Why Are Big Tech Companies a Threat to Human Rights?
Posted3 months agoActive3 months ago
amnesty.orgTechstory
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Big Tech
Human Rights
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The article from Amnesty International discusses how Big Tech companies threaten human rights, sparking a heated debate among commenters about the credibility of the source, the role of Big Tech, and the need for regulation.
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Oct 12, 2025 at 7:30 PM EDT
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Having worked at AI (a long time ago), I can assure you this isn't some mastermind plot to sneak a couple of cookies onto the computers of the one or two people who click through to settings.
Big tech is shaping public discourse. Big tech is censoring public squares. Big tech is forcing us to continue buying new devices. Big tech is killing open standards and platforms. Big tech is hurting democracy. Big tech is enabling monitoring. Big tech is using societal scale antipatterns to generate more profits than most countries. Big tech is engaging in anti-worker practices ...
That shouldn't be taking away from the messaging and certainly not a reason to lose credibility with something orthogonal.
I just wondering, would you mind to share from which part of the world you are for some context?
There are none of those from China, Russia, China, Iran.
I presume technology companies from those countries are used in support to authoritarian governments, but that sounds like a separate issue of how "big tech" as we understand it operate.
I take issue because they bring up big tech influence into geographies outside “the western world” but big tech has little penetration there and they should pint that out.
Perhaps TikTok is the closest thing to that outside of that group.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metcalfe%27s_law
There are some exceptions, but the overall trend is clear.
The article is quite sparse with sources/specifics, so let me back up this claim :
While it might not be an official requirement, being granted a Google apps license will go a whole lot easier if you join the Open Handset Alliance. The OHA is a group of companies committed to Android—Google's Android—and members are contractually prohibited from building non-Google approved devices. That's right, joining the OHA requires a company to sign its life away and promise to not build a device that runs a competing Android fork.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2018/07/googles-iron-grip-on... (It was surprisingly difficult finding any reporting on what should be a major story.)