20 sats \ 4 replies \ @Majjin 6 Jun 2023 \ parent \ on: Onlyfans has 50x more revenue than Substack. Why don’t we built a ⚡️ version? bitcoin
What I am saying is that we ought to promote and encourage good things and discourage bad things. If morality and ethics aren't relevant to this than what is? I say morality is very relevant if we're talking about a predatory industry such as porn.
Here's a hypothetical for you. Suppose that someone made a post about building a platform for human trafficking on top of Lightning. Assuming it isn't instantly removed, as it should be, would you not speak out against it?
I personally think you would. You seem to have a strong sense of justice.
You have me at "promote good things" and then lose me at "discourage bad things."
I acknowledge your right speak up about how you feel AND their right to trade with whom they choose for whatever they choose to without risk of censorship because their transaction it is not aligned someone's rules, ethics, morals...
I'm not interested in a hypothetical discussion of semantics, but I will answer as you seem interested in a productive conversation. I would,
a.) choose to have no involvement in developing a platform that is not aligned with my goals, morals, ethics in life, such as a lightning based HT platform.
b.) I would laugh at the idea all together as a visible immutable constantly verified public ledger is a silly place for anyone to be conducting transactions of such criminal magnitude.
c.) I would know that the harm done would be by the people who created such a system and not the money itself, and they are who are responsible and culpable for the harm done.
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Thanks for humoring me, I do appreciate it!
I definitely agree with all three of those points. I would go as far as asking k00b to remove the post and ban the user. I think that's where you and I differ.
I'm interested in digging down to the fundamental root of the disagreement. I asked the hypothetical to see where your mind is at. So why not discourage bad things?
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Discouraging bad things is way way way worse then encouraging good things. People don't break out their pitchforks to encourage good things, but they do when they discourage bad things.
Bad things happen to innocent people when groups of like minded individuals decides to start making decisions for "the sake of humanity" or because they are morally right and their victims are "morally wrong" according to the oppressor.
I'll give a simple example. Who does more for society? The guy inviting everyone over for a BBQ to strengthen bonds between neighbors or the group of Saudis publicly hanging homosexuals?
One is encouraging good behavior and one is discouraging bag behavior (if you ask them). You see why I'm defensive about approaching situations with a "I'm here to discourage bad behavior" mentality ?
Consider this, think of all the terrible things and crimes that could be orchestrated through the email protocol. Undoubtedly, humans have been sold via email.
While I do not support this, I wouldn't also not support a government backdoor to all emails to catch the 0.00000001% of people who use the platform for nefarious reasons.
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I'm not here to discourage bad behavior. However if I see, it I'm not going to leave it be. I'll at the very least speak up about it and/or call the individual out.
Encouraging the good is definitely the better way, but that doesn't make negative feedback any less necessary. Everyone does bad things from time to time, despite all the encouragement in the world to do good. Although their number is tiny, we can't ignore those who do evil because its pleasurable to them.
We have a responsibility to keep each other accountable in proportional ways. Even the Lightning network has watchtowers and penalty transactions for when people try to cheat. Proportionality is the key here. We should strive for the golden mean. Your email example is perfect. People have definitely done evil with email. That doesn't mean we install a mass surveillance state. That would be a gross overreaction.
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