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The Lawfare Podcast

Content Moderation After January 6

The Lawfare Podcast

The Lawfare Institute

International Law, Law, Government, Foreign Policy, News, Politics, Rule Of Law, International Relations, Current Events, Military, Constitutional Law, Intelligence, National Security, History, Terrorism, Diplomacy

4.76.4K Ratings

🗓️ 6 January 2022

⏱️ 60 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One year ago, a violent mob broke into the U.S. Capitol during the certification of the electoral vote, aiming to overturn Joe Biden’s victory and keep Donald Trump in power as the president of the United States. The internet played a central role in the insurrection: Trump used Twitter to broadcast his falsehoods about the integrity of the election and gin up excitement over January 6, and rioters coordinated ahead of time on social media and posted pictures afterwards of the violence. In the wake of the riot, a crackdown by major social media platforms ended with Trump suspended or banned from Facebook, Twitter and other outlets.

So how have platforms been dealing with content moderation issues in the shadow of the insurrection? This week on Arbiters of Truth, our series on the online information ecosystem, Evelyn Douek and Quinta Jurecic sat down for a discussion with Lawfare managing editor Jacob Schulz. To frame their conversation, they looked to the recent Twitter ban and Facebook suspension of Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene—which took place almost exactly a year after Trump’s ban.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

The following podcast contains advertising.

0:04.0

To access an ad-free version of the LawFair podcast,

0:08.0

become a material supporter of LawFair at patreon.com slash law fair.

0:14.0

That's patreon.com slash law fair.

0:18.0

Also, check out LawFair's other podcast offerings,

0:22.0

rational security, chatter, law fair no bull and the aftermath.

0:32.0

Right laptop, I'm ready to finish this thesis.

0:34.0

What thesis? The one I've spent two years working on.

0:36.0

Don't have it. What's the last version you saved?

0:38.0

Got final version, final final version, and no, I'm actually serious now.

0:42.0

This is the last version I will never save another version I promise.

0:46.0

Version 2. Surely that one? No.

0:48.0

Why? It's corrupted.

0:50.0

Swap. Swap. Swap.

0:52.0

For when you upgrade to an acochrome book,

0:54.0

they come with Google Drive built-in,

0:56.0

so you'll never lose a file again.

0:58.0

And save.

1:00.0

Already saved. Oh, thanks.

1:01.0

Saved it again.

1:08.0

You see in this sort of accounting of what had happened on January 6th

1:12.0

that there's all these smaller platforms that played a real role in what's going on,

...

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