@h_tejas @prasoon The ban is a good thing precisely for the reason you give: private companies should not control who gets to interact with a public servant. Twitter *should* be out of the loop. https://social.privacytools.io/@resist1984/105526982055281931
@resist1984 @h_tejas
1. Any and all social media, even federated, community owned ones are at best recommendation engines and often just propaganda machine.
2. The Internet is a pubic utility, not social media.
3. The State should use open protocols to communicate with the citizens (even state owned products would easily fail to address diverse accessibility issues and they often do)...
@resist1984 @h_tejas
4. Twitter didn't ban hate from their platform, just a person who has now lost power to another person.
5. The ban is not good or bad, it should be irrelevant. It's a private entity that's been awarded the privilege to exist and profit its shareholders and a few employees.
@resist1984 @h_tejas
6. The people, through the elected representatives, give it that privilege. It's not good to celebrate (or even acknowledge) these private entities' assumed privilege to grant or deny any citizen's right to exist on their platform.
7. Since emotions make for bad governance, let's keep religion and social media cults out of the State's business.
@h_tejas @prasoon point 7 contradicts 6, and point 7 is the sensible one. The state should not be using a private walled garden that it does not control. When twtr banned me, I could theoretically sue the /gov/ (not twtr) for violating 1st amend. b/c the politicians us it for public business. My case would be as weak as the extent of control the gov has over twtr.