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Tareq I. Albaho, PhD's avatar

Limiting "reach" is EXACTLY the same as proscibing speech.

If you say to someone: "here is a closed room with sound-proof walls and you can say anything and everything you want here", this is a violation of freedom of speech.

This involves a fundamental re-definition of what is freedom of speech. Free Speech is a tango. It involves a speaker and an audience. If you eliminate/reduce the audience, you have the deafening sound of one hand clapping.

This should be 101-stuff for any principled legal mind.

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Brent Johnson's avatar

You have freedom to speak, but you do not have a right to be heard. However, I as a potential listener should be the one who makes the choice of whether or not to listen. The problem is that someone in the middle is making that decision on my behalf.

If someone sends me a letter, I should get to choose whether or not to open it and read it. No one should be allowed to intercept it and withhold it from me. I may choose to activate a spam filter, but I still get to choose whether I look at the spam.

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