Naturally, I am not a lawyer, I am a dog on the internet. But some things have the smell of having been critically analysed by lawyers, and this just... doesn't somehow.
It seems if I post a photo of a sports event that makes the stadium location obvious, that would now fall foul of this policy? Likewise a concert, or a politician at a publicly recognisable residence
Purely personally, one of my most memorable times on twitter was the tens of thousands of people watching a British politician fly home on a long haul flight to get fired - quite sad that we won't get to experience the sheer bizarre feeling of that again https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/more-than-20-000-pe...
It’s almost like this whole rule was made up after the fact with little to no effort put into how it would be enforced when the sun rises the next day…
But I think that’s just the new reality. Moving forward, Twitter is whatever Elon says it is whenever he says it is.
The new reality is the same as the old reality. Twitter executives have been arbitrarily banning content based on their own whims and political biases for years, regardless of the written terms of service. It's just that there's a different executive in charge now with a different set of made-up rules. I'm baffled as to why anyone would care. The whole thing has long been a joke, nothing more than a platform for trolling.
They could do lots of things to comply with the new and arbitrary terms. But why? This is public info that's on many different sites and literally broadcast to anyone with a radio.
As I said on another thread, man, I wouldn't want to be in the team of lawyers charged with writing this rule.
"You have 24 hours. You have to write some rules that make my private jet's flights that are public information available on a public website in real time disallowed, while also making Hunter Biden's hacked nudes allowed. Go."
Twitter banned posting images of people against their will in December of last year. This sounds like a natural extension of that. There are caveats you can read about like incidental people in a crowd and I'm sure those caveats apply as well
Just want to highlight that this is happening at the same time that they are rolling out a policy that will require everyone to provide their live location in order to serve them targeted ads.
> they are rolling out a policy that will require everyone to provide their live location in order to serve them targeted ads
It's happening at the same time that there is an unsupported rumor from unidentified sources claiming that Twitter is talking about doing that. They are not actually doing that now, nor do we know if they are discussing it.
This is how news bifurcates into two sides - rumors are assumed to be facts by people when they support their internalized narratives, then get repeated as fact without context or any of the details.
If you want to run me through the things Platformmer got wrong about Twitter in the last month across the multiple stories they broke as evidence of how this is unsupported I’m all ears…
So if I don't turn on location services on my iphone the app disables itself? lol I only turn on location for apple maps. twitter can just get uninstalled if they make such a requirement.
Apparently it shows a full screen dialog that can only be dismissed by opting in. Selling the tracking data allows him to not have to rely on advertisers as much as they flee the platform. And even paying members have to do it, so he can make more on the paying members too.
This is going to be fun. Bots that just post “plane xyz has departed” - no personal info there! Bots that post - “Think Elons about to get high” no live location there.
The moron flies back and forth between three damn airports on one airplane which publicly disclosed its flight plans, what does he think this is going to acheive?
Oh apart from destroying Twitter as a platform for live events, protests, OSINT etc.
It’s not that he does dumb stuff, it’s that systematically acts first and thinks later. Which is not what I would hope for from someone building autonomous cars, rockets, or brain implants.
The destruction of Twitter as a viable tool for grassroots coordination _was_ the point of Musk buying Twitter with the help of sovereign funds of Arab countries.
Protest organizers generally don't like this kind of live location tracking, and routinely ask attendees to turn off location services or leave their phones at home.
It depends what sort of protest. 'A crowd of bad people have showed up to hassle Good Person - please come out to support if you can #worthycause' is very differnt from 'time to flex fellow #ideologybelievers you know what to do nudge nudge wink wink'.
A lot of people seem to be worried how this will effect various use cases, like coordinating protests and such.
I wouldn't worry. This policy was made specifically so that Elon could take down the account that posts where his plane is and any reincarnation of that. It won't be enforced on anyone else, unless you're protesting Elon. Or one of his autocrat friends. In which case you should use a different platform anyway.
I am convinced he's going to start doxxing people on twitter in effect sending mobs after otherwise anonymous people. He has the ability. He's keeps being a creepy weirdo, so I guess it's just time.
Wow. A lot more interesting than Twitter's rules and policies is learning that archive.org supports diffing between versions. That's the real story here.
Other commentators are pointing out the potential for future abuse from this policy. I'm interested in how this is targeted against @elonjet, the account dedicated to posting public information available about Elon's flights.
