Journalist Michael Shellenberger just dropped something controversial. He's claiming prominent figures like Bill Gates, John Kerry, and Hillary Clinton are backing tighter controls on X (formerly Twitter).
The allegations center around coordinated efforts between US politicians and EU regulators to pressure social platforms. For crypto folks, this hits different—centralized control over communication channels directly challenges the decentralization ethos we're building toward.
Whether you buy the narrative or not, one thing's clear: the battle over who controls digital public squares is heating up. And in a world moving toward Web3, these debates matter more than ever.
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ChainBrain
· 17h ago
NGL, this is exactly why Web3 must exist. The more centralized big players try to control the discourse, the more we need to accelerate decentralization.
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StopLossMaster
· 12-08 08:01
NGL, this is exactly the core issue that Web3 aims to solve. Centralized platforms are bound to be eliminated sooner or later.
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NftBankruptcyClub
· 12-08 07:55
Nah, this is the same old routine again—big tech colluding with politicians to suppress freedom of speech. We've seen this script way too many times.
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BearMarketGardener
· 12-08 07:50
The same routine again? The big bosses want to regulate X, so we need to be even more committed to decentralization, or else we'll get choked.
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token_therapist
· 12-08 07:49
ngl this is exactly what they're afraid of; web3 is really hitting them where it hurts
Journalist Michael Shellenberger just dropped something controversial. He's claiming prominent figures like Bill Gates, John Kerry, and Hillary Clinton are backing tighter controls on X (formerly Twitter).
The allegations center around coordinated efforts between US politicians and EU regulators to pressure social platforms. For crypto folks, this hits different—centralized control over communication channels directly challenges the decentralization ethos we're building toward.
Whether you buy the narrative or not, one thing's clear: the battle over who controls digital public squares is heating up. And in a world moving toward Web3, these debates matter more than ever.