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Tweeting “Memphis” autolocks your Twitter account (twitter.com/swiftonsecurity)
536 points by hirsin on March 14, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 334 comments



Ugh...I have a HN Twitter bot that just tried to post this and it got locked.

https://www.twitter.com/hackernewstop10


The reason for the ban is “revealing private information”. It seems to be related to a Dutch soccer player Memphis Depay.

https://twitter.com/OL_English/status/1371121328649076744


I read that tweet as OL's social media team having heard of the problem and poking fun at Twitter. Nothing in that tweet suggests that there is a causal relationship with that specific person.


Oh! When I first read the headline, I thought of Windows 98 (codename: Memphis), and got excited this is gonna be something retro about an elite UX design.


Out of the loop: what genie are they trying to stuff back in the bottle? Googling reveals that his transfer contract with full prices etc was leaked, but that appears to have been a few years ago.




Oh no, I hadn't even thought of that. Yes, likely many bots locked for this.


Yep, mine at https://twitter.com/hn_frontpage got hit as well


Maybe they’re trying to get rid of bots.


It doesn't appear to be locked now.


Apparently the company has very recently tweeted that a "bug" causing this has now been fixed.


"The company" hasn't tweeted about this either at https://twitter.com/twitter or https://twitter.com/TwitterSupport. Link or it didn't happen.



Thanks. (In case people wander by later, this was tweeted half an hour after my post above, and the OP has made it clear in a parallel subthread that they were referring to something that was later admitted to be a hoax by the perpetrator.)


I said "apparently" because my source was a screenshot of a tweet saying "Sorry for that.", just as this Gizmodo reporter also saw.

* https://gizmodo.com/twitter-banned-me-for-saying-the-m-word-...


The same user later tweeted: "to the people getting mad at me for this, it's ya' own fault for believing a single tweet from an unverified source instead of looking at the official twitter pages. i'm just havin' fun." https://twitter.com/SPLLTHEMANSNAME/status/13711921957772328...

So yes, unsurprisingly, something that "apparently" happened but wasn't sourced didn't actually happen.


Good for them. Bug, mistake, bad data, or whatever. Glad they fixed it.


In general it seems like moderating platforms with millions/billions of users is a fool's errand, but is required to be attempted due to the level of centralization we've ended up with.

Regardless of how much of it is automated away via blackbox ML algorithms lacking transparency or via outsourcing to cheap labor that spends their days looking at terribly offensive and shocking content, the end result is going to have countless false positives, a difficult (if even possible) path for users to appeal, and a largely discontent userbase that constantly feels wronged from multiple angles.

Having millions of people with thousands of cultures, hundreds of languages, and countless niche styles of communication all be moderated by the same group of people (or the same algorithms) just isn't a good idea, and I hope that in the long-term we can find ways for communities to self-moderate in more decentralized manners to help improve this.


There is no way to moderate the entire world. The sooner everyone alive accepts this, the better off we will be.

The values of a Black lesbian female software developer who grew up in San Francisco and went to Stanford will never be compatible with the values of a Hispanic straight male Marine officer who grew up in San Antonio and went to Texas Christian University and has been deployed to 17 different countries.

However, they can and do exist on the same platforms. They can exist because both of them are going to HAVE to learn how to engage with one another, even though their existences are completely incompatible and utterly different.

There's no technology on Earth powerful enough to solve for the human condition. We have to evolve our ways of thinking and interacting.


However, they can and do exist on the same platforms. They can exist because both of them are going to HAVE to learn how to engage with one another, even though their existences are completely incompatible and utterly different.

How are those two people's lives on social media incompatible? There's a million things they could have in common - a love of tacos, a band to talk about, a shared joke about a dumb celebrity, etc etc.99.9999% of the time different people can and do coexist in the same spaces.

The idea that two wildly different people with different points of view can't even exist in the same social network is nonsense. The only time incompatible points of view are a problem is when one or other person decides to try to invalidate the existence of the other. That's what moderation is there to stop. If people are just tweeting about their life there's nothing to moderate.


"invalidate existence" can do a lot of work though if you're sufficiently motivated.

There are a lot of 40-60% popular views that invalidate someone's existence according to certain parts of twitter.


I think you put a strong word on something very common. Invalidating existence is not always call to murder :D

If you say gun owners dont deserve to live or that the world would be better without white people, there are way to let it be said and discuss it without heavy moderation.

People are just mad at mad people. That s why it s a frigging jungle online. But if you stay patient with mad people or ignore them if you re not sure, then moderation stays on important things like doxxing


The GP wrote their "values" not "lives" are incompatible.


>The idea that two wildly different people with different points of view can't even exist in the same social network is nonsense

I agree. However I do see this happening. Its kinda crazy. I remember being on the internet as a kid (probably on sites I had no business being on lol) and people would get into heated arguments but I don't think it ever resulted in "I hate you, I'm going to try to get you banned via politics". I was around animation and creative type forums and people would go at each others throats but then like you say, bond over talking about a new software tool or animation lol.


You assume this is the only way, and it is true if you take as an axiom that everybody is equal and has equal right to be represented, to access the platforms and to participate in a public discussion. This is not however what leftist culture warriors think, and unfortunately for people who disagree with them, they now are controlling most of the Big Tech platforms and most of the corporate press. As the result, the values which they disagree with are and going to be suppressed, and they are absolutely OK with it - moreover, they consider it vital and necessary.

They do not want to learn to engage anybody they disagree with, and as long as they control most of the platforms, along with the academia, the education sector, the entertainment sector, serious part of the government institutions and significant part of the corporate boards - there is no reason for them to engage anyone, as soon as they can just suppress and deplatform whoever they like. Might makes right, at least for them.

Of course, there's no technology on Earth - at least not yet - to make dissenting voices completely silent. But that's not the point. The point is to make them orders of magnitude weaker, so they would not be able to influence anything. You can talk to your friends in your kitchen, if you want, while your opponents will have an access to billions strong audience. You can set up your puny webserver (provided your ISP and your DNS provider do not deplatform you, and your bank does not deny you access to payment systems) - and you'll be competing with the combined powers of Amazon, Google, Facebook, Twitter, Apple and such. Do you think they would feel compelled to "engage" you, to evolve and change their ways to account for your existence - or would they just crush you like a tiny insect, and not even notice it?


> They can exist because both of them are going to HAVE to learn how to engage with one another

You're assuming good faith from both parties. Harassers and trolls don't act in good faith.


There is a well-known recipe against trolls: do not feed them. Block and ignore them. If you visit a bathroom, you normally don't bloviate about the kind of crap you had just to flush, you rather avoid the topic; the same applies to trolls. Bring zero attention to them.

Trolls' game is all about drawing attention, in the form of ire, offense, and and panic. Deprive them this, and they'll cease to bother you much.

This is, of course, easier to do if you are a statue of buddha made of reinforced concrete, but even us living beings can learn and engage in some best practices of communication online.


