this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2025
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I would say that's irrelevant for the crimes committed. And not just Americans would struggle to find Myanmar on a map. Or really care what's going on there unless it's rooting out phishing farms using abducted foreigners.
I commend your view on the matter, that when it comes to their children they will do something. That may turn out to be true. However, that's not going to be enough to get anyone at meta convicted under the current laws. They are running under a cover of diffuse authority and supervision internally and section 230 externally. Abhorent drug pusher comments are not admissions of guilt. They have good lawyers. We need new laws, more regulation, and fines that make Wall Street worried.
Irrelevant to the crimes themselves, but very relevant to the political pressure that can be applied to force action.
We all know the law doesn't just get applied because it should be. Especially not against the rich. It gets applied, or at least has a chance to be, when enough people are paying attention and demanding justice.
Also, section 230 doesn't apply to criminal prosecution (it may not even apply to the ongoing civil case), and there is strong evidence from the civil case that it was the executives themselves that explicitly chose not to implement safeguards that Meta employees were calling for.
Absolutely. We need all of that plus way stronger antitrust. And we need the current law applied to bad actors, regardless of their riches.
You want the current laws applied. I say the current laws are not good enough to get anybody convicted, no matter how rich they are. And since I'd much prefer to live in a world where I'm wrong, let's stop arguing.