There's a difference between outright censorship and limiting algorithmic reach. When a platform restricts visibility—reducing how far content travels, who sees it, shadowbanning posts—that's not the same as formal censorship, but the practical outcome matters. Your speech technically exists, but nobody finds it. In the Web3 space where decentralization and open discourse are core values, these visibility restrictions raise questions about who controls the narrative and whether traditional platforms align with open internet principles.
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There's a difference between outright censorship and limiting algorithmic reach. When a platform restricts visibility—reducing how far content travels, who sees it, shadowbanning posts—that's not the same as formal censorship, but the practical outcome matters. Your speech technically exists, but nobody finds it. In the Web3 space where decentralization and open discourse are core values, these visibility restrictions raise questions about who controls the narrative and whether traditional platforms align with open internet principles.