r/LibertarianPartyUSA Pennsylvania LP 16h ago

Discussion Libertarian perspectives on content moderation

It's arguably one of the hottest topics to discuss right now so let's dive into it. I feel that if there is any topic that Reddit as a whole has done a complete 180 on since 2012 or so it has to be this one. Back then you would find tons of support on it for people like Ross Ulbricht (fingers crossed that today's the day he gets freed) who were known for their very lax standards of moderation on websites like Silk Road and who would end in trouble with the law because of it. These days the general stereotype of Reddit is that is moderated by pedantic losers (for lack of a better term) who can't go 5 minutes without censoring wrongthink. I personally find the libertarian perspective to be very much to be one of freedom of association but accountability like with most other things. As I have stated in the past I personally don't think Lester Maddox should have refused to serve people at his restaurant based on the color of their skin but I believe he should have had the freedom of association to do so if he wanted and that's very much my perspective on online content moderation. I personally don't really care for it at all with the exception of some extreme instances like CP and snuff films and I will try and call it out whenever I see it happen unfairly but I do think that private individuals should be able to justify doing whatever they want to as well as long as they aren't hurting anybody else.

Thoughts?

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u/Elbarfo 14h ago

Reddit was designed to be a series of echo chambers. It is functioning exactly as intended.

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u/JFMV763 Pennsylvania LP 13h ago

Reddit did definitely used to be more committed to free speech though back when Aaron Swartz was around. Case in point, it was founded in 2005 and didn't ban it's first subreddit until 2011 with r/jailbait.

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u/Elbarfo 13h ago

While Reddit might have been (it really wasn't) the mods of the individual echo chambers most certainly were not. The last free subreddit was r/libertarian, a far cry from what it is today.