Anonymous ID: f365a6 May 23, 2018, 1:48 p.m. No.1520544   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0605

>>1520312

Not if it's deemed a public utility.

Even the CEO in 2011 admitted that that was the goal:

>https://searchengineland.com/twitter-as-utility-like-running-water-thats-goal-says-ceo-64803

One should be able to access Twitter anywhere, on any platform, and the interface should be instantly usable. So said Twitter CEO Dick Costolo in outlining the company’s vision for its future at the Mobile World Conference in Barcelona, going as far as to compare the service to running water.

 

“It needs to be water. It’s instantly useful. It’s simple. I don’t have to re-learn how to use water,” he told the audience. “It’s always present.”

Anonymous ID: f365a6 May 23, 2018, 2 p.m. No.1520641   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1520494

>>1520542

wow, not surprising.

they have to do anything & everything to keep that stock price afloat.

@~$33 today i think i saw. it was @~$17 9 months or so ago. close to a double in less than a year.

no fuckery going on there, oh no.

Anonymous ID: f365a6 May 23, 2018, 2:08 p.m. No.1520710   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0721 >>0783

>>1520605

Thx. This is interesting as well.

The Court analogized access to the Internet to public streets and parks, finding that the Internet was no different than traditional public forums and adopting a broad interpretation of First Amendment protections.

If we're going to have to discuss legal matters, might as well make it poignant.

No hiding behind a corporate veil, especially if your company's stated mission was to create a platform analogous to a public utility.

(I'm talking to you, @Jack.)