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- Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk
- Path: sparky!uunet!enterpoop.mit.edu!world!bzs
- From: bzs@world.std.com (Barry Shein)
- Subject: Re: legal question re anonymity online
- In-Reply-To: mkj@world.std.com's message of Mon, 11 Jan 1993 02:53:55 GMT
- Message-ID: <BZS.93Jan10224833@world.std.com>
- Sender: bzs@world.std.com (Barry Shein)
- Organization: The World
- References: <BZS.93Jan10152122@world.std.com> <C0ns5y.DxA@world.std.com>
- <1993Jan11.014705.11465@netcom.com> <C0o5Dv.7B2@world.std.com>
- Date: Mon, 11 Jan 1993 03:48:33 GMT
- Lines: 116
-
-
- From: mkj@world.std.com (Mahatma Kane-Jeeves)
- >>You get into a disagreement with mickey_mouse@bell. MM threatens to
- >>nail your cat to your door. You don't give it any mind (but you save
- >>the msg.) You get home that night and there's your cat nailed to the
- >>door. So you call Bell and say "hey, who is this mickey_mouse guy I
- >>want to report him/her/it to the police...etc". And they say "damned
- >>if we know, he's one of those anonymous users you sued us over not
- >>having last year so we changed our policy."
- >
- >This is so simple I'm not sure how to make it clearer. I postulated
- >a BBS where *everyone* was pseudonymous by default. If "mickey"
- >doesn't know who I am, how the hell did he find my address? (OK,
- >before some of you ultra-hackers out there decide to show me, I know
- >there are ways, but the people who are capable of it are rare.)
-
- You got it, I mean, who cares how he got it, that's not your problem
- right now is it, you have to get your cat off the door, ugh, blech.
- And it is a heckuva coincidence, isn't it?
-
- >Furthermore, I never suggested that the system administrators
- >shouldn't know the users' real names. In fact, I think most systems
- >probably should keep a list of the real names -- on a secure offline
- >system, available only in case of emergency or a legal warrant.
- >What they definitely should NOT do is to broadcast the information
- >to the whole @#$%&*! network as a matter of policy!
-
- Well, Ok, that would fix it, I'll grant that.
-
- >Now, if I decide on my own to use my real name on the nets, that's
- >my problem, nobody else's. But if a system encourages or entices or
- >pressures people into that kind of exposure -- for example, by
- >inviting people to use the system, perhaps even advertising or
- >promoting it, and then imposing a real-name policy without insuring
- >that new users know all the ramifications -- then the system becomes
- >at least partially responsible for any unfortunate results. That's
- >my whole thesis in a nutshell.
-
- Yes, but it rests on the assumption you state above, that the
- individual had much less choice than in fact s/he did. It's based on a
- fallacy. You lose the "case" Prima Facie, you haven't established what
- you claim your case rests on, so there's no need to examine the
- conclusions.
-
- >Celebrities and other media professionals give up a lot of privacy
- >in exchange for the rewards of their careers, but even they retain
- >the right to use stage names and to try to protect their real iden-
- >tities, their homes and families, as best they can. Amateur confer-
- >ence participants should have at least as much right to do the same.
-
- Yes, they do, and they do. Celebrities give up the ability to do a lot
- of things you and I wouldn't think twice about doing. They don't hold
- a department store or restaurant responsible because they get mobbed
- when they walk thru the door and are recognized. C'mon, this point is
- irrelevant, celebrities can create no special rights or liabilities to
- help them. They might be able to curry favor, but what has that got
- to do with anything?
-
- >Al Pacino has a good line in his newest flick; something like,
- >"There are two kinds of people in this world, those who run and
- >hide, and those who stand up and face the music. Hiding is better".
-
- You have every right to follow that personal philosophy, but why do
- you expect the courts and the law to go to a heckuva lot of trouble,
- and at someone else's expense, to uphold that view? Particularly in
- all those cases where you can so easily take care of it yourself, even
- if it is at some cost, certainly the mere cost is not a reason.
-
- >Moreover, I think you are wrong if you think that we can keep the
- >channels for ANY info controlled in the absence of anonymity.
-
- Even with anonymity...
-
- >But there are rational ways to run a society with a substantial
- >amount of anonymity. David Chaum's article in a recent Scientific
- >American (Aug 92?) on an anonymous transaction protocol, using
- >"smart cards" and public encryption and signature techniques, is a
- >good example. Will society ever actually adopt such protections? I
- >doubt it, but I'm not ready to entirely give up.
-
- Yes, in some spheres I don't disagree. I am not even 100% sure I
- disagree with you on the rest of this (I disagree with the civil
- liability aspect, but that doesn't mean I am sure the sentiment is
- completely wrong.)
-
- >Once again, if we make it that easy for merchants to sidestep their
- >responsibilities, there is no sense trying at all. If a liquor or
- >cigarette or adult book merchant wants to sell to minors, by your
- >logic he could just hire a blind clerk, or set up his business in
- >some way to easily sidestep the responsibility.
-
- Well, it's not my logic, I believe it is how the laws etc currently
- stand (my example was a minor mailing in a sub card for a magazine
- s/he couldn't have if s/he walked into a retail store.) If I am wrong
- I'd be glad to be corrected.
-
- I suspect the area is grey and only practicality tends to protect the
- mail-order type, this is not a perfect world, and chasing someone out
- of state vs making a stink at your local PTA or church meeting are
- far, far different kettles of fish. So the distant guy tends to get
- away with it because, in effect, no one can pursue prosecuting him
- except in the most outrageous cases (i.e. he's subject to the same
- laws, but it is much harder to enforce.)
-
- >If the legal re-
- >sponsibilities of a merchant are worth creating in the first place,
- >it is certainly worth enforcing them better than this.
-
- Hey, you know, wish in one hand, s**t in the other, see which fills
- first...(I'm in a cynical mood I admit.)
-
- --
- -Barry Shein
-
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