Meta cancelling professional factchecking in favor of community notes is causing worry in West Africa, where online disinfo has led to community violence and death: - Great Global Voices coverage. (Also I love that we can toggle between original quotes and translation - great for me as a French language learner.)
To be slightly blunter than The Atlantic allowed me to be: the tiktok ban is a protectionist subsidy to Meta and Google worth hundreds of billions of dollars:
Social Web Foundation  (I am an advisor) warns that having an unfactchecked Threads on the fediverse is a recipe for misery and mischief:
Translation is activism. Writing is activism.” Featuring indigenous voices is a form of activism. We need to show all of these forms of activism are possible - Juke Bransiecq #GVSummit2024
Arzu Geybullayeva wonders whether the decentralized web could be a useful starting point for detaching ourselves from the platforms that have so disappointed us over the years. (Blogs, of course, were both decentralized and centered on platforms like Blogger) Asteris argues that we should be everywhere, cross posting across networks, even when it's a pain in the ass. In space engineering, redundancy means we should never rely on a single piece of equipment. #GVSummit2024
Asteris Masouras, social media editor for Global Voices, reminds us that there was life before the internet, and that we found ways to organize in those analog spaces. Once we got the internet, we got used to technologies coming and going - for a moment, we were all excited about Gopher. Then the web, then Facebook. Systems keep evolving. Our hopelessness today may have something to do with a loss of historical memory. #gvsummit2024
Rebecca MacKinnon, my Global Voices cofounder, leads a session called "Can we save the internet?" at #GVSummit2024, which begins with a brief history. In 2004, as blogging was on the rise, we were optimistic that the internet could open the world for interested participants. By 2014, authoritarians were adapting to the internet, sometimes in cooperation with large social media platforms. At this point, do we still see the internet as a hopeful place?
Kanav Sahgal explains that there’s a constitutional right to internet in India, but there’s also a mechanism for the government to argue that shutdown is necessary for national security. But shutdowns come around much less serious threats, like exam cheating. #GVSummit2024
Kanav Sahgal is an Indian activist focused on gender issues and on the Supreme Court. He tells stories of how internet shutdown affects the right to protest - losing WhatApp and Google Maps makes it extremely difficult to assemble in physical space. #GVSummit2024
Rezwan, the long-term South Asia editor for Global Voices, is chairing a session on internet shutdowns, which he describes as a common tool of repression in South Asia. These can be total blackouts, or slowdowns, where 4G is turned off and 2G left on. #gvsummit2024