Rush on Anonymity
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Rush Limbaugh opined that most of the BS on the Nets would disappear if Net IDs could be easily traced. (He was observing not advocating.) I know this isn't correct. Most of those who post do so under their own or easily traceable identities. Most of what is posted is "as legal as church on a Sunday" in any case. Many posters are judgment proof student types as well. The net is the equivalent of barroom conversation or other casual conversation between individuals. The only difference is more people can overhear. In addition, speakers are likely to get a bit more rambunctious because they are not in the physical presence of others and so are less likely to be intimidated in monkey-troop fashion. No deference need be given to those higher on the pecking order because those primitive responses are keyed to physical presence. The Net is an approximation of a stream of consciousness since many posters don't think before they post. That's not illegal, however. If the Fibbies knew who posted the Friendly Fire message about TWA 800 (how many megabytes of such messages have there actually been?), it would make no difference since such claims are legal. The Net is just what you get when communications barriers and physical intimidation are reduced. It isn't even very "nasty, brutish, and short." I've posted controversial opinions for years and have hardly been flamed once. All those reporters who get on the Nets and immediately get flamed must either be hanging out in the wrong places or be pretty stupid in the way they say things. DCF
participants (1)
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Duncan Frissell