shut this thread down now because JeanGary Diablo just ended this perfectly. Someone throw the damn towel, this fight's over.I can sum this up even better and much more quickly: Freedom of speech is the right for people to espouse their viewpoints without being arrested and imprisoned, provided that the verbiage is not defamatory or is being used to incite violence against others. That's pretty much it.
If a private company like Spotify, Facebook or Twitter bans you for the things you say, your freedom of speech is not being attacked. These are private companies and their users are essentially guests on their property. If my house guest says something I don't like, I have every right to tell that person to take back what they said or get off my property.
Many companies also have code of conduct rules that employees must agree to and sign as a condition of employment. If you sign such an agreement with your employer and then are publicly outed six months later for organizing a racist rally or because you're caught shouting "fuck her right in the pussy" at a female TV journalist covering a story, your employer has every right to fire you for breaching the code of conduct you signed, and your freedom of speech STILL has not been infringed upon.
Free speech is probably the most limited right we actually have. Speaking your mind can still destroy your life if your views are unpopular, but you won't go to prison, so you're protected.
Free speech is not "free" and never has been. It comes with a payment, and that payment is called 'responsibility'.
I think you have confused freedom of speech, with freedom of platforms… which does not exist. You have no right to NBC’s airtime to rant.
And you know something else?..... Kindler is actually a shape-shifting space lizard from the Constellation Draconis and they have been running the world since 6000 BC!
Didn't NY just sell his entire catalog?Neil young is giving up millions and millions of streams on Spotify!!! and $6.79 in income.
Agreed.When the right (and admittedly some on the left) complain about freedom of speech, they typically mean they should be allowed to speak but no one should be allowed to criticize them.
We already have libel and slander remedies and threatening is also against the law. As for the electronic platforms like Twitter or Facebook their actions limiting speech are far from settled.Agreed.
Free speech laws protect people from the police, court and government overreach. That's it. If a person makes comments that are threatening towards others or comments that are defamatory, there is no protection, nor should there be.
If you and I show up at a rally for some cause we disagree with and we start screaming over top of the voice of the person at the podium, we are not denying that person's "right to free speech". We are using our own right to free speech to speak over him, thus, the speaker's right to free speech has not been violated.
If you own a company and one of your employees is making comments you deem racist or sexist on Twitter, you have every right to fire that individual for their conduct. Their right to free speech has not been violated.
If you run a message board like Terb and certain people make comments you strongly disagree with, you have every right to ban their account on the basis of what they're saying. The message board is your property. Their right to free speech has not been violated.
In short, unless the police, courts or government stops someone from making comments that are not threatening and not defaming, no one's rights are being violated.