This approach only works if they don’t care about you. There’s a couple of decades of history by now showing how this approach fails, ranging from mass harassment (want to spend weeks blocking randos and sock puppets?) to attempts to contact your family and coworkers up to in-person harassment, placing Craigslist ads with your address saying you have violent rape fantasies, and SWATing.

This is, of course, unevenly distributed. If you’re a white guy you have to work at it to get the same level of resentment in certain circles that other people start with by being female, brown, gay, etc.

GamerGate is well worth learning about as an extreme example of how far it can get beyond the level where blocking works: it started with one person (Eron Gjoni) trying to clinch the “worst ex ever” title by rallying a hate mob against his ex girlfriend with some fake claims, which produced hate spasms for over a year, multiple police investigations, and fed into the 2016 US Presidential election.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamergate_controversy


You were doing pretty good right up until you tried to channel GamerGame... that was a huge mistake. I get that you believe the "Official Party Line"(TM), but a lot of people don't, and a lot of us watched this whole thing unfold real-time across The Zoe Post, 4chan, reddit, and every other major venue on which it presented itself.

Furthermore, some of us actually know the participants involved in a professional and private capacity.

Yes, Gjoni "did a bad thing" by posting all the duplicitous shitty things Quinn did... but therein lies the rub. If you don't want to be called out for being a cheater who fucks game journalists for good reviews... then don't cheat on your boyfriend and fuck game journalists for reviews. It really is that goddamn simple.

What GamerGate really was, was that gamers - the naive idiots they tend to be - found out that their little subculture was NOT immune to all the awful shit that plagues every other human interest. They, however, decided to start fighting back instead of just shrugging their shoulders and saying, "Oh well, everything's corrupt and awful, what can you do?"

But the real root cause problem here is that people don't want to accept human nature, almost all people, on almost all sides.


I realize that you might want to view your friends in a positive light but what I wrote is an accurate description of GamerGate (A lot of us saw this unfold, too). “ethics in journalism” was their favored excuse but the real cause was always the seething hatred for feminists and women not knowing their place. They ignored contemporaneous real ethical issues and focused on known-inaccurate excuses for the continued hate mob - for example, you’re still repeating their claim that Zoe Quinn slept with Nathan Grayson for good reviews, despite him not reviewing her games – something easily verified for anyone who cared to check.


"despite him not reviewing her games" The people he directly managed wrote 2 reviews. Stop pushing a lie.

The issue here acdha is that you failed to check.


Dude, it’s been almost 7 years, full of widely-recognized dishonesty and bad faith arguments by GamerGaters and fellow travelers. What do you think you’re going to accomplish by trying a new variation of an old claim conspicuously made without any evidence? Do you really think anyone is going to believe it, much less say it excuses what happened?


No one at the time ever claimed that the articles didn't exist, as you could just read the articles in question.

It was a revisionist lie added 6 to 8 months after the events.

Since you didn't bother to read the articles, there were 2 seperate articles both about Indie games in general. They both had sections on Depression Quest and both used Depression Quest for all the article's images. One of them at the bottom had a single hashtag #DepressionQuest on it. Both written by Nathan Grayson's subordinates.

Obviously, this isn't any different than large publishers giving the gaming journalists huge sacks of money, which they do.

The problem was it escalated out of control into the gaming journalists writing hit pieces on the gaming community as part of their damage control.

I'm sorry acdha but 7 years ago you were duped by hit piece articles.


Blocking, muting, or ignoring a handful of people may work. But when you have hundreds or thousands or more people harassing you, blocking them all isn't practical or sufficient. Get enough people mad at you and you'll end up being SWATted or doxxed (or turned in to deepfake porn). At some point the trolls start feeding each other. Next thing you know we end up with another gamergate (which started because some dude was mad at his ex).


People can still SWAT you even after they've been banned from Twitter though.


Or let them find each other and build their own little filter bubble of hate until they storm the US Capitol.


That works until the trolls' game is to shut down the channel of communication by crapflooding it.

Spewbots and humans who act like them are nothing new. See a topic of discussion you feel is dangerous or merely not aligned with your core values? Send in the trolls and/or bots to spew hateful nonsense all over it until nothing else remains. Ignoring those trolls is precisely what they want: Ignore them, ignore the topic, ignore everything all the non-trolls are saying, move along, nothing to see here. Nifty little censorship tool if you can weaponize it effectively enough.

DNFTT only works on pathological individual cases who care about what the community thinks of them.


What happens if the trolls decide to bring explosives to blow up your Buddha statue?


We've witnessed hundreds of statues destroyed last year, from Abraham Lincoln to Cervantes. So we know the answer - if it's the right people doing blowing up, nothing happens, you have one statue left and you are forced to apologize for putting it up in the first place.


I think it stretches the metaphor outside its charted range.

OTOH using explosives is outright violence, and would likely be illegal by US federal laws.


And now with gpt3 we can create an endlessly creative bots of harassers!


I am not sure I understand your claim... there are many global-scale companies that do moderate their entire site... Google, Reddit, Amazon.

Are you trying to make a more specific claim than your post lets on? Maybe that it’s impossible to moderate without making some concession you don’t prefer? Or it’s impossible to moderate away certain kinds of things?


You're going to use Reddit as an example, where the people least deserving of power are given it, freely, and end up banning people for merely having different opinions?

I would not have used that in my list.

It doesn't boil down to a "concession I don't prefer". The only thing you moderate are those things deemed illegal by the Federal government, anything else is fair game, which brings us a pretty large umbrella of discussion in which to engage. Some people don't want to engage in those discussions because they're hard and/or unpleasant. They not required to, and can freely leave them and ignore them. Allowing whiners who can't stand that people may have a controversial opinion that's at odds with their beliefs to have any power whatsoever is a fast track to failure on multiple levels.

People have block tools; they need to learn to use them.


> The only thing you moderate are those things deemed illegal by the Federal government, anything else is fair game

Why?

It is certainly legal in the USA to be a KKK member as long as you aren't participating in the domestic terrorism. Yet I have no interest in conversation with KKK members and would will choose to freely leave websites where they hang out. So many people agree with me that a website owner decides he needs the traffic of anti-KKK people and starts banning legal Klan members.

Why must the website owner keep Klan members who have not broken any laws? Why should everything besides what is deemed illegal by the federal government be fair game?


> deemed illegal by the Federal government

I'm guessing you mean the US Federal government, not the Federal government of China, or any of the many others around the world. For a global network, why should the US government's rules be more important than others? Or should networks be restricted to one country only?


> Some people don't want to engage in those discussions because they're hard and/or unpleasant. They not required to, and can freely leave them and ignore them.

They did leave, and then they made the new space where those discussion are not tolerated. We are talking inside one of such places.

Some people don't want to understand that there are discussion places which limit certain topics. They are not required to, and can freely leave and ignore them. They have plenty of other places where uncensored discussions can occur.


> Some people don't want to understand that there are discussion places which limit certain topics.

Twitter and Facebook aren't such spaces.

They're both based on models of unlimited growth, which means you're going to have unlimited viewpoints, which means you're going to have to #DealWithIt.