Actually it was the other way around. The Sun King himself typed the three magic letters after banning the account https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1603160241352462336 which probably led someone scrambling to update the policy.
Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if Russia-Ukraine war OSINT was the main target and @ElonJet just visibly banned before updating the policy as misdirection because personal thin-skinnedness is less newsworthy a motivation.
Still doesn’t make sense to me. Twitter doesn’t need permission to ban any account. They can just do it. Creating an ad hoc rule about location sharing isn’t going to satisfy the free speech absolutism crowd. So what’s the point?
This would seem to cover everything from the paparazzi at TMZ (no great loss imho) to on-the-ground reporting at a protest or breaking news event. Basically any video or reporting about the doings of any private individual(s) could be grounds for removal of tweets/account bans.
ElonJet should just recreate and rebrand as EJetDogPics. In addition to tweeting when his jet moves around, they also send out cute dog pics. That way, their account isn't just 'dedicated' to sharing someones live location.
Remember a few days ago when the so-called Twitter Files were supposed to convince us that moderation decisions at old Twitter weren't up to snuff? Maybe Bari Weiss can use her unfettered access to tell us what went into this new decision.
So i guess it's considered fair to institute a new rule and then immediately ban everybody who violates that rule without giving them any advance notice or grace period to begin complying with the new rules?
It may not be “fair” but that’s how it always works. If the person in power wants you gone, you’re gone unless you have someone more powerful in your side.
I'm pretty cynical, but let's be real: power doesn't have to work this way, and I don't think we do ourselves any favors acting like it does. A functional society finds ways to hold unchecked power accountable for pettiness, and that's a norm that doesn't go away unless all of us let it.
To be more specific, societies are always threatened by actors who wield massive unilaterally-exercised power, who are only countered when enough other people band together and pool their own power in opposition.
Because if the problem is unchecked power, and any checked power is checked by a power that is checked or unchecked, eventually you either get a loop or an unchecked power, which can then do whatever abuse you're worried about.
How do you figure? “Unchecked” means uncontrolled, not uncontrollable (an important distinction). In a functional social system, different powers constrain one another, which is a kind of loop I guess, but a stabilizing one.
This has the nice "benefit" of also making Twitter useless as a real-time organizing tool ("We're at City Hall demonstrating against the new ordinance. Come on down.").
That's not what the policy says, it's about sharing someone else's location without their permission or when they don't want you to
Edit: I can see a grey area for "{$speaker,$performer} now taking the stage at {$conference,$music_festival}". Particularly if its somehow a surprise
Edit 2: Imo as written it's not a good policy because there are probably going to be lots of harmless things in technical violation that get ignored, so it turns into a "we'll enforce it if we don't like you or what you're saying" rule
Ironically, if Elon had simply put "no one is allowed to track the private jets of my friends and I on my platform" into the rules and policies it would be a lot more straightforward. I'm not sure there's a word or phrase in English for "making something worse while trying to save embarrassment", but Elon is defining it.
> That's not what the policy says, it's about sharing someone else's location without their permission or when they don't want you to
"I'm at City Hall demonstrating. There may or may not be other people because if there were, I haven't asked them if I can share their location or not. Come down and find out in person!"
>Free speech! Absolutist free speech for everyone!
People mock Musk
>Ok except you can't impersonate people
People mock Musk with accounts labelled "PARODY"
>Ok you also can't do that
People post 30-sec clips of him being booed
>Ok, no posting videos of shows
People track his private jet
>Ok no location information
(repeat ad nauseum)
--
Honestly anybody who believes any word this guy says is a complete rube at this point. Billionaires have way to much influence and this needs to change in short order
> This is bizarrely specific. I have a feeling it's related to current events.
I suspect its either the exact first day of POW videos from Ukraine government accounts related to the Russian invasion, or deliberately chosen to be shortly before that; the targeting is transparently obvious.
And, to be clear, those videos do raise real problems of where exactly the boundaries of the vague prohibition in the 3rd Geneva Convention of 1949 regarding protecting POWs from public curiosity are and ought to be drawn, and it might be reasonable for a social media outlet to adopt a blanket policy prohibiting videos of POWs (either generally, or by government sources, or with some other rule trying in good faith to address human rights.) But the construct of this rule makes it clear that that’s not the issue, that instead its about serving the propaganda interests of one side of a current conflict.
If there a legitimate safety concern they'd be suing adsbexchange, since that's where all the flight trackers are sourcing their data, and it's trivial to just go to that site and route around twitter's ham-handed censorship.
