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Reddit Openly Proclaims It Will Discriminate Based on Race in Content Policing

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Hong Kong Leader Addresses UN Human Rights Council as Criticism Mounts Over Beijing’s Security Law

“We are deeply concerned by unconfirmed reports that Beijing has passed the national security law,” said British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab, according to Reuters. “This would be a grave step.” He added: “Once we have seen the full legislation, we will make a further statement.” Charles Michel, president of the European Union Council, told reporters after his video summit with South Korean President Moon Jae-in, “We deplore the decision,” Reuters reported. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said that the bloc was discussing with “international partners” on potential measures in response to Beijing’s encroachment into Hong Kong’s judicial system. According to Yonhap News Agency, South Korea’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Kim In-chul said at a press briefing that the Moon government was “paying keen attention and watching the trend closely with…

Reddit Openly Proclaims It Will Discriminate Based on Race in Content Policing

Social media platform Reddit adopted new rules against “hate speech” that discriminate against certain people based on their race, gender, religion, and other characteristics.

Reddit seems to be the first tech company to do so openly, though there’s evidence that other companies have done so surreptitiously.

Reddit used to have no hate speech policy. The platform was based on the concept that individual communities (subreddits) largely set their own rules and police themselves.

On June 29, Reddit announced that it has adopted a site-wide policy against “Promoting Hate Based on Identity or Vulnerability.”

“Communities and people that incite violence or that promote hate based on identity or vulnerability will be banned,” the rules say.

“Marginalized or vulnerable groups include, but are not limited to, groups based on their actual and perceived race, color, religion, national origin, ethnicity, immigration status, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, pregnancy, or disability. These include victims of a major violent event and their families.”

The catch is, Reddit gets to determine which races, religions, and gender are “marginalized or vulnerable” and which are not.

“While the rule on hate protects such groups, it does not protect all groups or all forms of identity,” the rule says. “For example, the rule does not protect groups of people who are in the majority or who promote such attacks of hate.”

Reddit didn’t respond to a request for clarification on what race, gender, and religion it considers to be the “majority.”

Last year, Reddit received a $150 million investment from Chinese tech giant Tencent. The news sparked concerns of incoming censorship among its users.

Google, Facebook

There’s evidence that other internet companies have adopted similar measures.

Last year, then-head of Google’s Responsible Innovation Team, Jen Gennai, was recorded on a secret camera as saying that she was working on addressing “fairness” in Google algorithms.

A leaked internal document said that algorithmic “unfairness” related to “unjust or prejudicial treatment that is related to sensitive characteristics such as race, income, sexual orientation, or gender, though algorithmic systems or algorithmically aided decision-making.”

But Gennai made clear her job was to bring “fairness” only to certain people, based on whether they belong to a group Google deems “historically marginalized.”

“Communities who are in power and have traditionally been in power are not who I’m solving fairness for,” she was recorded as saying.

Last week, a former Facebook content moderator revealed that the moderators were told to enforce the social media company’s content policies selectively to allow “Hate Speech” against white people under certain circumstances.

Reddit seems to be the first company to openly spell out discrimination based on race and other characteristics in its policies.

“Like Google, YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram, Reddit has adopted a policy … that includes only those minorities recognized by the left, while excluding those whom the left attacks, as well as exonerating the leftist hatred for the white majority and the ideological opponents of leftism,” commented Michael Rectenwald, former liberal studies professor at the New York University and author of “Google Archipelago: The Digital Gulag and the Simulation of Freedom,” in an email to The Epoch Times.

Reddit Purge

Along with the policy announcement, Reddit banned about 2,000 subreddits. Most of them were small and inactive, but there were several major forums, including darkhumorandmemes and darkjokecentral as well as the socialist forum ChapoTrapHouse, gendercritical (a forum for feminists that oppose self-assumed female identity), and consumeproduct (a forum critical of consumerism, corporate political pandering, pornography, and homosexuality).

Also banned was The_Donald, a fan club of President Donald Trump with more than 790,000 subscribers. The subreddit used to be the largest internet forum of Trump supporters, but was virtually shut down by its own moderators in February after Reddit removed about half of the moderators for breaking Reddit rules.

Some of the moderators moved the forum to a new site, TheDonald.win. The site is getting about 200,000 unique visitors a day, its administrator, who declined to provide his name, told The Epoch Times via Twitter direct message. Popularity of the site has been steadily increasing in the past months, based on Alexa ranking. It has recently allowed other forums to set up under its infrastructure.

Follow Petr on Twitter: @petrsvab

Focus News: Reddit Openly Proclaims It Will Discriminate Based on Race in Content Policing

Hong Kong Protests Continue Despite Beijing Passing National Security Law

In Hong Kong, local activists are calling on people to take to the streets on July 1 to protest against Beijing’s national security law despite a police ban on the gathering. Several local activists including Figo Chan, vice convenor of local pro-democracy group Civil Human Rights Front (CHRF); Wu Chai-wai, chairman of Hong Kong’s Democratic Party; district councilors Tsang Kin-shing and Andy Chui; and lawmaker Eddie Chu, held a press conference at noon on Tuesday. Together they said they will be the organizers of a march from Causeway Bay to the city’s Central district on Wednesday afternoon after police rejected two applications—one from CHRF and another other from Chui—to hold a rally on July 1, the anniversary of Hong Kong’s handover from Britain to China in 1997. CHRF, which has…