Liberals reacted with relief and delight last week, when gravel voiced conspiracy theorist Alex Jones was disappeared from the internet. I don’t like Alex Jones. I debated him in 2011 about 9/11 and 7/7 conspiracy theories and he suggested I was a government shill. He peddles outrageous, sometimes hateful, lies in order to fund his business of selling tat. (Visit the Infowars online shop if you really want to understand what he’s all about.1).
In a strange way Jones is a natural mutation of the internet business model itself – more outrage equals more clicks equals more sales. Perhaps one reason Google and Facebook ditched him was because he reminded them too much of themselves.
The Jones banishment is part of a concerted effort. The big tech firms are under increasing pressure to make the place more hostile for people like him: over the past few weeks and months several high profile radical right-wingers have found social media – for a long time their haven – is no longer so welcoming. Gavin McInnes, Vice Founder and alt-liter, was also expelled. Milo Yiannopoulus was acrimoniously dumped some time ago. Behind the scenes the companies are upping their monitoring procedures and removing significantly more content than even just a year ago – especially radical Islamist.
Very few liberals were overly worried about the Jones affair. To anyone who expressed a concern about free speech, the stock response was: Facebook and co haven’t denied Jones his freedom of speech. They haven’t stopped him from hosting his own blog, from shouting from his own rooftop or writing his own newsletter. They have simply stopped him spewing his babbling drivel on their private platform. Private platforms can do as they wish.
This is exactly correct, and I’m glad they’re acting more responsibly. But it is also exactly the problem. Regardless of the specifics of the Jones case, it illustrates the way tech companies increasingly decide what ideas people access, what’s in the public domain and what’s not, and therefore the shape and contour of the public sphere.
Not in a strictly legal sense: Alex Jones could indeed start up his own newsletter, and he probably will. But in a functional sense the public sphere has become a private enterprise, a set of servers owned by Californian companies.
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