"Goverments can easily influence Steemit Inc or other companies promoting their front-ends.Do you really think it matters much if some content is on blockchain, if this content is not being displayed by any front end? I really have my doubts."
I think it really does matter. Even if these companies were universally intimidated to censor, once it's on there it's public. The blockchain is just out there ready to be read. While it may be put behind obstacles or exempt from being read by a given utility for whatever reason, they don't erase it. It can even still be read.
If we use the black bars put over stuff to censor it on television as an analogy for this kind of censorship by frontends, it would be like we can go out of our way to move the black rectangles off of the picture and it's still there underneath.
Being flagged can't stop an account from posting, as far as I know. On other social media the company can stop an account from posting.
Also just because they created the blockchain, why does that mean they could stop it? You could threaten Satoshi Nakamoto all you want and she or he would still be just as incapable of bringing down the Bitcoin network as you. That's if you could find the slippery person or people anyway.
If only Ned et al. were so anonymous.
Dear @a-non-e-moose
AWESOME COMMENT buddy.
Also thank you for accepting my invitation (memo) and dropping by. I appreciate your comment.
Ehm. Correct me if I'm wrong, but it only means that data on database is public. But still almost noone will see to read it if front-ends will censor that content.
In current days - if you're not visible online then you don't exist. Censored content will be unreachable for almost everyone.
Of course it does stop author from posting. It just force him to give up on this platform and withdraw all resources and leave. And it can be done by anyone who has loads of resources. Not only by authorities who need to follow some regulations.
Have a great upcoming week :)
Piotr
I won't argue against the importance of visibility, but I think it's secondary to the actual existence of the data in the first place.
One of the defining qualities of blockchain tech in general is censorship resistance. It's also a major part of Steem, and a big draw for many people including myself. I'm confident that those of us who care about this issue will find a way to leverage that quality come hell, high water, or front-end censorship.
"Force" is a strong word. Surely you can work to demoralize someone with flagging, but that does not directly stop their posting. That's only going to stop people who come for entertainment and frivolity, and those who have no reason or will to persist in demoralization. Those with conviction, like whistleblowers or watchdogs as extreme examples, will retain the unfettered ability to transmit their content around the world even when all their posts are flagged to zero. No other account could stop them or stop anyone from reading their content.
This, I think, is powerful. Much more powerful than any frontend.