What you want, can be done on Hacker News because we're a focused community and most of us all have similar jobs, come from similar backgrounds, etc., or at least, there's enough of us that work in tech and enough of us that went to good schools that we're a more or less cohesive community with fairly similar values.

You don't have that with 5 billion users, sorry.


And said companies are quite often on HN for screwing up said moderation.


They aren’t actually making a claim. It’s an emotional appeal to “free speech” absolutism, whatever that means.


Your reply kinda implies that "entire world" is spanned from SF to Texas. Anecdotally, I just returned from Egypt vacation trip. Go figure how to moderate black 14 years orthodox christian sugarcane worker, who is writing in Arabic script.


And yes, I am Russian, so for me Memphis is a former capital of Egypt)


Speaking of that..

What I find interesting is that the more you travel for leasure and meet people from other countries. The more that you learn about different view points.

Also the more gross that identity politics and shamming practices over viewpoints becomes. I'm not saying that you should support people you don't agree with. But, there's a heck of a lot of other cultures that are at odds with what's going on.


The better solution is they both use their own mastodon instances with different rules and the instances block each other.


What's wrong with the good old method, "separate communities"?

A group of people talking about sports will reject (or moderate) people who want to talk about latest programming languages.

A group of people talking about computer-related stuff will downvote and flag non-computer news about latest sport game.

The global discussion forum without any moderation does not live long. We can moderate the entire world if we split it into many small parts and give member power to do so.


That was pretty normal until not long ago, but there seems to be a push to "everything is political". This provides the excuse to go after people who might contibute to a community, but stated somewhere else opinions that are not in line with somebody in said community.


I'm fine with that... but these platforms aren't.

These platforms are driven by what Eric Weinstein, correctly I think, calls E.G.O.s, or Embedded Growth Obligations. You can't convince a venture capitalist to fund something like Twitter without the promise of enormous user growth, because the model only works if you have an enormous userbase on the platform.

I actually think Zuckerberg's dumbass tag line, "It's free, and always will be." is stupid. Facebook is worth about jack shit to everyone except advertisers, because it doesn't cost anything. Putting up a monthly fee is how you separate people who are willing to shit all over something from people who are willing to build something.

World of Warcraft is, I think, a fine example of this, especially versus a game like League of Legends. WoW's userbase, will still filled with the occasional troll and troublemaker, has far fewer than League. Why? Because you have to buy the game itself just to get started. Then you have to spend $15 a month to play it. You're invested from the word "go". For League, you play the entire game, from start to "finish" for free, only paying if you want to. Hence you see a ton more trolling and shitty behavior, because the vast, vast majority of players aren't invested - its just a way for them to while away their lives with no investment.

I guarantee you, if you had to pay $5 a month for Twitter and $5 a month for Facebook, you'd see a lot more reasonable behavior, because after the first few months, only people who really got "value" from the platform would keep spending the money to use it. And the sad part is, even 100,000,000 users at $5 a month would be an enormous moneymaking enterprise - with almost guaranteed higher quality interactions.


What if these two hypothetical people are friends who share cooking tips ?

What if neither uses Twitter , but meet at a bar. I've dated liberals and conservatives. People are nicer in real life. Very rarely do people walk up to me hurling insults. Happened constantly online though.


That's a very American way of thinking, just the kind of reasoning that allowed Facebook to almost destroy your democracy.

I'm aware that discussing free speech on any platform is a fool's errand, but at some point somebody has to say that making people angry is profitable and facilitated through the US concept of giving anyone a platform to say anything with very little consequences.

And the last four years really showed how far it can go.

> They can exist because both of them are going to HAVE to learn how to engage with one another

People never ever learn. Wearing a mask has become a political struggle, people literally rather died than wore a piece of cloth just because they looked at it emotionally and not rationally, like you software dev and Marine officer would.


> people literally rather died than wore a piece of cloth just because they looked at it emotionally and not rationally

And that's fine. If you're going to live in a so-called "free" society, part of that "freedom" means people have to be "free" to make stupid choices, even if those stupid choices kill them.


What if their stupid choices kill other people too?


We already have laws for those things - second, third degree murder; involuntary manslaughter, etc.


So can people out in public without masks on be charged with any of these things?


Not wearing masks increase the risk. But as long as they, themselves, are not infected, they are not “killing”

You don’t charge people with manslaughter violating fire code —- there are separate law for that


Covid is so dangerous because you don't know when you're infected. People don't show symptoms for about 10 days after getting covid, and they're infectious long before symptoms appear. By the time you know you're infected with covid, you can easily have given it to someone else - and they could have already given it to another person in turn!

Here in Australia we're dealing with quarantine outbreaks by ring fencing. When we have a confirmed case, we isolate everyone that person has been in contact with, and also isolate everyone they've been in contact with as well. So, one confirmed case -> we lock down hundreds of people. This is the only way we've found to keep outbreaks under control without locking down entire cities.

The policy of only wearing a mask when you feel sick is nowhere near enough to stop you from infecting & potentially killing people.


I'm really not clear on what you're advocating here. Going out in public without a mask increases the risk of transmitting the virus to other people, possibly killing them. In this case one person's freedoms impinge on another's.


Risk is a part of life, driving a car puts people at risk. Going out with a mask also puts people at risk. Coal and nuclear power put people at risk.

You can’t eliminate risk by restricting people’s rights, at some point the restrictions cause more measureable harm and risk of future harm than they eliminate.


We restrict people's rights all the time. You don't have the right to drive drunk, or fly a drone around an airport or raise a false fire alarm in a crowded theater etc etc. Society is a balancing act of one person's freedoms vs another.

Why should I have to endure life threating extra risk for something that's a trivial inconvenience on your part like wearing a mask?

I have to say that this kind of me-first libertarian thinking is a big part of the reason I choose not to live in the US anymore.


> Why should I have to endure life threating extra risk for something that's a trivial inconvenience on your part like wearing a mask?

This question can be reasonably applied to any restriction on anyone’s liberty and the answer is that we always have to strike a balance and there will always be people like yourself who are unhappy with where that balance lies.

> I have to say that this kind of me-first libertarian thinking is a big part of the reason I choose not to live in the US anymore.

I’m glad that you sought out a community that strikes a balance more to your liking but you should probably consider that libertarians in the US do not consider the balance between personal freedom and social risk in the US to be representative of their values. The US is a neoliberal country, not a libertarian country. And that’s fine, and that’s also not for everyone, people who find themselves too far from the center of discourse should find a community where they are more at home. The world is a big place.


And that's why we have driver licences, clean air laws, NRC.

You can't just subject other people to risk because you want to, since it is the community who is going to pay the price, it is the community that decides how to restrict the rights.

(Granted, the process for making that decision is not always the best, but unfortunately this is the only one we have)


Oh I agree 100%. This is why there is constant tension between people who want less restrictions and people who want more. We are always striking an imperfect balance.

“A good compromise leaves everybody mad.” -Bill Watterson


The Valley's position on who of the two needs to disappear from the social media landscape has crystallized already.


