Yet the backlash is intensifying. Civil rights groups organize a boycott. Advertisers withdraw their campaigns. A trending hashtag. T...
Yet the backlash is intensifying. Civil rights groups organize a boycott. Advertisers withdraw their campaigns. A trending hashtag. The employees of the platform threaten to leave. Days later, the CEO is forced to choose between banning a popular creator — and facing the fury of his fans — or being seen as a hypocrite and enabler of dangerous behavior.
If this scenario sounds familiar, that’s because a version of it has happened on every major Internet media platform for the past half-decade. Facebook and Alex Jones, Twitter and Donald Trump, YouTube and PewDiePie, Netflix and Dave Chappelle: every major platform has found itself trapped, at some point, between that particular rock and the anvil.
Now it’s Spotify’s turn. The audio giant has faced calls for weeks to take action against mega-popular podcast host Joe Rogan after Mr Rogan was accused of promoting Covid-19 misinformation in his broadcast, including hosting a guest who had been banned by twitter for spreading false information about Covid-19 vaccines. This month, a group of hundreds of medical experts urged Spotify to crack down on Covid-19 misinformation, saying Mr Rogan had a “worrying history” of promoting lies about the virus.
So far, the backlash cycle hits most of the usual notes. Critics have compared excerpts from Mr. Rogan’s interviews with the rules laid out by Spotify, which ban material “that promotes harmful false or misleading content about Covid-19.” Two folk-rock legends, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, led the boycott, pulling their catalogs from Spotify last week in protest at the platform’s decision to back Mr Rogan. Brené Brown, another popular host, quickly followed suit, saying she would not release new episodes of his Spotify-exclusive podcast “until further notice.”
Daniel Ek, CEO of Spotify, published the required blog post Sunday, defending the company’s commitment to free speech and saying that “it’s important to me that we don’t take the position of content censor.” And while Spotify has refused to take action against Mr Rogan, it has pledged to put advisory warnings on podcast episodes about Covid-19 and direct listeners to a hub full of authoritative health information. .
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