K
Kalman
Guest
there is another issue. several social platforms have gained financially by a u.s. law that has given then considerable leeway in the growth of their businesses. however the grant of that leeway is provisional on them acting as if they are a utility. by banning or restricting certain topics or users, they are no longer behaving like a utility, but are editorialising like a publisher, and thereby ruling themselves ineligible for the leg-up they have been given. so far nobody has pulled them up on this legality. people don't get banned or censored for what they wrote in a letter or said in a telephone call. if a platform is a utility, there should be no restrictions from its operator.
Tesla has received billions of dollars in subsidies from city, state and federal treasuries. Is Tesla a utility or private company?