More on the 2016-2019 closure of the Internet. In 2015, Reddit, like YouTube, had almost no content policy beyond banning illegal activity, doxxing, harassment, and involuntary or underage pornography. By 2020, Reddit had purged political dissent from the site.
Much of Reddit's shift was motivated by one thing: that r/The_Donald, the hub of internet Trump support, could consistently reach and dominate the front page. Reddit repeatedly changed their algorithm and policies specifically to suppress r/The_Donald before banning it.
The first major crack in Reddit's freedom of speech stance was in 2016, when the CEO of Reddit, Steve Huffman, was caught personally editing user's posts on r/The_Donald. He then changed Reddit's policy to exclude r/The_Donald from the r/popular Reddit homepage.
After Unite the Right in Charlottesville (October 2017), Reddit announced an expanded content policy against hate speech and banned around 20 subreddits.
In March 2018, Reddit began banning the (legal) sale of guns or prostitution in response to the Parkland mass shooting.
In September 2018, Reddit revamped their quarantine system (subreddits became invisible to non-members, killing growth) and began quarantining dozens of subs, including popular ones such as r/TheRedPill, for being "controversial" [ie, some activist wrote an article].
Also in September, Reddit changed its harassment policy from requiring fear for real-world safety to simply "anything that works to shut someone out of the conversation through intimidation or abuse," a much laxer standard. This led to dozens more subs getting purged.
In January 2019, many subreddits were banned for "anti-Muslim content" after the Christchurch shooting, including r/Gore and r/cringeanarchy, neither of which were political.
r/The_Donald, the hub of Trump support on the Internet with 754,000 subscribers, was quarantined in June 2019, as was r/frenworld (for using pepe the frog memes as coded antisemitic messaging). r/The_Donald was banned for good in 2020, along with more than 2000 other subs.
In numbers: in 2019 Reddit quarantined 256 subs, banned 21,900 subs, suspended 55,994 accounts for policy (as opposed to eg spam) violations, and removed 222,000 pieces of content for policy violations. Moderators removed 84.1 million pieces of content.
One of the more difficult things to find concrete information on was the role of power mods. By 2020 six volunteer moderators had autocratic control over 118 of the top 500 subs; these individuals tend to be leftist and plausibly more powerful than the actual site.
In 2015, Redditors were almost universally hostile to the idea of censorship or banning "hate speech." By 2018, a significant minority were in favor. By 2020, most dissenters having been banned from the site, a majority were in favor.
Today, Reddit is notorious for its doctrinaire leftism, but it used to be a very ideologically heterogenous site and the main discussion forum between different groups on the Internet. Nothing has successfully replaced 2016 Reddit for actual popular debate.
Another thread on the closure of the Internet. Amazon, like other major tech giants, had little content policy beyond "no illegal content, spam or scams/fraud" in 2015 and by 2020 had a well developed censorship infrastructure for both the web store and AWS.
Amazon is particularly important for two reasons: (1) AWS making it, like Google Search, a major Internet chokepoint and (2) 50% book and 80% e-book market share; Amazon banning a book is the closest a non-classified book can really come to being banned in the US.
The first cracks in Amazon's neutrality appeared in June 2015, when a media blitz and political pressure campaign (sparked by Dylan Roof) led to Amazon removing all Confederate flag (a completely normal American symbol) merchandise from the site.
There is a common Hollywood upwards mobility narrative for early 20th century European immigrants. It's not really true; for most origins earnings for both first and second generation were similar and were already above average in generation 1.
Relative rank order didn't change much either.
I know you might be wondering "why are Italians so high and Norwegians, Swedes, etc so low." Answer: farms.
The most important platform to be closed off 2017-2019 was YouTube. Before 2017, YouTube was a very open platform, with easy monetization and almost no moderation of legal content. By the end of 2019, thoughtcrime (anything to the right of Ben Shapiro) was thoroughly purged.
In March 2017, several news organizations (The Times of London, the Guardian, WSJ) published coordinated articles about ads appearing next to "problematic" content on YouTube. This led to the British government summoning Google to explain and an advertiser boycott.
[as an aside, no one sane believes that an ad appearing next to a YouTube video implies the company behind that ad endorses or knows about the content of the video; this was 100% astroturf. No one knew or complained until the news articles hit]
It is stunning how quickly the Internet was closed off 2017-2023. Perhaps most importantly, Google began politicizing search results in April 2017 with "Project Owl," which sought to suppress "problematic searches" [their term, not mine].
To accomplish this, Google began removing "problematic" autocomplete selections. Since then, there have been a number of cases of Google's autocomplete bias getting so heavy-handed it went viral on other platforms, but the thumb on the scale is usually invisible.
Google also began manual rating/curation of their "featured snippets" answers.
It is completely false that redlining was "explicit racial gatekeeping." 92% of redlined homes were white! Redlining was based on bureaucrats trying to predict if home values in an area would go up or down so as to avoid wasting taxpayer money on bad loans.
Almost all black neighborhoods were redlined because black neighborhoods tend to be poor, violent, dirty, and getting worse (because of black behavior), and so not places people want to move to. This was true in 1936, it was true in 1966, and it is true today.
The current view of "redlining" in the popular consciousness is a (wholly, 100% false) narrative to frame current black lack of housing wealth as the result of past white malfeasance and hence justify white expropriation.
Thread with excerpts from Helen Andrews "Boomers" (2021).
Steve Jobs was an atypical Boomer - he didn't care for politics or philanthropy. Also did not like porn and saw himself as an institution builder, not a destroyer, and closer in personal habits and ideals to the founder of IBM than his age peers.
Unlike Jobs, Tim Cook is a very political CEO of Apple, and awarded for it by the UN and ADL.