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I'm not sure how you boiled it down to that... Perhaps you mean "is the right to free speech forfeited when anyone is breaking the law?" in which case the answer is emphatically no, because someone is going to break the law no matter what...thorgold wrote:However, with more thought, the problem boiled down to this question: Is the right to free speech forfeited when one is breaking the law?
delfts wrote:It would likely cause even more rioting and lead to a more volatile situation. Removing rights from people when those people are asking for more rights/equality doesn't seem like it'll lead to the people being any happier.
I'm curious about how the riots will end. I need to read more about riots in history...
ameretrifle wrote:Magic space feudalism is therefore a viable idea.
Glmclain wrote:I would seriously be surprised if anyone around here supported Totalitarianism to that degree. We seem to be a pretty liberal lot.
The problem is not that people are out on the streets but they can communicate making them able to disperse and regroup in another area quickly.
It does not damage freedom of speech and the inconvenience of not being able to use these sites all the time would be vastly outweighed by disruption from a riot.
cphite wrote:delfts wrote:It would likely cause even more rioting and lead to a more volatile situation. Removing rights from people when those people are asking for more rights/equality doesn't seem like it'll lead to the people being any happier.
I'm curious about how the riots will end. I need to read more about riots in history...
I would be against banning free speech and communications no matter what; to me, those are essential freedoms that should never be taken away from anybody, for any reason.
That being said, I honestly don't see these people who were rioting in the UK as being "asking for more rights/equality" - the vast majority of them were just drunken idiots looking for an excuse to act out. I fail to see how looting and burning local businesses equates to seeking more rights or equality; especially when a lot of the idiots doing it were spoiled brats who have as much or more than the people they were victimizing.

Any use of this against looters/rioters can just as easily be targeted against legitimate protests.
No, the problem is that people are out on the streets and don't see any consequences to kicking in shop windows and running off with crap.
Oh really? And what of all the inconvenience caused to people trying to warn each other of a riot approaching their area?
I don't understand why the government would want to shut down people discussing their illegal activity online.
Headshrinker wrote:Why would a legitimate protest need to communicate quickly?
And for that matter you could make the same argument about police, great for detaining violent drunks but the same officer could be just as easily targeted against legitimate protests.
If you know where the rioters are that would make their jobs a lot easier.
do you want to rely on twitter for that?
What is the alternative - jailing them before they have committed an offence? Or restricting innocent people's use of an extremely helpful and useful technology?Headshrinker wrote:I don't understand why the government would want to shut down people discussing their illegal activity online.
But then they have already committed an offence, jailing them doesn’t put it right
What do you rely on? That's not rhetorical, I'm curious. I currently do not rely on any riot-alerting-technology, but twitter seems as good as any.Headshrinker wrote:do you want to rely on twitter for that?
If that's the case, then the police could use the technology to set up some stings instead of blocking the services. Set up some accounts, tweet/facebook that such and such shop is a good target, have some officers already on site and when the looters show up... "Hello fellas. Put down the loot and put your hands behind your backs."Headshrinker wrote:My understanding is that the looters will use twitter to find a target, when the police arrive they will run away and use twitter/fb to find another target.
JBJ wrote:If that's the case, then the police could use the technology to set up some stings instead of blocking the services. Set up some accounts, tweet/facebook that such and such shop is a good target, have some officers already on site and when the looters show up... "Hello fellas. Put down the loot and put your hands behind your backs."Headshrinker wrote:My understanding is that the looters will use twitter to find a target, when the police arrive they will run away and use twitter/fb to find another target.
Any society that surrenders liberties in pursuit of security will gain neither and lose both.
bgc wrote:Coincidentally enough, the San Francisco subway system (BART) just disabled all of their underground cellular antennas to stop people from coordinating a protest from inside the stations. 3 hours of service interruption later, no protests...
http://thehill.com/blogs/hillicon-valle ... ne-service
Vaniver wrote:Harvard is a hedge fund that runs the most prestigious dating agency in the world, and incidentally employs famous scientists to do research.
afuzzyduck wrote:ITS MEANT TO BE FLUTTERSHY BUT I JUST SEE AAERIELE! CURSE YOU FORA!
cphite wrote:delfts wrote:That being said, I honestly don't see these people who were rioting in the UK as being "asking for more rights/equality" - the vast majority of them were just drunken idiots looking for an excuse to act out. I fail to see how looting and burning local businesses equates to seeking more rights or equality; especially when a lot of the idiots doing it were spoiled brats who have as much or more than the people they were victimizing.
LaserGuy wrote:]People could also get around this by just using a proxy server or something, but I'm guessing the average person probably wouldn't know to do that.
IcedT wrote:Also, this raises the important question of whether or not dinosaurs were delicious.
CorruptUser wrote:Why does this sound like the start of...

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