One of the biggest challenges we face with such rapid communication is context and culture. What we say here in the United States may not offend us, but it has the potential to offend people of other cultures. Hate speech and offensive language are constantly used here in America. Whether you go to Reddit, Facebook, Twitter, you name it. You will find individuals and groups promoting and supporting something that most people find irrational, disgusting, disturbing, and offensive. However, the problem here is that we have different morals in the United States than, say, Turkey. Here we can say that USA is terrible and stupid, but in Turkey, if someone says something controversial against his country's name, then he must be removed immediately. Governments are dictating what can be said; therefore, free speech is not actually an accredited freedom as it is controlled and censored. Electronic Frontier Foundation staff attorney Hanni Fakhoury said that "Twitter makes it easier for people to say things they don't mean and broadcast them far and wide," and that "If I say online that I want to kill Obama, it's much harder to gauge how serious I am if I'm across the street from the White House and I have a gun (NYtimes.com, Robbie Brown). in the situation? Twitter is a site where anyone can follow anyone and anyone can post anything. However, if you said that I want a burger at the cashier at In-N-Out, they'd say, "Sure, would you like some fries and a drink with that?" It's all about context, and frankly, that's something a lot of governments fail to understand
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