The Chronicle

Jones ban a bad thing Facebook, tech giants go too far

- JAMES MCCANN James McCann is a freelance journalist. Follow him on Twitter: @jdfmccann

ALEX Jones has built his media empire, Infowars, by saying outlandish things.

He has had to issue apologies because, again and again, he has inaccurate­ly accused prominent people of sexual crimes. The families of two children killed at Sandy Hook are suing him for defamation, after he implied the mass shooting was staged.

He has alleged that the moon landing was fake, 9/11 was an inside job, and that the government is putting chemicals in the water that are “making the friggin’ frogs gay”.

He is, in short, not a source one cites if one wishes to be taken seriously.

Among his other conspirato­rial claims, Alex Jones has insisted, for years, that a small cabal of powerful globalist elites is trying to silence him. Perhaps it’s just a case of a broken clock being right twice a day but last week, a small cabal of powerful globalist elites did, actually, try to silence him.

Within 12 hours, Apple and Spotify took down Infowars podcasts, Facebook scuttled the Infowars page and YouTube (which is owned by the people who own Google) deleted the Infowars account and videos. There has, it seems, been an executive decision to de-platform Alex Jones.

In the past, social media companies have been eager to portray themselves as the good guys. They like to look as though they’re interested in defending the right to freedom of speech. As recently as last month, Facebook publicly made the case that banning socalled “fake news” sources, specifical­ly Infowars, would “be contrary to the basic principles of free speech”.

Now, Facebook, Google, Apple and Spotify – titans of the internet age, the people who control our personal informatio­n, correspond­ence, music, news and entertainm­ent – are, by their own standard, violating freedom of speech.

None of the tech giants have cited why, specifical­ly, they’re removing Jones’ content. Facebook, contradict­ing its old position, now says that Infowars “violates our hate speech policies”. How, exactly, remains to be explained.

YouTube says Infowars has breached “community guidelines” although, again, we don’t have details. Apple has defended itself by saying it won’t “tolerate hate speech”. Obviously, this is not true; even if one was to define Alex Jones and Infowars as “hate speakers”, Apple was tolerating them before, and isn’t tolerating them now.

By anyone’s definition, even those who loathe and mock Infowars, this is a purge.

Of course, these corporatio­ns are well within their rights to banish whoever they please. They are businesses and are run for profit.

They don’t have an obligation to preserve free speech; they have an obligation to make money for their shareholde­rs. How they choose to do that is up to them. That might mean, say, recording everything you do online and selling that informatio­n to the highest bidder.

This should terrify us. The internet was supposed to make informatio­n free and accessible, sweeping away repressive cultural gatekeeper­s and ushering in a new, democratic free-for-all. Instead, control of the world’s culture has consolidat­ed in the hands of a tiny group of insanely wealthy people living in Silicon Valley.

This purge has emboldened Alex Jones and his supporters.

They will continue to huff and puff in whichever little patch of the internet they still possess. Their reach has diminished, no doubt, but on this topic at least, the raving doesn’t seem quite as conspirato­rial any more.

 ?? Photo: iStock ?? POWER TO SILENCE: Facebook has banned Alex Jones, a man who peddles in putrid conspiracy theories. And that's actually a bad thing.
Photo: iStock POWER TO SILENCE: Facebook has banned Alex Jones, a man who peddles in putrid conspiracy theories. And that's actually a bad thing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia