Law in the Internet Society

View   r3  >  r2  >  r1
NilePierreFirstEssay 3 - 11 Nov 2024 - Main.NilePierre
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"
Changed:
<
<
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
>
>

The Internet and Diddy's Downfall (final draft)

 
Changed:
<
<

The Internet and Diddy's Downfall

>
>
-- By NilePierre - 11 Nov 24
 
Deleted:
<
<
-- By NilePierre - 18 Oct 2024
 
Changed:
<
<

Who is Diddy?

Sean Combs (aka Diddy) is an award winning rapper, producer, record label executive, often referred to as a music mogul. Diddy, who has 100 civil cases and faces criminal charges from the US Attorney, is allegedly guilty of sexual assault, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice, among other charges.
>
>

Who is Diddy?

Sean Combs, also known as Diddy, is a Grammy-winning rapper, producer, and record label executive who has become a cultural icon and a music mogul. However, his legacy is now overshadowed by over 100 civil cases and criminal charges filed by the U.S. Attorney. These allegations include sexual assault, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice, dirtying his once sparkling public image.
 

Rumors Online and the Court of Public Opinion

Added:
>
>
As someone who grew up in Los Angeles, I’ve heard rumors of the dark side of Diddy’s white parties for years. Rumors once confined to beauty salons and barber shops now circulate through Twitter threads, videos, and online forums, gaining credibility and reach. Even before Cassie’s lawsuit against him in 2023, Reddit and other forums were already discussing Diddy’s alleged abusive behavior. For instance, a 2019 Reddit post of a video of Diddy’s former bodyguard with alleged firsthand accounts of his abuse got over 1,200 upvotes. Certainly, the internet has become a highway for not just intellectual, but social and cultural information to spread. It has also become a passageway to critique, analyze, and dismantle reputations piece by piece.
 
Changed:
<
<
As someone who grew up in Los Angeles, I’ve heard rumors of the dark side of Diddy’s white parties for years. However, social media has served as a platform to circulate these rumors past small talk in Los Angeles salons to twitter threads, videos, and forums. Certainly, the internet has become a highway for not just intellectual, but social and cultural information to spread. It has also become a passageway to critique, analyze, and dismantle reputations piece by piece.

Although the allegations against Diddy didn’t reach mainstream media coverage until Cassie filed a suit against him in November 2023, there have been online rumors about him online years before then. For example, in a 2022 reddit thread “What’s something in hiphop that’s unconfirmed, that you 100 percent believe?? https://www.reddit.com/r/hiphopheads/comments/uzx7tl/whats_something_in_hiphop_thats_unconfirmed_that/&#8221;, one user commented “People like Birdman, Diddy, etc. are grooming younger artists and probably doing more than that..” This got 478 upvotes. A reddit thread from 2019 is titled “P. Diddy is a woman beater and has verbally abused his own mother according to his former bodyguard, Gene Deal. Story starts around 25 min. Mark.” It got 1.2k upvotes. So although the formal news outlets might have been slow to catch on to Diddy’s behavior, it’s hard to believe that the pervasive narratives about him online didn’t contribute to or encourage individuals to come out against him.

Cancel culture plays a major part in turning online gossip into life-changing information. Some see cancel culture as a way of holding people accountable, and others see it as undue punishment. While many disagree on the role it plays, it’s undeniable that the internet/social media has made a huge cultural shift in the way we interact. “The number of people who can go online and call out others for their behavior or words is immense, and it’s never been easier to summon groups to join the public fray.” (https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2021/05/19/americans-and-cancel-culture-where-some-see-calls-for-accountability-others-see-censorship-punishment/). Social media has changed the way we see and interact with celebrities, giving the public once unimaginable levels of access and enabling fans to theorize and critique endlessly. It has also created an obligation for response from celebrities that we have never seen before.

The rumors have turned from whispers in salons and posts on forums into full fledged legal allegations. Now that there have been over 100 cases filed against Diddy, and a video tape of him physically assaulting Cassie widely disseminated across news networks and websites, cancel culture has fully engulfed Diddy’s existence. His once sterling reputation has now been irreversibly tarnished, whether or not he is found guilty in our courts. His legacy has transformed from a music legend to creator of violence. (https://www.vulture.com/article/diddy-allegations-lawsuit-analysis.html). While the courts have yet to make decisions in Diddy’s cases, the court of public opinion has made its decision.

>
>
Cassie’s allegations mark a turning point where online whispers became lawsuits and opened the floodgates of legal action against Diddy. Still, it's important to recognize that these accusations exist in the same cultural landscape as infamous cases involving men like Jeffrey Epstein, Donald Trump, and Roman Polanski. Unlike the minimal consequences faced by those who abused old hollywood pre-internet stars like Judy Garland, modern celebrities face swift judgment in the court of public opinion—a shift that speaks to how power dynamics have evolved through social media and cancel culture. The internet has enabled the public, particularly marginalized voices, to critique power more freely. But as history shows, the court of public opinion can have minimal effect in the real life consequences faced by perpetrators.
 
Changed:
<
<

Shifting Power Dynamics

>
>

Shifting Power Dynamics

 
Changed:
<
<
Cancel culture as a whole speaks to the shifting power dynamics observed in internet culture. For a large segment of time, traditional media set the tone on public figure’s reputations. Newspapers, networks, press tours, and talk shows were the avenues in which the public could access information on celebrities. Critique of their actions was left to those that controlled these platforms. Now with social media, new voices can be heard and users are empowered to stimulate conversations. Furthermore, people whose opinions may not have mattered before - especially women, people of color, and other marginalized communities - have a platform.
>
>
Social media platforms give ordinary people - especially women, people of color, and other marginalized communities- a way to critique powerful figures and demand. While cancel culture can lead to transparency and public critique of bad actors, there is often a lack of followthrough. Looking at Donald Trump, who was just elected President despite being held liable for sexual abuse and faced a plethora of online critism for his sexual misconduct, cancel culture only served as a superficial layer of justice.
 
Changed:
<
<
In Diddy’s circumstances, this made all the difference. Looking at his victims, they are overwhelming women and people of color. Not only have victims who fit this description often disempowered by the music industry, they tend to institutionally be failed by the legal system. It is hard to believe that Diddy would have been held accountable on the level he has without the internet being a platform for people to speak out and critique his actions freely, which may not feel safe to do in the halls of record labels or police stations. Surely, the US Attorney's office wouldn't have taken such steep actions if it were not for the massive attention the Diddy case was getting in the media, which is driven by social media.
>
>
In Diddy’s case, social media has amplified the voices of those most likely to be ignored by the traditional legal system. Many of his alleged victims are women of color, who have historically been underserved by institutions. Yet, the effectiveness of this online outcry is questionable when one considers how little has changed for other powerful figures who have faced similar allegations. Despite online backlash, some of the most powerful individuals accused of sexual crimes - Epstein, Trump, Polanski - either avoided legal repercussions or had delayed consequences after having lengthy careers filled with abusive behavior. While public opinion may shift due to social media, actual accountability is questionable.
 
Deleted:
<
<

Does The Internet Give Us a Real Window?

 
Changed:
<
<
While the internet has undoubtedly been a resource to give voice to the voiceless, and help rumors evolve from gossip to tools to tell the stories of victims, people have adapted to the potential intrusion it can provide. The internet, particularly through social media, can give a false sense of access and knowledge of another individual. In its inception, social media was a tool to share your life with people already existing in your real-world community. Now, it has evolved and redefined what a community means. Many individuals follow the life of celebrities like they would follow the lives of their families before the internet. While social media gives us a window to public figures, it’s important to know that this window is skillfully curated to fit a particular image.
>
>

Parasocial Monitoring and Data Collection

 
Changed:
<
<
This para-social monitoring has also led public figures who have an association with Diddy to curtail their online images. Seemingly in response to Diddy’s fall from grace, many celebrities have scrubbed their internet footprint. Usher, Megan Fox, Pink, and others have deleted their X and Instagram posts in the past few weeks. (https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/news/why-are-celebs-deleting-social-media-posts-and-what-does-it-have-to-do-with-the-diddy-tapes/ar-AA1r3cNW?ocid=BingNewsVerp). LeBron? ? James, Yung Miami, Steph Curry, and other have unfollowed Diddy on instagram following his criminal charges. (https://www.vibe.com/lists/celebrities-unfollowed-diddy-lebron-james-kim-kardashian-steph-curry/). With celebrities being mindful of their online presence, the impact of cancel culture through monitoring might be weakened.
>
>
Social media has also intensified what we might call "parasocial monitoring," where fans follow celebrities’ lives as if they are part of them. The window into celebrities’ lives provided by social media is often curated to create a specific public image, reinforcing an illusion of intimacy. Parasocial relationships play a significant role in cancel culture, encouraging people to scrutinize every action of public figures like Diddy or even those loosely connected to him. Recently, celebrities like Steph Curry, Yung Miami, and Lebron James have unfollowed Diddy on instagram following his criminal charges, perhaps to publically distance themselves and avoid online ridicule.
 
Changed:
<
<
You can save at least 150 words, perhaps as much as a quarter of the draft, with a couple of factual sentences containing relevant links, including to the legal documents you do not link at all.
>
>
But there’s another layer: while we observe celebrities, we’re also being observed. Every click, share, and follow contributes to data on our online behavior and drives more engagement. In a way, the biggest social media platforms and websites rely on our parasocial monitoring and sensationalize celebrity scandals to draw in users. Just as social media has empowered public voices, it has also commodified our engagement, exploiting serious issues for clicks. What once was a source of empowerment is transformed into a profitable cycle of engagement.
 
Deleted:
<
<
That makes room for the most promising route to improvement: clarity in interpretation. What do the differences among the stories of Sean Combs and Fatty Arbuckle, Charlie Chaplin and Roman Polanski, Mohamed El-Fayed, Jeffrey Epstein, and Donald Trump---to take a few obvious examples---show us about "parasocial monitoring" and "cancel culture"? Is the underlying subject of the essay "public opinion about celebrities" or "how rich sexual criminals do or don't get prosecuted?" Given that women are assaulted every few seconds in the US and we treat that as "normal," isn't all this "giving voice to the voiceless" stuff just obscene nonsense?
 
Changed:
<
<
It might also be helpful to remember that all the publishing you mention is actually only half the relevant phenomenon, the other half being all the data collected by surveilling all the people who gawk at all this tripe. This is smelly cheese in a mousetrap, after all. Among the mouse necks snapped under the bar is yours, n'est-ce pas?
>
>

Conclusion

  \ No newline at end of file
Added:
>
>
Diddy’s story reflects a broader social question: can online platforms truly bring justice, or do they simply entrap us in an endless cycle that ultimately benefits harmful institutions? We should question if our online criticism actually translates to real world outcomes, or if being “canceled” is merely an illusion of power to subdue ordinary people.

NilePierreFirstEssay 2 - 10 Nov 2024 - Main.EbenMoglen
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Line: 34 to 34
 While the internet has undoubtedly been a resource to give voice to the voiceless, and help rumors evolve from gossip to tools to tell the stories of victims, people have adapted to the potential intrusion it can provide. The internet, particularly through social media, can give a false sense of access and knowledge of another individual. In its inception, social media was a tool to share your life with people already existing in your real-world community. Now, it has evolved and redefined what a community means. Many individuals follow the life of celebrities like they would follow the lives of their families before the internet. While social media gives us a window to public figures, it’s important to know that this window is skillfully curated to fit a particular image.

This para-social monitoring has also led public figures who have an association with Diddy to curtail their online images. Seemingly in response to Diddy’s fall from grace, many celebrities have scrubbed their internet footprint. Usher, Megan Fox, Pink, and others have deleted their X and Instagram posts in the past few weeks. (https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/news/why-are-celebs-deleting-social-media-posts-and-what-does-it-have-to-do-with-the-diddy-tapes/ar-AA1r3cNW?ocid=BingNewsVerp). LeBron? ? James, Yung Miami, Steph Curry, and other have unfollowed Diddy on instagram following his criminal charges. (https://www.vibe.com/lists/celebrities-unfollowed-diddy-lebron-james-kim-kardashian-steph-curry/). With celebrities being mindful of their online presence, the impact of cancel culture through monitoring might be weakened.

Added:
>
>
You can save at least 150 words, perhaps as much as a quarter of the draft, with a couple of factual sentences containing relevant links, including to the legal documents you do not link at all.

That makes room for the most promising route to improvement: clarity in interpretation. What do the differences among the stories of Sean Combs and Fatty Arbuckle, Charlie Chaplin and Roman Polanski, Mohamed El-Fayed, Jeffrey Epstein, and Donald Trump---to take a few obvious examples---show us about "parasocial monitoring" and "cancel culture"? Is the underlying subject of the essay "public opinion about celebrities" or "how rich sexual criminals do or don't get prosecuted?" Given that women are assaulted every few seconds in the US and we treat that as "normal," isn't all this "giving voice to the voiceless" stuff just obscene nonsense?

It might also be helpful to remember that all the publishing you mention is actually only half the relevant phenomenon, the other half being all the data collected by surveilling all the people who gawk at all this tripe. This is smelly cheese in a mousetrap, after all. Among the mouse necks snapped under the bar is yours, n'est-ce pas?

 \ No newline at end of file

NilePierreFirstEssay 1 - 18 Oct 2024 - Main.NilePierre
Line: 1 to 1
Added:
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

The Internet and Diddy's Downfall

-- By NilePierre - 18 Oct 2024

Who is Diddy?

Sean Combs (aka Diddy) is an award winning rapper, producer, record label executive, often referred to as a music mogul. Diddy, who has 100 civil cases and faces criminal charges from the US Attorney, is allegedly guilty of sexual assault, forced labor, kidnapping, arson, bribery, and obstruction of justice, among other charges.

Rumors Online and the Court of Public Opinion

As someone who grew up in Los Angeles, I’ve heard rumors of the dark side of Diddy’s white parties for years. However, social media has served as a platform to circulate these rumors past small talk in Los Angeles salons to twitter threads, videos, and forums. Certainly, the internet has become a highway for not just intellectual, but social and cultural information to spread. It has also become a passageway to critique, analyze, and dismantle reputations piece by piece.

Although the allegations against Diddy didn’t reach mainstream media coverage until Cassie filed a suit against him in November 2023, there have been online rumors about him online years before then. For example, in a 2022 reddit thread “What’s something in hiphop that’s unconfirmed, that you 100 percent believe?? https://www.reddit.com/r/hiphopheads/comments/uzx7tl/whats_something_in_hiphop_thats_unconfirmed_that/&#8221;, one user commented “People like Birdman, Diddy, etc. are grooming younger artists and probably doing more than that..” This got 478 upvotes. A reddit thread from 2019 is titled “P. Diddy is a woman beater and has verbally abused his own mother according to his former bodyguard, Gene Deal. Story starts around 25 min. Mark.” It got 1.2k upvotes. So although the formal news outlets might have been slow to catch on to Diddy’s behavior, it’s hard to believe that the pervasive narratives about him online didn’t contribute to or encourage individuals to come out against him.

