"Freedom of Speech": I don't know where the phrase is located in your country, but in the US this is a constitutional guarantee that peaceable assembly as to protest won't be shut down by the government, that the press won't be shut down for being politically incorrect, that there are no repercussions per se for disagreeing with the government. And it hasn't worked out that this is absolute. You can't indefinitely live in ('Occupy') a public park. Democratic National Convention in Chicago 1968 is a famous case where peaceable assembly was shut down.harryupbabble wrote: Advertisers don't want vulgarities? YouTube complied and made it harder for vulgar trolls to post comments, it seems. Freedom of speech was cut. Absence of trolls equals absence of freedom of speech?
There is no guarantee in a private for-profit business you can do anything the proprietor wants stopped. So, at Facebook, enough people flag what you did, they can remove it, it's not any different than a restaurant, if you're bad for business, you can be shown the door with no rights to assert at all. KVR is not a free speech zone. etc. Youtube has terms of service, and a mechanism for reporting violations.