Why not have user curated and shareable blocklists? So if I never want to see anything from Alex Jones or Milo Yiannopoulos and the like, I just subscribe to a blocklist that eliminates far right commentators. You could even create networks of trusted users where anyone they block, is blocked for everyone in the network. Or have shareable rulesets, like "block anyone who uses this word", or "block anyone who follows this account".

Of course you could create huge echo chambers that way, but that happens anyways when you curated your followers, so I don't see that as a huge issue. Just now in addition to deciding who you follow, you also decide who you block.

Twitter (or whatever platform) would still be responsible for eliminating bad actors (spammers, people posting illegal content) but other than that could just let users curate what they see on the platform.


Why isn’t it sufficient to not follow Alex Jones? I’ve never seen a tweet by him. Twitter is one of the least pushy platforms in algorithmically pushing content. Just follow people you want to see content from, and unfollow if they tweet things you don’t want to see.


No, it's not enough. Twitter constantly showes me nudes that are liked by some people I follow. I hate this feature.

They should be an option to limit your feed only to the people you follow, but it is unlikely we'll see it because it contradicts the platform aim to increase engagement, by hook or by crook.


I think that feature exists unless I am imagining things? There should be a ... button on the top of the tweet and there should be something like "Not interested in this tweet" there. When you click it, I think it says "show fewer tweets by X" and there should also be an option to see fewer of the likes / retweets from a person.

But in reality, in twitter, like is a soft form of retweeting and users know it. So if someone you follow uses the "like / favorite" feature it also kind of means they want people to see it. For bookmarks, there is a different bookmark functionality. On twitter, like is a low weighted retweet that does not show up in the user's profile directly.


The feature exists, but it doesn't work. Repeatedly asking for "fewer likes by this person" doesn't visibly reduce the frequency of those likes being pushed onto you. The whole thing is a stupid misfeature: Likes are not retweets, so they shouldn't behave like them.


They behave like that and pretty much every user (past a couple months) knows that. When a person presses "like" they know that some of their followers will see that. It signals "this is interesting" publicly, what other purpose could it serve? People that follow you would like to see it, of course. If you don't like people's likes don't follow them.

That said, the feature has always worked for me - actually it works too well that I have to think before I use it. Because after setting it once, it seems like I never hear from that person again. So it feels like an unfollow for me. Maybe the functionality depends on how much you interact with the person on Twitter? I don't know. I don't interact with people much on twitter, so when I choose that option, I don't see any likes from that person ever again, and it feels like I see their tweets A LOT less often than desired.


> what other purpose could it serve?

1. Agreement with the tweet, directed at the author only.

2. A form of "bookmarking" tweets for later. It's no accident that for most of Twitter's life this wasn't called a "like" but a "favorite" (with a star instead of a heart symbol).

As for "some of their followers will see it" and "I don't know [how it works]": That is precisely the problem. Your timeline isn't determined by your choices and the choices of the people you follow. The "algorithmic" timeline also adds a lot of randomness and unwanted choices that you can't control.


I've been saying "Show this less often" / "Fewer likes by this person" / etc pretty much continuously on every element ever since that option appeared.

As far as I can tell, it has never had any effect whatsoever. I still see the components I dismiss, and I still see likes from the same people. Possibly less often... but it's hard to tell when it's every time I open the page.

At this point I click it mostly out of stubbornness and perverse curiosity, to see if the company is at all capable of changing this awful course.


Then use Tweetdeck, and leave the "activity" column closed. The only things in your "home" column are things tweeted or retweeted by people you follow, and you can exclude the retweets if you want. There's other filters too.

https://tweetdeck.twitter.com/


Follow better people? (Or at least don't follow their "personal" accounts)


The people are ok. It just happened that within russian opposition female members have a weird tradition to do #nudesthursday

I am generally interested in what they write but on Thursdays they post nudes and like nudes of other females I don't follow, and Twitter shows me a lot of their likes. It annoys me to no end.


> They should be an option to limit your feed only to the people you follow

You can functionally get the same thing by using the "list" feature instead of following people.


Or by using Tweetdeck.


There is an even better way. Never look at your timeline, so never see any pushed material at all: https://lee-phillips.org/howtotwitter/


Do you use the official Twitter clients? Because they seem to push different, “popular” content pretty hard. Many people joked that ‘Super follow’ should have been replaced by ‘Super block’


> Why not have user curated and shareable blocklists?

Not a fan of this.

I've found myself banned a couple times, only to find out I likely got caught up someones blocklist that put out a large blanket block on anyone friends with someone who followed someone else. Or some similar indirect nonsense.

The idea being you're isolating yourself from someone who's friends with an asshole, so you're less likely to encounter someone you don't like.

And if innocent people get caught up in the dragnet, then so be it.

I found this incredibly unfair, and not really smart, either -- not every "follow" is an endorsement. :P


Sure, but that is the users choice when they chose to use a particular list. I think it is better to give someone the option to choose which people or classes of people to block than decide for them. If someone thinks the risk of blocking someone they are interested in is outweighed by the cost of being exposed to people who's opinions they find damaging, that is their choice.

Personally I wouldn't really block anyone, but I think it is better to have the option that to not.


I find myself blocked from all kinds of accounts that I've never interacted with and as far as I can tell the primary reason is because I follow Sam Harris which is a ludicrous reason to block someone.


> Why not have user curated and shareable blocklists?

Because often the goal is to control what _others_ can see.


Whilst what you say isn't bereft of truth, your phrasing conjours up a shadowy cabal - which in turn makes me wonder if you're deep down one of several potential conspiracy rabbit holes yourself.

If you don't want to give this impression you would benefit from modifying your tone.


It was a simple statement of undisputed fact proclaimed by Twitter management and their peers.


This does happen on a small scale with third party apps, but it seems like doing it on a large scale would just shift the review problem to the curators of the blocklists. If I ran a "known doxxers" blocklist, I'd have to rely on the same kinds of scripts that got Twitter in trouble here.


Shared twitter blocklists are a thing through third-party apps. (Twitter did have basic CSV import/export for block lists too, but didn't further improve that feature and silently dropped it at some point)


I think this is a pretty good solution to the social media algorithmic problems. In a post-S230 world, it'd be pretty neat to see platforms implement decentralized moderation schemes.


In a post-S230 world there are no platforms.

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20200531/23325444617/hello...


Thanks for linking me to an article that I've already read, but I made none of the statements written there, nor does that article state that "In a post-S230 world there are no platforms."


You could probably get some value from https://secateur.app/ but there are also various blocktogether the groups.


BlockTogether shut down in January, after Twitter disabled the APIs it used.


Well, arse.


I started to build this out, but the twitter api access grants are basically all or nothing and that dismayed me enough to give up


Twitter does allow sharable blocklists. I maintain and distribute a very popular one.


Why would big tech voluntarily surrender the unprecedented power to shape worldwide discourse?

"Power intoxicates men. It is never voluntarily surrendered. It must be taken from them." — James F. Byrnes


> "Power intoxicates men. It is never voluntarily surrendered. It must be taken from them." — James F. Byrnes

A great quote that could be understood as a proof that decentralization is a mirage. For decentralization to work it requires its participanta to voluntarily surrender their prerogative to accumulate a relative advantage through exceptional personal agency.

