At least two brands have said they will suspend advertising on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, after their ads and those of other companies were run on an account promoting fascism. The issue came less than a week after X CEO Linda Yaccarino publicly affirmed the company’s commitment to brand safety for advertisers.

    • @Fisk400@feddit.nu
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      2011 months ago

      Like lemmy.world defederating from several tankie instances and the active discussion about defederating from additional communist instances?

      Is that thing that is already happening the thing you want to happen or are there some additional things you want?

    • @me_rolling@lemm.ee
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      211 months ago

      m2c: no one should get banned for sharing his ideas. There’s a right to hate without exercising violence.

        • @alabasterhotdog@lemmy.ca
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          1711 months ago

          Even attempting to draw a parallel like that between race/ethnicity and material wealth is a fairly questionable take to most rational people I’d say, or at least hope.

            • @alabasterhotdog@lemmy.ca
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              11 months ago

              You may have misunderstood my comment; it was intended to suggest that I strongly question your values and priorities because you’re attempting to equate something as innate as race with material wealth. I’d go further to say that your conflating communism and socialism with nazism and fascism is merely ideological drivel.

        • @funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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          311 months ago

          what the hell are you talking about? Victor d’Hupay was an aristocrat. John Goodwyn Barmby was a Chartist, one of whose literal tenets is “pay persons of modest means if they have to serve the interests of the nation”. Thomas Moore was the Lord High Chancellor to Henry VIII. Charles Fourier was the equivalent of a millionaire at age 9. Marx was a lawyer. Engels was the son of a wealthy mill owners. William Morris was the son of what today we’d call a Wall Street fatcat. Kropotkin’s family owned serfs.

          Nearly everyone involved in suffrage movements started wealthy and observed the treatment of the poor and was moved to do something about it.