Skip to main content

Is Free Speech a Relic of the Past? Exploring the Technocensorship Dilemma

Is Free Speech a Relic of the Past? Exploring the Technocensorship Dilemma: In this age of advanced technology and collaborative suppression, we’ve managed to upgrade our book-burning techniques to the digital realm. Who needs matches when you can just press a button, right? So, let’s all raise a toast to our brave new world, where free speech is so yesterday, and where algorithms reign supreme in telling us what to think and how to behave. Don’t worry, though – Big Brother is just a friendly algorithm away, ensuring that you’ll never have to worry about pesky things like individuality and independent thought. Cheers to a future where our minds are safe and sound within the cozy confines of the Ministry of Technocensorship!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Facebook Personal Information Leaked Through The “Like” Button

Facebook Personal Information Leaked Through The “Like” Button : The Government of Japan today urged Facebook to improve the protection of It’s personal data, following the succession of incidents in which information has been leaked from millions of users of the social network throughout the world. -Japan urges Facebook to improve the protection of personal data . The  Committee of Protection of Information   in japan adopted a resolution in which it urges  Facebook  to  take measures to avoid similar cases, as the first warning directed to the American giant of Internet. Google Offering Products Based On User Data To Increase Revenue The document states that personal information of users of the social network included in their profiles or their browsing history  were automatically transferred to external pages of Facebook that had a link to the “like” button   , even if Internet users did not click on it. Therefore, he asks Facebook to “give clearer explanations about  h

Death of young puppy aboard United flight triggers United States department inquiry

United Airlines dealt with new reactions on Wednesday regarding a young puppy dog which passed away in-flight soon after an attendant ordered it stored in an overhead box. The United States Department of Transportation stated it is taking a look at the events which resulted in the bulldog’s demise. UNITED STATE Legislator John Kennedy, whom previously on Wednesday sent out a letter to the United Airlines Commander in chief Scott Kirby, asking for relevant information regarding the significant amount of pets which have passed away while in the transporter’s care, published on Twitter that he intended to submit a bill on Thursday which will restrict airline companies from placing pets inside overhead receptacles. ” Violators will face significant fines. Pets are family,” he noted. Kennedy, within the correspondence, stated United’s “pattern of animal deaths and injuries is simply inexcusable.” The man mentioned that the numbers occurred while on air-planes  is  24 pets, which pas