Remove tag defamation
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Personal reputation systems are about to take off… but the next start-up won’t last

Trends in the Living Networks

It’s time for a centralized, well organized place for anonymous mass defamation on the Internet. Tags: Business relationships Influence Reputation. The thrust of Arrington’s article is that if we are all open to anonymous feedback…. But it’s coming nonetheless. …we we will have to change how we judge reputation.

System 108
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Thoughts from the Walkley Public Affairs conference - Trends in the Living Networks

Trends in the Living Networks

The Lowy Institute has, for now, chosen not to enable comments on the blog, primarily because of the risk of defamation. Sam believes that Australian political blogging is not mature, and is behind that of other modern economies. Coming from a broadcast background, she decided to build a simple studio and do podcasts.

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Civil rights organizations want advertisers to dump Facebook

Vox

The NAACP, the Anti-Defamation League, and others say they are sick of waiting for changes. Nearly 99 percent of Facebook’s revenue came from advertising in 2019. Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images.

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Mass layoffs and general chaos: How Elon Musk is changing Twitter

Vox

He also met with leaders of civil rights groups like the NAACP, the Anti-Defamation League, and Color of Change, promising them that Twitter takes hate speech seriously, and he won’t reinstate any banned accounts (e.g., Trump) until after he sets up a content moderation advisory council, which he said will at least take several weeks.

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Mass layoffs and general chaos: How Elon Musk is changing Twitter

Vox

On Thursday, Musk spoke with leaders of civil rights groups like the NAACP, the Anti-Defamation League, and Color of Change, promising them that Twitter takes hate speech seriously, and that he won’t reinstate any banned accounts (e.g.,

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Section 230, the internet law the Supreme Court could change, explained

Vox

But in 1994, Stratton Oakmont sued Prodigy for defamation after an anonymous user claimed on a Prodigy bulletin board that the financial company’s president engaged in fraudulent acts. In the midst of this was a lawsuit between two companies you might recognize: Stratton Oakmont and Prodigy.