"Decentralization for thee and not for me."


Penistone and Scunthorpe and now Memphis. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcZdwX4noCE

As much as I dislike Twitter (I only really use it for work reasons) they are in a no win situation. They either moderate what people post with a flawed system that will never be 100% or be hounded by the "Why won't anyone think of the children" group.


No win? With hella bank roll and their engineering staff? BS.

They've got a path forward but their management needs to see a new model - and they are not innovators/disruptors anymore. Prognosis: twitter will rot more for next 2-5 years and management won't notice till the ticker is affected. It will take a bit for consumer sentiment to reflect. Then we'll see a new CEO, some shake-up and grand announcement. I hope in that time tho a new challenger emerges.


Look at YouTube and the multiple adpocalypses as an example. They have a massive bank roll and engineering staff but still fall foul of journos writing a story about "look at this content next to X's advert. We reached out to X for their take."

which leads to a tanking of CPM, creators getting demonitised over news reporting, content creators self censoring to the determent of those with visiabilty issues (or simply being on mobile with a small screen) as instead of reading out a statement they will display it on screen in fear of YT's bots flagging because of their spoken content.

No content moderation system will be 100% perfect, esp when you take it as a worldwide problem. And (atleast in the western world) facing demands for more and more content moderation.

In an ideal world we should be able to leave it up to the user. But Twitter has self filters for years and centeral filtering on the platform has only increased not decreased.


That sounds like the spooks giving a "nerd harder" response to being told backdoors will compromise security for everyone. Just because they have money and talent doesn't mean they can do the impossible.


I'm not telling engineers to try harder. I'm telling managers to discover a less slimy model than outrage-to-engage.


The old internet with webforums for particular topics, where the moderators knew the posters, was a better model.


This works well with reddit. Each community has a different moderation style, often aided by bots. If you don't like a community or its moderation, you can look for another community or create your own, as it frequently happens.

Reddit has its problems, but I think such a federated moderation system is a decent solution for larger websites. However, you need to provide the moderators with the right tools to enforce their rules. Throwaways were a bit of a problem on our humble subreddit, as were link spammers.


Old internet still had problems that we just didn't recognize at the time. Astroturfing in full blast back then, and 4chan like floods happened commonly. And getting popular was a great way to ruin the place.


I don't know that I entirely agree. The old Internet isn't gone, I spend more time at a couple topic-specific vBulletin forums than I do on HN or Reddit. The only aspect that might be better is the subtopic division. But I'm not entirely convinced about that, either.


It really was, but we've largely abandoned that model.

The new model is going to require understanding that there are people who are totally opposed to almost everything you hold dear... and finding a way to interact with them.


Discord (and Reddit, mostly) moderation still works in the old ways. Whenever there's something like a server or channel or subreddit moderation can be delegated, at least somewhat. Maybe vast unstructured oceans like Twitter aren't the way forward?


> Maybe vast unstructured oceans like Twitter aren't the way forward?

Maybe people just need to learn how to use their block buttons and maybe people that own these platforms need to grow some balls and tell those same people to get the fuck over it and that not everyone believes what they believe.


No we haven't. Twitter isn't the internet; it's overrepresented in the news because journalists use it, but it's not actually where normal people hang out. Most of the internet (including most social media) doesn't have these problems.


Why is moderation required on a platform like twitter? If somebody makes offensive tweets who forces you to view their page? If some group of people openly plot criminal activity why not let the civil authorities prosecute them for their crimes? I don't get the impulse to control free speech online. Offline you can say whatever you want in a public forum. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxxDkAkclw4


Well if you give the address of the teenage daughter of you noisy neighbour doing parties all the time with a pic that say "come and take me", maybe you crossed a line that should stimulate moderation?


Re-read my sentence about prosecuting crimes being the job of civil authorities not some Twitter moderator. I would much rather somebody who did something like you mentioned feared being arrested instead of just banned from Twitter.


Also this is kind of how twitter requiring phone verification comes in handy. Joe Jerk Neighbour calls strangers as above to accost Neighbour Daughter. Strangers are arrested They say @jjerk put us up to it. Thanks to twitter the cops know exactly who @jjerk is in real life. No need for moderator memory hole, just arrest the guy.


I'm always amused at the lack of imagination of people that ask "what could possibly go wrong?" yet come up with nothing leading them to make posts like the GP.


It's a modern reliving of the myth of the Tower of Babel.


Myth?

I think the "Bavel" analogy is apt.


Absolutely. We can solve this with decentralized networks with a TrustNet so moderation is user centric rather than global. I've explored this problem in depth here: https://adecentralizedworld.com/2020/06/a-trust-and-moderati...


> the end result is going to have countless false positives

I suspect the real measured false positive rate is remarkably low. Cases like this make great headlines but still impact only tiny fraction of Twitters hundreds of millions of users and happen rarely compared to the message volume.


Yep. Censorship doesn't work. At least not centralized censorship at scale.


Killfiles worked for usenet


They really didn't. And they certainly don't work now; just look at how completely overrun with spam Usenet is these days.


That's because all the humans moved to modern tools, but spam scales very easily.


There are a few places that I have visited that are now rarely used by humans, yet the activity of the spammers/bots is still alive and well to the point it is litterally the only traffic. To the obvious point, that you have to seriously wonder if the maintainers of the sites/platforms are not in on it.


What worked for Usenet was contacting the "sysop" of the node the user was posting from, usually upenn, and getting them to have a chat with the user and/or ban them. If their admin wasn't responsive, contact the upstream of their site.

Decentralized policing of users and having one responsible "moderator" per a few hundred users.

Then the internet was opened for commercial use and we got Eternal September and Canter and Siegel.


It worked for a while for the single user.

However with growth there were more bad users and misbehaving users still could give a bad impression to new people in a group, thus limiting acquiring new users.


I’m curious, How were those killfiles different than muting or blocking on Twitter? Usenet was a little before my time.


It's like muting users. Or muting messages by topic. Essentially a more advanced and useful technology than any of the social networks offer today.


Twitter allows you to mute users, keywords, and I believe specific threads. Killfiles weren't more advanced than that.



That’s just asking users to moderate themselves.


Thankfully, as seen in Russia and India, those thousands of cultures have no wish to be moderated by the self-anointed SV elite.


The moderation by Russian government isn’t something I would wish to any culture.



Ugh, no, this is simply not true.

There is a wide spectrum of news you can trivially read, from Fox to BBC to tons of small blogs.

If you want to be anywhere near Soviet levels, you want to eliminate all viewpoints except one. Until you do this, you are not even close.


You have absolutely no idea what you are talking about? Soviet level? Not even close, not even in the same-universe-close. Please learn something about what the life in USSR was really like.


You're right that on the specific topic of government censorship they are not nearly the same. Very different legal structures and all that.

