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Showing posts from October, 2023

Code of Practice on Disinformation. A Comparative Analysis: Methodological Limitations

There has been much ado in the press over the last month or so concerning the Twitter platform (Twitter X) and its alleged inadequacy in tackling the phenomena of disinformation/misinformation. As discussed in my previous post Potency of the European Union's Code of Practice on Disinformation the European Commission’s (EC) has put into place the Digital Service Act (DSA) which came into effect on August 25, 2023. On September 26, 2023, Lisa O’Carroll wrote an article published in The Guardian with the following headline: EU warns Elon Musk after Twitter found to have highest rate of disinformation . Ms. O’Carroll reported: “The EU has issued a warning to Elon Musk to comply with sweeping new laws on fake news and Russian propaganda, after X – formerly known as Twitter – was found to have the highest ratio of disinformation posts of all large social media platforms.” The laws Ms. O’Carroll referred to are those enshrined in the DSA. Ms. O’Carroll made reference to a report that und...

Referendum No Case is Not Sufficient to Justify a No Vote

In this post I will discuss the Case for Voting No (No case) in the upcoming Australian referendum on the Aboriginal and Torres Straite Islander Voice ; hereafter referred to as the Voice to be conducted on October 14, 2023.  Voting in Australian elections and referenda is compulsory. The No case is premised on dangers that could manifest from the proposed inclusion of the Voice after Chapter VIII in the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia. In summary, the concerns are that the Voice will be: Risky Have unknown outcomes Divisive Permanent On the basis of these fears the No case puts forward ten reasons to Vote No. I will look at each of these ten reasons as individual premises of the No case to determine the veracity of each and the degree to which each supports the conclusion that citizens ought to vote No to the Constitutional change. I will show that the reasons, as premises are in the main not justified and as a consequence the conclusion to Vote No remai...

Towards an Understanding of CBDCs as a Societal Benefit

In my previous post Towards an Understanding of CBDCs as a Threat to Freedom and Privacy I discussed concerns that libertarians on the right side of politics have with Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs). I pointed out that commentators like Mr. Rand Paul and the Cato Institute argue that CBDCs are risky as they perceive these types of digital currencies to be threats to freedom, privacy and financial security. In this regard decentralised cryptocurrencies are a safer bet in their view. I for my part, in my previous post pointed out that these kinds of threats and privacy concerns also make decentralised digital cryptocurrencies, like BITCOIN risky as well.    Libertarians on the right wing of the political spectrum, as well as most of the mainstream media’s commentary on digital currencies view digital currency technology in terms of how it can benefit individual economic actors and support the capitalist financial system. In this post I will discuss how digital cur...