So if I'm a conference and I share video of public/private individuals while at that conference that would violate the rules just because they are at the conference. How would I know anyone's getting stalked? Sounds like a great policy alright O_o.
How are we going to define "live"? If the data is five seconds old? Five minutes? Five hours? How far between measurements can we share? Does this policy apply to everyone, or just nonpublic figures?
Can someone provide a citation that doesn't require me to enable Javascript to answer these questions, if they are addressed in the policy?
I spent good money on a Bellingcat workshop and now some of those skills are apparently useless, though to be fair the example we used in class was Jeffrey Epstein's plane, not Elon's IIRC.
i have to wonder if you staid on at twitter because you believed in free speech what you make of being forced to quickly engineer a policy of censorship like this.
Well, there goes any linking to spacecraft trackers, since if they list the ISS they fall foul of this rule. Or to Nasa's homepage, since they often include the location of currently active crewed spacecraft.
Probably can't link to SpaceX either, especially if they're running a crew up to the ISS.
Or the plans/sightings of senators who escape to Cancun.
Or "I met celebrity X on this flight and they were really awesome!" posts.
twitter policy talks about private information, but they seem to also take issue with public information (which is made somewhat more accessible if put into a tweet but still was public before.
edit: seems to be as exploitable as ChatGPT (except from getting banned anyways because of no oversight ;) ) "What is not a violation of this policy?": Gossip, rumours, accusations, and allegations ---- so just preface the flight data info of Elon Musk with "I heard a drunkard say in my tavern that Sir Elon is at 49°21'43''W 38°20'59'N just recently
So basically people raised enough stink that ElonJet was unbanned, but with the policy changes will likely be banned (again) but this time under the guise of violating the rules and policies. And now the other jet accounts are being removed as well in order provide convenient cover.
Yeah, kinda, but also it looks like it was unplanned. They only suspended the elonjet at first, then the rest of the guy's accounts 3-4 hours later, and finally whatever hastily constructed policy they're implementing now.
Umm, between this and the provision cited in the first reply (from OSINTTechnical) this basically seems to require prior approval for any kind of live news coverage
On the matter of enabling real time doxxing as being protected by free speech, we could perhaps take this a step further. Cell sites gather the real time GPS location of all cell phones whether geo-location is enabled in the phone or not on most phones. Even on the phones that do not support this there are commands to ping the location of all the phones, triggering the e911 functions in the modem. All phones manufactured for sale in the US after 1996 have this function. Activating this function does not provide feedback to the phone OS at all.
I am curious what the public reaction would be if there was an API that could give the real time location of anyone by name, groups-of-people by location, IMSI, MSISDN, etc... regardless of the subscribers age. Would there be any push-back?
Some cars also have this information. They are quite literally vessels by standard automotive terminology. Maritime laws require GPS data for all vessels and there are sites that track these vessels today. We could also track the location and speed of all cars and set up an API to query by location, license plate, vin number I think this may have already happened, owner name, owners license number. We could doxx people that are speeding, driving erratically, visiting an ex-lovers home. Insurance companies would certainly love this information. Some people volunteer it to insurance companies already for a discount but why not make it public? The police could see real time location and speed of every vessel with an expired registration.
We could take this even further. Using cell phone and car data we could infer how often people drive their car vs using public transportation. Anyone exceeding a specific ratio of personal vehicle usage could have their personal ESG score modified and limit access to their CBDC bank account to discourage using cars until they ride the bus for a certain number of days per month. We could even confine their car to a specific approved geo-fence.
All of these ideas are encapsulated within /s, obviously.
While I was homeless, I began getting really concerned about people knowing so much about my life and my physical location. I wrote about that in a piece called Lessons Learned from Writing the San Diego Homeless Survival Guide. Excerpt:
While homeless in Fresno, I began identifying myself online as "in California" and sometimes as "no longer in San Diego" but I intentionally did not actively advertise the move. A lot of people continued to believe I was in downtown San Diego well after I had left San Diego County entirely and my stress levels began to go down as people mistakenly assumed I was somewhere else.
While homeless, I generally did not tell people where I was camping, either online or offline. I felt this was a safety issue. I didn't want people to know where I was camped.
I am not a fan of Elon Musk, but the HN standard is to take a charitable interpretation of things where possible. The charitable interpretation is that he's socially awkward, overly in the limelight and learned a lesson the hard way about how online information about your whereabouts is potentially very dangerous information and decided to use his experience to inform company policy.
