by jor-el on 4/2/20, 4:50 PM with 16 comments
Today I came across a very disturbing news of health workers being attacked while they visited a suspected Covid-19 infected patients house in India (and many other countries). The cause of attack has been attributed to misinformation being spread on a Whatsapp group. This news is not a one off incidence of Internet services leading to a social unrest.
As a solution, often Indian government lean to shutdown the internet in such places during riots, or any kind of social unrest. Indian government did the same in Kashmir recently as a per-emptive measure in 2019. This was criticized and our Supreme court went on to say Internet is a fundamental right.
So here lies my dilemma. On one hand Internet - which of course includes Facebook, Insta, whatsapp, Signal etc services - is very important and considered as a fundamental right, but it is also causing harm to the society. How can such problem be solved, which from my vantage point is becoming more frequent? Can it be justified to shutdown internet or censor internet during crisis? If not, then how to tackle this problem from a governance point of view when you know the cause from where the problem is arising.
I am giving examples from India, but this problem is becoming very global according to me, and would like to hear your views from a global perspective, is there some country handling this in a better way? And I humbly request, please do not indulge in any political arguments.
[1] https://www.news18.com/news/india/four-arrested-in-indore-for-attacking-spitting-on-health-officials-during-covid-19-contact-tracing-2561659.html (Whatsapp part mentioned towards the end of article)
by mifreewil on 4/2/20, 7:43 PM
I see this line of thinking extremely dangerous and misguided.
> is very important... but it is also causing harm to the society
Let me stop you right there. You can literally make this case about every noun ever. History is littered with a long list of do-gooders that tried to ban books, alcohol, some sort of human sexuality, gambling, and on and on. I believe this is roughly where the saying "The path to hell is paved with good intentions" comes from.
In the United States, we believe in freedom. Freedom has the same properties that can lead to good or bad outcomes. People can choose good or bad. They can choose the right political candidate or the wrong candidate. They can believe what they want to believe. They can choose different paths that may lead to prosperity or to poverty.
Censorship or banning things mostly don't work and banning it just because it can cause harm is not defensible. Censorship, especially, creates a large amount of harm itself by reducing trust in the government. Reminds me when I was a teenager and I asked for a hacking book for Christmas. My relative refused to get it for me because of the harm it could do. My response was that knowledge was neither good nor bad. It's what you decide to do with it. My argument was that that same knowledge of computer hacking, while can be used for bad or evil, can also be used for good or defense against those wishing to do harmful things.
In the United States we have experience with alcohol and other drug prohibition, and it's been an absolute disaster. And the thinking about that is the same alarming attitude that is displayed here regarding free speech.
The reason the United States has a 1st Amendment that prevents the government from restricting speech is because it's incredibly dangerous to allow anyone or any group to decide what speech is allowed. It may start out with good intentions, but is far too dangerous to even allow the beginnings of it to exist.
by pcunite on 4/3/20, 2:11 AM
This will continue in this life. If you give all power to government, then they will cause the harm. If you give all power to the public sector, they will cause the harm. A balance is required between the two and that based on agreement.
To the issue you bring up, specifically. Become a trusted source of information that the public sector can rely on. Trust, once lost, becomes difficult to re-obtain.
by powerapple on 4/2/20, 6:15 PM
by codegeek on 4/2/20, 7:33 PM
Kill the message, not the messenger. If Social media is easy to mis-spread information, teach people how to use it better.
by gumby on 4/2/20, 7:50 PM
If the internet is made indespensible, as water and electricity are considered, then access cannot be shut off.
But even where IPs are being passed around, it has been possible for some governments like Turkey's and China's to block access to certain sites, especially if they have architected their communications topology to support that (e.g. having few transport links outside their country).
by ACosmicDust on 4/3/20, 5:35 AM
Blocking the internet is out right foolish and harmful.
by keenmaster on 4/2/20, 6:52 PM
If that seems quaint, consider the alternative. The internet gives nuclear-scale ammunition to fear mongerers and foreign agents. Scientific nation building, moderated by democratic humanitarianism, is a necessity not a fantasy in this day and age.
by gtirloni on 4/2/20, 5:05 PM
by leetcrew on 4/2/20, 7:13 PM
a slightly more reasonable alternative would be for the government to censor misinformation during the crisis. this raises the usual questions: what will be censored? at what level will it be decided? I certainly do not trust the trump administration to curate my news.
by edmundsauto on 4/2/20, 7:30 PM
by zzo38computer on 4/2/20, 7:59 PM
But if there is bad information on there, then the government and/or anyone else who has good information should add the good informations too.
by deft on 4/4/20, 3:23 PM
by acd on 4/2/20, 6:39 PM
Call friends instead