But from talking to people who were living in the USSR as adults through the 70s and 80s (and my own memories of the USSR in the 80s, though I was not an adult, and reading I have done, but I put more weight on the in-person conversations with people I know and who can give me direct first-hand comparisons), the US is certainly same-universe close at this point, and rapidly getting closer, in terms of things like public confessions, limiting acceptable points of view (in _parts_ of the US, segregated by culture) etc. In some aspect, "further along", heading for Cultural Revolution era China. The practical implications are unfortunately not as different as one might like.

Maybe a clearer way to describe it is that the "lived experience" (again, limited to certain professions or locations in the US) is unfortunately far too similar, even while the legal and social structures that produce it are quite different in their details.

And just make sure we're on the same page: the US now is nothing like _1930s_ USSR. We should make sure we mean the same thing when we say "life in the USSR", because it varied quite a bit over 70 years.


You should add China to your list of repressive government moderation - would be more complete that way.


It's only repressive government moderation when someone else does it. When it happens in the US, it's "policing hate speech".


That's a fair argument but only if you embrace the logical conclusion of the stance you are taking.

If you are arguing for unbridled free speech then fair enough (Personally I wouldn't but we can have that conversaion).

If however you have your own feelings about sane limits on free speech - then you can't take this position without someone else using your argument against you.

It's fine to make these kind of grand statements but I'd like you to clearly state that you're going all the way with it and not just being slightly less inconsistent than the person you're calling out.


>If you are arguing for unbridled free speech then fair enough (Personally I wouldn't but we can have that conversaion).

It's just words. Sticks and stones... What I see on social media platforms is a UX made to require moderation. Once upon a time, the user had the power to ignore people with the click of a button. "Don't feed the troll" was common wisdom. If Alex Jones or anyone else said something you didn't like, you just ignored them and never hear them again.

All the "gamification" of social media made everyone participating in social media into "gamers" who throw tantrums and their little joysticks when they "lose" points. Just like when you got your ass beat playing Mortal Kombat. Then moderators, like parents, come in to scold you and give you a timeout/suspension/whatever.


I think the parent might have been sarcastic. Hard to tell in text only. I read the last line as "pOlIcInG hAtE sPeEch" with USA being the butt of the joke.


Yes, I was being sarcastic. Missed adding a /s


I think I was reacting to your sarcasm.

I presumed you were arguing that it is a hypocricy to criticise "repressive government moderation" on one hand while supporting "policing hate speech" on the other.

I would argue that it's possible to consistently support the latter whilst condemning the former. It's simply a debate about when a neccesary evil slips over the line into something worse.


Reminds me of The Hhitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy:

> Belgium is the rudest word in the Universe, yet by a strange coincidence, also the name of a country on Earth. In the Secondary Phase of the radio series, it is stated as "completely banned in all parts of the Galaxy, except in one part, where they don't know what it means, and in serious screenplays.


Douglas Adams just had a way/understanding of the universe that I am grateful that he was able to share with us. I never did get the hang of Thursdays either.


As Twitter has been accepted as the ultimate arbiter of what may be said, I suggest the city of Memphis rename itself "Graceland," thus pleasing all the Elvis fans, boosting tourism, and avoiding sticky complications about legal technicalities.


What about Memphis, Egypt?


They are welcome to steal Graceland's name, after all turn about is fair play.


It's still not too late to rename their city Thebes - last time I checked the one in Greece burned down and they haven't had time to rebuild it, yet.


Yeah, that's been called "Manf" for probably over a 1,000 years now.


Ramses?


Twitter has increasingly slid into user-hostile territory. I moderate /r/Twitter on reddit and we have a pinned thread just showing nothing but complaint after complaint, because content moderation is a failure when you attempt to scale it.

We'd like to get Twitter Comms to address it at some point, but the company is opaque. It's just nuts.


Just a small anecdote: I created a company account, then set the birthday to ~1 year ago, when the company was registered. Everything was fine for 5 minutes, then my account has been blocked with a notification telling me that I need to be at least 13 years old to use Twitter. I can still login but cannot access the settings to change the birthday (or just remove it) as a screen “fix your age or prove your identity” is blocking me from doing anything. I used their support form to send a proof of ID a few times but the account gets blocked again every time.

Somehow twitter believes that 1 years old are trying to join their platform. That was more than 6 months ago, and still no solution ¯\_(ツ)_/¯


Most hilarious one related to the 13yo boobytrap was that they lock you out if your date of registration predates your 13th birthday, regardless of how long ago it was.

Like, if you were younger than 13 at some point, and you didn’t prove yourself that you’re no longer 13, it can’t be ruled out that you potentially haven’t aged since, by Twitter logic.

Seen through survivorship bias it’s obvious that you may never set DoB for any of your accounts, but ... I guess Twitter is kind of weird one from what SNS is generally understood to be.


> Like, if you were younger than 13 at some point, and you didn’t prove yourself that you’re no longer 13, it can’t be ruled out that you potentially haven’t aged since, by Twitter logic.

No, that’s due to the fact that they don’t want to store any data about yourself from when you were under 13 years old. I had this happen to me when I changed my account age and it said it had to delete all tweets (amongst other info) from when I was <13 and my profile was wiped (bio, profile pic, website link), likely because they don’t timestamp profile changes in their DB (some audit log probably has it though).

https://help.twitter.com/en/managing-your-account/account-re...


What shocks me is there is no warning that setting a date of birth is a dangerous action.

The company is just hostile to its users.


This likely has nothing to do with hostility and everything to do with regulation, specifically COPPA:

https://www.ftc.gov/tips-advice/business-center/guidance/com...

>7. I have a “mixed audience” app and would like to age screen my users. Are there specific requirements for the age screen?

>An example of a neutral age screen would be a system that allows a user freely to enter the month and year of birth. Avoid encouraging children to falsify age information by, for example, stating that certain features will not be available to users under age 13.


I lost my Discord account for daring to use the "change your e-mail address" feature. Nothing warned me that this was a potentially-destructive action. It happens.


A year or two ago I went through every online account I have to change the email address.

I should have kept a record of results. Some were good and easy. Some had no option other than an account closure. Some involved a single contact of support without any real verification that I was actually the account holder. Some involved a protracted string of contact with support that tried to claim I was asking for an impossibility. Some services kept my old email on file and I periodically receive something to my old address.


I had way too many successful email changes that did not send an email to my old email account informing me of the action. If a hacker had stolen those accounts, I might not know for a long time!


Similar story: I finally created an account last week and after a few minutes of looking around, I tried to follow 1 person and got locked out. It requires a phone number to the unlock the account now. Just feels like gratuitous extortion of personal data. Also, seriously asking: Why does it even let you create an account with email if it will force you to give a phone number anyway?


Yeah, this phone number lock is really annoying. Depending on the state of the account you may have a link on the desktop version to bypass adding a phone number.


I created a regular account. I followed a handful of people. Not long after (same day I think) it said they thought I was a bot and could I scan my ID and email it to them to verify I was a human.

I couldn't even log into the account to delete it without providing them a photo of my ID, so I said fuck that and never thought about it ever again.


