- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
More than 200 Substack authors asked the platform to explain why it’s “platforming and monetizing Nazis,” and now they have an answer straight from co-founder Hamish McKenzie:
I just want to make it clear that we don’t like Nazis either—we wish no-one held those views. But some people do hold those and other extreme views. Given that, we don’t think that censorship (including through demonetizing publications) makes the problem go away—in fact, it makes it worse.
While McKenzie offers no evidence to back these ideas, this tracks with the company’s previous stance on taking a hands-off approach to moderation. In April, Substack CEO Chris Best appeared on the Decoder podcast and refused to answer moderation questions. “We’re not going to get into specific ‘would you or won’t you’ content moderation questions” over the issue of overt racism being published on the platform, Best said. McKenzie followed up later with a similar statement to the one today, saying “we don’t like or condone bigotry in any form.”
On one hand, Substack is in it’s rights and as a journalistic organization, they are in the right.
The issue is: Once you serve a Nazi in your bar, you become a Nazi bar. Substack is going to become shitty, and fast. They will lose high engagement users, first when the ones who protested pile out for another platform and then quickly when the quality dips.
Also, their cavalier attitude will change when Stripe steps in.
How is Stripe associated with Substack? (I’m out of the loop here)
I was too, but sounds like the TL;DR is they’re the supporting infrastructure which substack uses:
https://stripe.com/ae/customers/substack
Thanks, that definitely explains it better than simply being a payment processor.
I an guessing they do their payment processingt
So if a Nazi buy [a service] then the [service offerer] is a Nazi.
So every [service offerer] in the world is probably Nazi, since probably every [service offerer] in the world has at least a Nazi customer.
Interesting approach, now what we should do about all these Nazi [service offerer] ?