As a footnote, I really, really like the way this was presented, showing the old and new policies side-by-side and highlighting the pertinent changes. Kudos to whomever put this together.
Sorry, but I don't understand how you could take a charitable interpretation of Elon Musk's history when it comes to privacy. This is the same guy that hired a detective to try and investigate someone he disliked (the whole 'pedo guy' incident). He's been unmasking low level employees as rage bait for his Twitter crowd. He's shared sensitive information with far right individuals.
No one is a monolith and once someone has a "bad reputation" for a particular thing, good luck reversing it.
I saw some tweet with him saying (rather stupidly) that he is so committed to free speech that he will not take down @elonjet and it was, of course, mocking the fact that it was now down. His previous position was dumb -- just like I was initially dumb to be sharing so much information about myself online, which brought out the worst in some people.
I wasn't a "bad person" to be oversharing. I was naive. I had lived a very private life and it was really hard for me to figure out how to negotiate a relationship to the public. It was painful.
I imagine that for a lot of things, such a wealthy man gets a lot of deference in face-to-face stuff. That can make it hard to get a good idea of what's real and what's just ass-kissing bullshit and that's not how the world really works.
I wish HN would keep its dignity even if Elon Musk cannot seem to do so. And giving no room for any nuance in the discussion is not it.
> I imagine that for a lot of things, such a wealthy man gets a lot of deference in face-to-face stuff. That can make it hard to get a good idea of what's real and what's just ass-kissing bullshit and that's not how the world really works.
The affluenza defense never ceases to get a belly laugh out of me. Thanks for that.
You think Doreen is using "the affluenza defense"? Seriously? One, she's one of the most thoughtful, honest people here. Two, of all the people least likely to be impressed by wealth, she's probably close to the top of the list.
Maybe consider taking her post at face value also?
I don’t really know who the poster is, so I’m sorry if I’m missing some context you have. She said men who are so rich can’t get a good read of the world due to how rich they are. At face value, that to me reads “affluenza”. Willing to hear another interpretation.
I have a hard time believing that the same crowd that is paranoid that there's a conspiracy to hunt down women seeking abortions through digital technology wouldn't also take issue with live location sharing.
But maybe people are just monomaniacally obsessed. They need to direct their hatred at some target. They found Elon Musk after moving on from Trump, and they don't care at all about the substance of these matters.
Common sense says that this policy was not put in place to stop one-off photos of individuals, but to reasonably prevent individuals/groups from continuously tracking someone in realtime and broadcasting that information out to others.
It will be interesting to see how it is enforced though.
this policy makes saying something like “the president will address congress at 8pm
from the rose garden” or “elon is at the chapelle show” bannable. it it not something most people should agree with
it makes going live on the street and asking a stranger a question bannable too. you’re also posting some rule’s that weren’t present at the time of my reply, which implies to me you’re actually just arguing in bad faith and you’re really just one of those elon nerds
> you’re also posting some rule’s that weren’t present at the time of my reply
A lot of the time in online discussions there is always grey area. You can never be 100% right. Except for the precious few, like this one. And it is even better when the person accuses you of arguing in bad faith, and using an ad-hominem attack, at the same time they are completely wrong.
Click the link in the OP. It's literally a diff of the rule change - which you didn't read. LMAO.
It's ironic how it turns out it is you who is not arguing in good faith. You are but one of many though so don't beat yourself up too much about it.
This would technically also ban videos posted of Musk taken live of him getting boo’d en masse at Dave Chapelle’s comedy show, if you read the whole text literally.
True. Like if media is waiting outside a courthouse or something. "We are down at the courthouse waiting for so and so...".
But if someone was tracking me, I would absolutely want a clear policy to have it taken down. I don't know anyone who would disagree with this.
I think its good though because there is an inherent fascination in people to want to know where people are (like celebrities) and to watch where they go. And a lot of this information could be collected by social media posts if someone really wanted to.
Like an SBF tracker for instance...would be interesting to get a notification when he gets transferred to prison and to the courthouse. But if you happened to be in SBF's situation, you would prefer your privacy.
I think its a big thing. People are looking at it as just one small thing that he does for himself, but the right to privacy of location is a big deal. And mainly because everyone would prefer to be in control of their privacy. And also, posting pictures on social media, or someone seeing you in the street, is public, but shouldn't give someone the right to repost this with live GPS coords. Except if someone is like "I'll be signing books, come down and meet me" which is giving permission, which is allowed by the rules.
