i tried to reply to this thread a while ago, but my post was lengthy (and probably a bit repetitious) and focused more on the "guilt by association" concept, then i ran out of energy half-way through and decided the simplest way to clean up the post would be to close the tab and try again another time.
so, another time.
for the purposes of this post, i'm going to assume "problematic" content or anything i "disagree" with is outright, clearly-expressed bigotry ("women don't deserve rights") or clearly-expressed agreement with same ("i stand with guy who said women don't deserve rights")
i can't think of anything else that would create a strong enough judgement in me that i'd feel the need to take any action.
Someone whose button you have on your website has released a deeply disrespectful blog post that's making the rounds. Do you feel the need to remove their button as to not seem like you are supporting them and that view, or not? Do you fear that people think you have picked a side in this conflict because you still have that button up?
yeah, that button is gone, but not right away. even if i found out about this day of, i wouldn't remove the button until next time i updated my site. i don't update my site very often (i ended up here after looking at the task of doing so and becoming overwhelmed) and i think it's unreasonable for anyone to assume that the presence of a button on a site that hasn't been updated since the problematic views surfaced even
knows about said views.
i also think it would be weird if i updated my site solely to remove that one button and nothing else.
which i think ties into the implied but unasked question: would i judge someone for retaining that button in these circumstances? if the site saw no indication of activity after the blog post was written, unequivocably no. but even if it did...maybe they just didn't see it? a single button with no explicit written endorsement of the views in question doesn't really mean much.
there's a big difference between linking to, say, Bakery Website where the blog contains unhinged bigoted rants, and linking to a site that is
only unhinged bigoted rants. in the first example, it's possible the person who put the link there didn't even know about the blog; and even if they did, they're linking for the recipes.
(actually in this particular example it might be "more moral" to outright mirror every recipe on your own site. a recipe cannot be copyrighted. you can't steal a recipe. legally, all recipes are public domain. this is why recipe websites have lengthy walls of text absolutely no-one reads.
that part is subject to copyright. but still, the actual recipe is free.)
i'd remove the button, less because i didn't want to be associated with this blog, and more because i didn't want anyone to see the post in question.
You're in a webring, and you skip through it and discover that the site that is before or after you in the order features content you disagree with profoundly. Do you exit the webring or ask to be moved in the order because you don't want anyone thinking you are associated (or for people who are not familiar with how webrings work, that this is one of your pages)?
i contact the webring master and point it out to them, asking them to remove the offending site from the webring. if they refuse, i ask to be removed from the webring.
again, not because of guilt by association, but because i don't want my site to contain a link to something hateful.
and, again to the unasked question, i wouldn't judge someone for being next to a more hateful site, or being in the same webring as it at all. assuming the webring isn't dedicated to bigotry (saying that i realise those probably exist), membership doesn't indicate guilt
or association. as kolo said, you have very little control over your webring neighbours.
Someone with very problematic views features your button on their site where they host these views. Do you ask them to take it down or not?
asking a bigot for anything at all is asking for trouble. they can keep the button, and oh are there links to charities that benefit queer people and people of colour in my footer? huh. how long have those been there?
Do you think webrings and buttons have aged badly in this regard in comparison to ~20 years ago?
no. the issues you raise aren't new at all. in fact, contrary to much of the sentiment in this thread, i'm going to suggest that the internet has matured in this manner quite a lot.
i can recall the PETTIEST fucking drama over stamps and button links and sister sites and webring neighbours. your fanfic site allows non-canon ships? disgusting. i'm leaving your webring and starting my own. your review site posts
uncensored swearing? what the fuck is wrong with you. i'm moving domains so all your links to my site break.
fuck, i can remember some fandom sites that censored links to other sites in the same fandom purely because the admins had a falling out over some minor canonical quibble.
the internet has matured a lot in terms of allowing others and yourself to be associated with things you don't 100% agree with.
but i still think outright bigotry is a sensible place to draw a line.