The funny part is, your account was probably recorded as a "bot" account in that team's success metrics.


honestly I'm happy it worked out that way, given how cancerous twitter has become. They blocked me and it was better for me overall.


Unpopular opinion: I am not sure if I come to the the same conclusion (that Twitter is user-hostile). Even if you see "complaint after complaint". It could be actually true that the complaint ratio is going down, because the # of users or engagement is actually growing. I am not saying I know the rate, but I don't think we can rule that possibility out.

As a thought exercise, if you assume there is 1% chance of someone complaining about something that went wrong with their account. And there is a billion users using that service. You will have to have a super high accuracy to not end up in a world where there isn't a dozen+ people being affected each month. I believe that Twitter (and other services) actually do try very hard to avoid this, but it is a very hard problem.

To this, some HN users believe that they just should have say 100k+ humans moderating everything, but it is very hard to have 100K humans consistently moderate and not introduce biases.


I come to the conclusion that Twitter is user-hostile based not on complaints but rather by details mentioned in this post (user suspensions in response to posting 'memphis' in a tweet.) It doesn't take much else to make this determination.

I will note that your thought exercise is a statment, least in part, of Masnick's Impossibility Theorem (Content Moderation At Scale Is Impossible To Do Well):

- Any moderation policy will anger someone

- Content moderation is inherently subjective

- Errors at scale result in many errors over time

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20191111/23032743367/masni...


Content moderation is trivially easy when your users pay for it or have skin in the game. Making accounts paid would immediately fix the problem as few people would want to risk losing real money.

Content moderation only becomes a problem where your business model is "growth and engagement" and your revenue depends on your users generating as much content as possible.


If users are paying, you run into lawsuit territory when you try to censor them for their views. Not necessarily because you can't stop doing business with the person who you decide is an enemy of the people, but because you are still taking all the money of their followers and others who signed up to read their tweets. So accepting money would require a moderation policy that didn't change every other week but was clear and upfront in terms of what business services were being sold.


If skin in the game was a guarantee we would have no crime. Spammers, astroturfers, and scammers already spend real money to get their message out for their purposes.

Real name polices already failed at their stated purpose even after people losing their job over tweets and Facebook posts was a well known things. Whatever fee people would be willing to pay wouldn't cut it. Hell it didn't work even on the infamous SomethingAwful!


It's not a guarantee but it's much better than what we have now.

All the issues you mention were successfully dealt with on the forums of the good old days with much less resources (moderation done by volunteers and very little technical expertise - definitely no machine learning).


it's possible to do NLP at scale much better than they do. they just don't care


https://twitter.com/SwiftOnSecurity/status/13711918852686725...

> What's possible is a Twitter staffer tried to block a street address, but the postal syntax acted as an escape sequence, or the original was multi-line and they only pasted the city.

What postal syntax in the US looks like an escape sequence?


Probably the comma faking out a CSV parser? US addresses are typically written like "123 Fake St, Memphis, TN 38002" with commas between the street address and city, between the city and state, but not between the state and ZIP code.

e: I wonder if somebody with a large handful of accounts to burn could narrow down the intended block target by tweeting every combination of "{states_containing_a_memphis__abbreviation} {ZIP_code}" until one of them gets blocked? http://www.city-data.com/zipmaps/Memphis-Tennessee.html


I meant separator token, sorry.


Very easy to imagine a , or a \n being directly before and/or after a city name.


I'm a bit surprised that this username wasn't already taken.


I got blocked too, and so was referring to the ancient Egyptian city.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memphis,_Egypt


IIRC, Memphis, TN was named after the great city in Egypt and even has a Pyramid, although it may be a shopping center.


I've heard it's a giant Bass Pro Shop. Incidently, I'm driving by Memphis this Tuesday - now I'm inclined to check it out!


There's a great recent video on the Memphis Pyramid from Bright Sun Films [0] - 10th tallest pyramid in the world!

0: https://youtu.be/FEB-YG2iiYA


Could be a typo or filling in whatever field incompletely - e.g. they meant to block a specific street address but only got the city name in the "block" field.


CR


I am now enjoying my 12 hour enforced break from Twitter.


On Hacker News?


Not on an alt account?


So, Twitter now has a no procrastination feature? :)


Users: social media is too addictive.

Twitter: we're testing out a new safe word feature to address that.

They should keep this. Randomly pick a new word each day, anybody who says it gets locked for a day.


Eventually everyone will get locked, and Twitter will be a much better place by virtue of having no users.


It'd be interesting to see Twitter adopt the old "Robot 9000" automod rules, where every tweet would have to be unique from all previous tweets system-wide or else you get a temporary ban that exponentially grows in length after every infraction.


Are you referring to /r9k/ ?

There are only 10 pages visible on 4chan, did that rule only apply to visible content or all past content aswell?


/r9k/ was actually modeled after Randall Munroe's open-source "Robot9000" automod bot for one of XKCD's IRC channels (where unoriginal users would be muted for N time, rather than banned).

The original post explaining it is here [1]. I'm not sure whether the 4chan implementation applied to just the 10 visible pages or all past comments.

Fun fact: Twitch also has an r9k mode for chat [2] (that scopes "unique messages" per-chat over a 10-minute rolling window).

[1] https://blog.xkcd.com/2008/01/14/robot9000-and-xkcd-signal-a...

[2] https://twitter.com/twitchsupport/status/382923694864994304?...


Randomly pick a new word each day, anybody who says it gets locked for a day.

Didn't Pee Wee Herman do something like that?


So, we can seem how Twitter's censoring works now, start at a word that's only associated with Memphis, then draw gradually closer. Alternative spellings, alternative utf-8 lookalikes, alternative characters (leet speak, etc.). Usually if a company blocks words they do common substitutes too like: memph1s, m3mfis, ... do they block rot13(), how about ₘeₘphis, ᶬ3ₘph15??


Either the ban is over or utf-8 lookalikes are fine.


Looks like there’s some exception, maybe blue ticks? https://twitter.com/swodinsky/status/1371187070815846400?s=2...


All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.


Reminded of Rachel’s post about requiring confirmation for exceptionally destructive actions (https://rachelbythebay.com/w/2020/10/26/num/).


I don’t know how this relates to the twitter thingy, but it was a useful read, thanks!

A relevant tag: #devops


swiftonsecurity speculated that whoever banned “Memphis” meant to ban something like “123 Example Street, Memphis”, but hit an edge case in the parser or screwed up a regex or something.

My thought is that the message “you’re about to ban 123,456 users, please confirm how many users you’re ready to ban” would have been a useful safeguard.


My thoughts on the matter is that Test Driven Design is pretty cool, and if you had never written a test before, this is the one of the easiest tests to write.


Yeah that definitely seems like a mistake. I tried it and it worked. I'm going to appeal it and see what happens. This must just be one of the algorithms going haywire or something.


Someone in the thread suggested a more probable (somewhat substantiated) reasoning: They got banned for "revealing private information". OP is thinking that someone at twitter tried banning publishing some address in Memphis, but somewhat it got tokenized (?) and so Memphis is now blocked.