Cancel culture plays a major part in turning online gossip into life-changing information. Some see cancel culture as a way of holding people accountable, and others see it as undue punishment. While many disagree on the role it plays, it’s undeniable that the internet/social media has made a huge cultural shift in the way we interact. “The number of people who can go online and call out others for their behavior or words is immense, and it’s never been easier to summon groups to join the public fray.” (https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2021/05/19/americans-and-cancel-culture-where-some-see-calls-for-accountability-others-see-censorship-punishment/). Social media has changed the way we see and interact with celebrities, giving the public once unimaginable levels of access and enabling fans to theorize and critique endlessly. It has also created an obligation for response from celebrities that we have never seen before.

The rumors have turned from whispers in salons and posts on forums into full fledged legal allegations. Now that there have been over 100 cases filed against Diddy, and a video tape of him physically assaulting Cassie widely disseminated across news networks and websites, cancel culture has fully engulfed Diddy’s existence. His once sterling reputation has now been irreversibly tarnished, whether or not he is found guilty in our courts. His legacy has transformed from a music legend to creator of violence. (https://www.vulture.com/article/diddy-allegations-lawsuit-analysis.html). While the courts have yet to make decisions in Diddy’s cases, the court of public opinion has made its decision.

Shifting Power Dynamics

Cancel culture as a whole speaks to the shifting power dynamics observed in internet culture. For a large segment of time, traditional media set the tone on public figure’s reputations. Newspapers, networks, press tours, and talk shows were the avenues in which the public could access information on celebrities. Critique of their actions was left to those that controlled these platforms. Now with social media, new voices can be heard and users are empowered to stimulate conversations. Furthermore, people whose opinions may not have mattered before - especially women, people of color, and other marginalized communities - have a platform.

In Diddy’s circumstances, this made all the difference. Looking at his victims, they are overwhelming women and people of color. Not only have victims who fit this description often disempowered by the music industry, they tend to institutionally be failed by the legal system. It is hard to believe that Diddy would have been held accountable on the level he has without the internet being a platform for people to speak out and critique his actions freely, which may not feel safe to do in the halls of record labels or police stations. Surely, the US Attorney's office wouldn't have taken such steep actions if it were not for the massive attention the Diddy case was getting in the media, which is driven by social media.

Does The Internet Give Us a Real Window?

While the internet has undoubtedly been a resource to give voice to the voiceless, and help rumors evolve from gossip to tools to tell the stories of victims, people have adapted to the potential intrusion it can provide. The internet, particularly through social media, can give a false sense of access and knowledge of another individual. In its inception, social media was a tool to share your life with people already existing in your real-world community. Now, it has evolved and redefined what a community means. Many individuals follow the life of celebrities like they would follow the lives of their families before the internet. While social media gives us a window to public figures, it’s important to know that this window is skillfully curated to fit a particular image.

This para-social monitoring has also led public figures who have an association with Diddy to curtail their online images. Seemingly in response to Diddy’s fall from grace, many celebrities have scrubbed their internet footprint. Usher, Megan Fox, Pink, and others have deleted their X and Instagram posts in the past few weeks. (https://www.msn.com/en-us/entertainment/news/why-are-celebs-deleting-social-media-posts-and-what-does-it-have-to-do-with-the-diddy-tapes/ar-AA1r3cNW?ocid=BingNewsVerp). LeBron? ? James, Yung Miami, Steph Curry, and other have unfollowed Diddy on instagram following his criminal charges. (https://www.vibe.com/lists/celebrities-unfollowed-diddy-lebron-james-kim-kardashian-steph-curry/). With celebrities being mindful of their online presence, the impact of cancel culture through monitoring might be weakened.


Revision 3r3 - 11 Nov 2024 - 19:05:37 - NilePierre
Revision 2r2 - 10 Nov 2024 - 15:13:39 - EbenMoglen
Revision 1r1 - 18 Oct 2024 - 19:01:47 - NilePierre
This site is powered by the TWiki collaboration platform.
All material on this collaboration platform is the property of the contributing authors.
All material marked as authored by Eben Moglen is available under the license terms CC-BY-SA version 4.
Syndicate this site RSSATOM