Last updated on December 10th, 2021
The past week in tech news has largely centered around the aftermath of the Charlottesville, Virginia counterprotests against neo-Nazis and white supremacists, which saw protester Heather Heyer killed. Since then, various White supremacists’ websites have been knocked offline; many are turning to increasingly obscure options.
Engadget notes that despite recent events (the post-2016 election spike in hate crimes, etc.), last week was apparently the final straw for the tech world.
Among the various actions taken by tech companies in the past week:
- Spotify’s removed various White supremacist artists from its site.
- Apple and PayPal have started suspending its services to such individuals/groups.
- Facebook’s cracked down on a few such groups, though largely ones tied to the White supremacists marching at Charlottesville.
- Finally, the Daily Stormer, a neo-Nazi/White supremacist website, was kicked off various services, including: GoDaddy; Google; Squarespace; and even Cloudflare. Cloudflare’s a content delivery network (CDN) that’s been extremely tolerant of hate group sites, in the name of free speech. However, Cloudflare finally changed its mind (and reluctantly) after DS deemed the CDN an ally in a site post.
Free speech vs hate speech

Traditionally, the tech industry’s taken a very hands-off approach to regulating hate speech, citing free speech concerns. However, recent events, especially since last year’s election, have thrown that philosophy into doubt. The tech industry’s finally admitting it does play a big role in today’s public discourse.
Of course, the United States’ first amendment regulating freedom of speech applies to the government, not private individuals or companies. I’m not obliged to host racist or homophobic material on my site, just as Facebook, Twitter, or the Huffington Post aren’t obliged to host such stuff, either. As an xkcd strip pointed out, sites yanking support for things like hate groups isn’t censorship; DS and similar sites can go find receptive hosts for their material on their own. (A Seattle area CDN’s doing just such for DS.)
There’s also the US-centric nature of free speech debates online. Many countries have hate speech laws; Germany, for instance, bans Holocaust denial. Of course, the biggest tech companies are based in the US. However, despite a laissez-faire approach, sites like Facebook are starting to run afoul of other countries’ laws on hate speech.
Additionally, the “just ignore it” approach to hate speech isn’t working. Online harassment of women and minorities is a heavy problem on social networks like Facebook and Twitter. To date, Twitter’s approach to handling harassment leaves much to be desired.
Finally, it might help if tech companies employed more women, African-Americans, and Latinos, including as managers or CEOs. Perhaps tech companies’ approach to dealing with hate speech would be different, or at least less tone-deaf.
Would progressive activists be affected by tech companies handling hate speech?
Some worry that tech companies regulating hate speech might lead to their throwing progressive activist groups like Black Lives Matter into the same boat as the likes of DS. Given polls show large numbers of White voters disapprove of BLM, I could see some concerns.
Still, BLM isn’t a hate group, as stated by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Black Lives Matter states the police shouldn’t mistreat Black people. Neo-Nazis and White supremacists, on the other hand, want Black people, including Yours Truly, dead. Claiming both sides can find a “middle ground” or that they’re “two sides of the same coin” is ludicrous and false.
Conclusion
Overall, tech companies, especially social networks, do have an influence over public discourse, and should make their products as open to all users as possible.
However, hate speech isn’t something tech companies have to support out of blind free speech adherence. The existing problems with online harassment of women and minorities suggests a broad hands-off approach in the name of free speech isn’t working. More must be done to combat hate speech.
Finally, Silicon Valley needs to hire more Blacks and Latinos; the increased diversity would be helpful.