>This must just be one of the algorithms going haywire or something.

That or maybe some random test code from development that got pushed into production by a series of accidents like a senior clicking Approve on the pull request of an intern without actually reviewing the code. Just a guess.


I tried it and was locked for violating the rule against posting people’s “personal information.” I just appealed the account lock...


As the catchphrase goes, "The problem with censorship is that <censored>"

I hope instances like these continue to drive people away from centralised and heavily-censored platforms.

Personally, the only thing I do with Twitter is to read when I'm linked there, but now that they've started to block those who don't want to run their arbitrary code just to read some text and images, I have even less desire to use the site.


I would like to coin a new phrase, the "Game Master Dilemma". For any self selecting group the number of people willing to do thankless hard work decreases with respect to the difficulty of the task considerate with the reward.

In tabletop games there's often far fewer players willing to take the Game Master role because it's more difficult. The people that take the role have to really enjoy the task and the "reward" (good feelings because people had fun).

This means there's far more players than Game Masters. I think this applies to everyone making (in my opinion) pithy statements about "centralized platforms". There's vastly more centralized-social-media-platform users than people with the technical capability, time, and money to run some smaller social media instance. The ratio of players to Game Masters is huge. It can be a lot of work/expense to run a board for even a small group of users.

This means that larger more centralized platforms will end up being the norm because they centralize the infrastructure and lower the friction for users to do the interesting stuff like discuss topics or share cat pictures. Because the central platforms are being Game Masters players can flock to the platforms and network effects will draw more users.

If you want some magical world of super decentralized community moderated social media (you basically want mailing lists) you need to solve the Game Master Dilemma. Infrastructure is not free in time or money. The more demands on the infrastructure the more it costs. The only decentralized community moderated platforms that will exist are ones where the Game Master to player ratio is low. The higher it gets the worse of a job it is being the Game Master until it's not worthwhile at all.


This is pretty much the issues we are seeing more and more with centralized systems relying on automated systems for moderation with no method of appeal.

I'd bet 90% of google accounts banned fall under something like this. And since there is no appeal, that means if you end up banned/peanlized/etc and you aren't rich/influential then you are screwed by a kafkaesque hell.


Yeah, can confirm. It does work.

I don't suggest trying it, as unlocking your account requires phone no. and email verification... yikes.


I tried to create a Twitter account once. 5 minutes after creation it got suspended and unlocking required a phone no. Same goes for Facebook


I've got a couple dozen accounts registered between defunct bots that were tied to irc bots or blogs, and single-use numbered accounts registered for contests and giveaways that required twitter. None of them has ever required any proof or phone number for registration. My primary account, which I use just as infrequently? Of course they asked for my phone number. I'm just annoyed I can't do 2fa without the twitter client or sms.


For Twitter: I believe that's just part of their signup flow

Likely significant reduces the bounce rate compared to requiring a phone number while creating the account


Same here. I let it stay suspended. Weeks later it came out that Twitter had a flaw that let anyone see your phone number.

It will be a cold day in hell before I give them my number, and I survived the Texas icepocolypse this year.


I wonder if they‘ll unlock everyone when they release the fix. I kind of doubt they will.


haha yeah right. after watching Twitter, Inc after all these years there's nothing left but to be cynical if they'll do the right thing.


I’m still banned


Just once? Not even three times and then it comes, like the Candyman or the Babadook?


It’s Zalgo without the text corruption


Oh boy, the dumpster fire that just keeps on giving. I really hope Twitter does have audit trail on everyone being locked by this so they easily can unlock everyone again


And now we'll have the suspension on our record so future suspensions will be more severe.

Automated moderation in action!


Random thought of mine was companies use AI to moderate. But potentially malefactors can train the AI to flag harmless stuff. And because of the opaque nature of neural networks there isn't good mechanism to undo it, except by reverting.


They didn’t kill Microsoft’s Tay - they made her auto mod.


The 4chan syndrome. Make common words into racist dogwhistles.


As a fan of the University of Memphis basketball team, this is not the weekend I'd like this to happen. Though with how our weekend is going maybe it's a good thing...


"We've temporarily limited some of your account features" Jesus how stupid...


Some twitter $2/hr contract worker for a subcontator (I knew nothing about the slave labor) on the other side of the world having fun.


If that were true they would've blocked a more common word. "The" for example.


I got away with the subtexual play:

Maybe Everthing Merely Projects Hellish, Inimical Sophistry


Cancel Culture 2.0: entire cities purged ;)


May be the Sodom and Gomorrah were just a similar automated system error, and the story that we know is just a spin by the heaven's PR department in the aftermath of the mistake.

Also jives nicely with another topic - automated drones - at the top of HN today. Giving that Twitter with all its money has probably an AI among the best and still makes such a gaping errors...


>May be the Sodom and Gomorrah were just a similar automated system error,

They were clearly related to the salt mine meme


Twitter ha a bunch of stupid, arbitrary rules. If you make a tweet comment that violates twitter's rules and are forced to verify your phone, all future tweets will be demoted to the bottom of comments where few people will see them. This is permanent and no way to ever fix it.


When it comes to cenrsohpip and selective enforcement of rules, twitter is the worst of the social networks. THE CEO has lied about ghosting and so many other things. terrible company.


I got banned in 2008 for similarly silly (and unknowable) reasons. Posted zero, and I mean zero, spicy content. Maybe they didn’t like me posting a soy latte or a photo of a dog. But I got a ban for almost a week. And then suddenly it worked again, and they refused to say why or what triggered it. Maybe Jack or Ev got drunk and started hitting buttons. Zero transparency or apology, so I can only speculate.

Tried this one out- said the super private magic word, and got a ban. Appealed it to ask them why.


I (foolishly) took people at their word, thinking the bug had been fixed.

It has not.


Similar, there's many short names you can add to a comment in a paypal payment that will get your paypal locked down. "CIMEX" is a good example. Thanks OFAC!


At what point does it stop being reasonable to donate free content that attracts eyeballs to web hosts addicted to censorship?

I left Twitter after a dozen years and many thousands of followers. You can, too.

Tweeting anything gets you closer to the day Twitter locks your account and destroys all you've built.

You won't even be able to view your follower or following lists at that point (and they're not in your data export), or any of the DMs you've sent or received over all those years.


It's too bad Kafka didn't live long enough to see online moderation. We still have Cory Doctorow, of "Unauthorized Bread", of course.


It's been fixed: https://twitter.com/TwitterSupport/status/137123558771858227...

> A number of accounts that Tweeted the word “Memphis” were temporarily limited due to a bug. It’s been fixed and the accounts have now been restored. We’re sorry this happened.


So, I've submitted same news hours earlier (from official 2600 mag twitter account) but my submission was flagged and locked for comments.

-_-


Does it only happen if you tweet the word by itself, or even in context?

I actually enjoy Twitter so I'm not willing to test myself. :P


This is the only screenshot I have seen so far. https://mobile.twitter.com/textfiles/status/1371196727215144...


Weird, even in a perfectly reasonable context.


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