Stani@stani·Apr 11

Recent actions in Brazil towards x shows that social platforms will have hard time to establish resiliency for freedom of speech or to thrive as fair and open social spaces.

Eventually x would need to take down accounts that are unlawful for whatever legal decision or interpretation of the law. This also means that politized judgements or interpretations of the law can become a reason to take down opinionated accounts.

There are lot of cases in history where the law or court judgements have been used as a political tool.

A way to enable open and fair social spaces would be by relying on a network that can ensure data integrity for social data (accounts, followers, content). If a node does not respect the data integrity, it gets disqualified and removed. New nodes will appear due to the cryptoeconomic incentives.

Thats why I am also bearish on existing federated data models since there are little incentives to establish data integrity. Nodes can be paid to run these servers to serve data and “to be nice” but without a consensus, there is no guarantee for data integrity.

Once there is a consensus over data integrity, social primitives can be established and ownership rights issued to private/public key holders of the network participants. Virtually Bitcoin relies on the same mechanism for establishing ownership guarantees over a financial primitive.

This is why I am bullish on using onchain for providing security to ensure data integrity and ownership that eventually can enable censorship resistance. Moderation would still work on an application/platform level without seizing users accounts and voice on protocol level.

It’s a fundamental transition from don’t be evil to can’t be evil.

  • Agreed

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    • Hey, this tweet got me thinking about the power dynamics in social platforms and how they handle rights to free speech. It's wild how laws and politics can impact what we see online. How do you think this will shape the future of social media? 🤔

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      • @05069·Apr 13

        make lens great again

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        • DARKSİDE@000600·Apr 11

          damm

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          • @zamaansari·Apr 11

            Good job

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            • Claymacedo@claymac·Apr 11

              I'm Brazilian and Brazil is suffering from the loss of freedom of expression... They're trying to establish a dictatorship.

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              • Good

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                • omid@mindnetwork·Apr 11

                  Good

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                  • That’s exactly the reason we are here and why I believe so much in the future we are shaping together!🌹

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                    • @uttar·Apr 11

                      Cool

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                      • dankshard@dankshard·Apr 11

                        what happened in Brazil?

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                        • That's why we are here.

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                          • Cao Luan@an_ujeong·Apr 11

                            555

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                            • Anon@metatxn·Apr 11

                              Social media platforms are in a risky position. They must adhere to the laws of the countries they operate in, which can sometimes lead to content takedowns that go against the spirit of free expression. Moreover, Politicised legal interpretations further complicate the situation. Content deemed harmful or illegal in one region might be perfectly acceptable elsewhere. This creates a challenging landscape for platforms trying to maintain a global presence.

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                              • Ugoyoung5@ugoyoung5·Apr 11

                                Change is inevitable, the future government will adapt

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                                • 👀

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                                  • xiaoyumi@xiaoyanzi·Apr 11

                                    g

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                                    • Gilson@gilsoncarlos·Apr 11

                                      It is interesting to see how recent actions here in Brazil reveal a larger issue about freedom of expression on social media. The need to remove illegal accounts can easily become a political tool, where interpretations of the law can be used to silence dissenting voices. In an impactful and sensational way, the proposal to use blockchain to guarantee data integrity could be revolutionary. It will be necessary to create material for crypto influencers here in Brazil, it is something that will move very slowly and runs the risk of being sabotaged or politicians themselves not engaging. By establishing consensus on data integrity, we can create a system that not only protects users' property and privacy, but also enables censorship resistance. This marks a fundamental shift from simply avoiding evil to making it impossible to be malicious.

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                                      • Absolutely ser! Well articulated post. Thanks for sharing. 💯🫡

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                                        • Diogo R@diogor·Apr 11

                                          Also Musk has a lot of interests in Brazil and with Tesla and Starlink but BYD will build an electric car factory in the north of Brazil, etc. He's probably not very happy about it.

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                                          • weida1988@lens6999·Apr 11

                                            baby

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                                            • 43rtfe@fesdecf·Apr 11

                                              666

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                                              • 💯 bullish that many people will see the need to come on chain and express themselves.

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                                                • Diogo R@diogor·Apr 11

                                                  But in this specific case in Brazil, it's because there are plenty of people spreading fake news like crazy nowdays , so there is a need to someone to say stop with this craziness.

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