Sigh. Privacy is a good thing! But now its politicized, so people for it turn against it.
I don't think anyone would be happy with someone re-posting their live location on the internet. Like I cannot think of a single person who would like this. Maybe you do? If so, I would really be interested to know why.
From my perspective (not a celebrity or public figure) I don't want to feel like I can't say that I saw so-and-so at a mall or something. It's stifling. It also dramatically violates the entire "free speech" thing Musk has been barking about.
> live location information, including information shared on Twitter directly or links to 3rd-party URL(s) of travel routes, actual physical location, or other identifying information that would reveal a person’s location, regardless if this information is publicly available;
Would you like someone to share that information about you or not. That's as simple as it is.
Are you saying you don’t see how this bans a lot of reporting? Do you not see how that language bans you from posting a photo you take in the public that includes other people? The language is wide open for selective enforcement. Selective enforcement is exactly the type of moderation that Elon rallied against. So when there is a change to the Terms of Service, one would hope that thought and care would go into it while also upholding the mission that he laid out.
The terms already included the following before this change:
> home address or physical location information, including street addresses, GPS coordinates or other identifying information related to locations that are considered private;
You make a good point about the risk of selective enforcement, but there is already a huge amount of rules left open to ambiguity already.
I guess we will see if its used as a tool for censorship.
Would you be okay with Elon Musk publicly posting the real-time location of your favorite politicians, or journalists who are critical of him, or other tech executives he has a beef with? I've yet to meet anyone who says yes, and I really don't think it'd even be a question if not for Musk's hypocrisy on the issue. I'm not sure how I'd go about finding "data" for this - it's one of those things that's so niche and so widely understood to be bad behavior, nobody bothers to write opinion polls about it.
Public figures have always had fewer privacy rights than regular citizens. See paparazzi. You can also often find out where politicians and journalists by calling their offices. It's not private data.
So, yes. I would be OK with it. So long as, like with the flight tracker bots, it's not included with an incitement to violence.
> On March 14, 2006, Gawker launched Gawker Stalker Maps, a mashup of the site's Gawker Stalker feature and Google Maps. After this, Gawker Stalker—originally a weekly roundup of celebrity sightings in New York City submitted by Gawker readers—was frequently updated, and the sightings are displayed on a map. The feature sparked criticism from celebrities and publicists for encouraging stalking. Actor and director George Clooney's representative Stan Rosenfeld described Gawker Stalker as "a dangerous thing". Jessica Coen said that the map is harmless, that Gawker readers are "for the most part, a very educated, well-meaning bunch", and that "if there is someone really intending to do a celebrity harm, there are much better ways to go about doing that than looking at the Gawker Stalker".
> On April 6, 2007, Emily Gould appeared on an edition of Larry King Live hosted by talk show host Jimmy Kimmel during a panel discussion titled "Paparazzi: Do They Go Too Far?" and was asked about the Gawker Stalker. Kimmel accused the site of potentially assisting real stalkers, adding that Gould and her website could ultimately be responsible for someone's death.
What point are you trying to make, out of curiosity? This piece provides opinions for, opinions against, and a very IANAL take on the legality of public data for public figures existing.
It's not a personal opinion thing. It's one of those things that you really could ask everyone and they would agree. It's hard to even think of a reason why someone would oppose it for themselves.
> hard to even think of a reason why someone would oppose it for themselves.
One group who may be against such a measure on philosophical grounds would be so-called “free speech absolutists” who evangelize the value of unfettered speech. Censoring content of any kind should be reprehensible to anyone who claims to belong to such a group.
Don't be disingenuous; the incongruity is over the previously stated commitment to maximally free speech. Twitter by Musk (tm) absolutely has the right to throw people off, set narrow content policies, and so on, just as was true under previous management. But equally, others have the right to point at the hypocrisy and say 'ha ha', because Musk swore up and down that he was gonna Be Different (tm).
It seems if I post a photo of a sports event that makes the stadium location obvious, that would now fall foul of this policy? Likewise a concert, or a politician at a publicly recognisable residence
Purely personally, one of my most memorable times on twitter was the tens of thousands of people watching a British politician fly home on a long haul flight to get fired - quite sad that we won't get to experience the sheer bizarre feeling of that again https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/more-than-20-000-pe...