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Dan Tynan's picture
Dan Tynan

Culture Crash

Think you're really anonymous? Think again.

It's been a big week for anonymity on the Net, but not necessarily a good one.

First, there's "Anonymous," that amorphous collective of Netizens that recently celebrated a year of driving the Church of Scientologist up the friggin' wall. This week I received a press release from the group listing its many accomlishments (anonymously, of course): A number of peaceful protests, the exposure of various CoS front groups, the leaking of confidential CoS documents via WikiLeaks, actions by various international governments against the church, and so on.

But there was one item conspicuously absent from their list: The arrest of Dmitiry Guzner, the 18-year-old from New Jersey who plead guilty to dDOSing the Scientology Web site. Turns out Guzner wasn't so anonymous after all.

(A source close to Anonymous - whose name I do not know - told me a while back he thought there were probably several hundred people involved in the dDOS attacks. That seems more plausible, though whether the Feds will go after them too remains to be seen.)

I asked 'Anonymous' to comment on Guzner. I'm still waiting for a response.

But anonymity on the Net is hardly limited to noble protests and/or juvenile pranks. This week a Texas circuit court judge ruled that anonymity is no defense against libel or defamation on the Web. As Computerworld's Jaikumar Vijayan reports, Topix.com has been served with papers demanding the identities of 178 posters who wrote nasty things about Mark and Rhonda Lesher, a Clarksville couple who were tried and acquitted for sexual assault last month.

(I won't repeat any of the comments here, but you can find examples in the 365-page complaint filed by the Leshers' attorney [PDF].)

Topix has until March 6 to decide whether to hand over the actual names of the pseudonymous posters. Whether they can make a First Amendment argument to keep the names private is far from a sure thing. College-oriented web forum AutoAdmit was forced to identify several anonymous posters who made ugly and/or threatening comments about two Yale Law students. Ars Technica, on the other hand, notes a handful of cases where courts ruled in favor of anonymous posters, despite defamatory or libelous comments.

As someone who has his own share of blog trolls in various venues, I am opposed to anonymous commenting. (I'm sure I'll get trashed for saying that.) But depending on how the blog is set up, people who think they're commenting anonymously aren't actually all that anonymous. In many cases an email address is required and an IP address is recorded with each post. That's how it's possible to ban persistent spammers from the comments fields. That's also how an attorney could get obtain your identity, or at least get a pretty good idea of who you might be, if you ever got sued for posting something nasty. Think about that the next time you decide to let your fingers do the talking.

Personally, I think anonymity absolutely has its place, but it's a very small place. You should certainly be able to exercise your right to free expression without endangering your life, family, career, or personal freedom. Whistleblowers, confidential informants, political dissidents - these folks would not survive without the shield of anonymity.

But if you choose to be anonymous just so you can be a jerk and get away with it, I have no patience for you. (I use the word 'jerk' here because Computerworld won't let me use a stronger epithet.) I think if you say something online, you should put your reputation on the line along with it. Because that's what will ultimately lead us to have better, more civil, more intelligent conversations across the Net.

When not fending off trolls (and you know who you are), Dan Tynan tends his blogs, Culture Crash and Tynan on Tech.

 

What People Are Saying

Stand up for your viewpoint or shut up

I believe one should be responsible for what one says. The idea of being able to hide and say all the crap one wants is wrong.
If one is willing to stand up for his opinion - then say it. If you aren't then shut up.

[;-] cheers
http://marcozna.wordpress.com

scientology is so much

scientology is so much rubbish,get out of the cult now.

Why should bloggers be

Why should bloggers be anonymous?
Because they're cowards. The Constitution protects the rights of brave men who are willing to stand up for what they believe in, not Internet cowards.

Blog sponsors that troll their own blog

What about blog sponsors that anonymously troll on their own blog? I suppose there is nothing wrong with it, except that on some sites, the blog sponsor engages in flame wars (because he is a flamer and a troll himself) and then deletes the dissenting comments. I find this to be fraudulent and creepy at least when done on what should be respectable blogs.

I agree that anonymous

I agree that anonymous posting should be legal, but it should be concise and defined. When it is used for rants, it becomes powerless.

For example, I don't care one way or the other about Scientology, but what IS irritating is seeing thousands of these anonymous comments anytime there is anything that has to do with anything related to Scientology, Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes, John Travolta and all the other celebrities or anything related.

You can't tell me how disgusted I was when I saw the news on the internet about the Travolta's son's death and the bottom is loaded with comments from "anonymous" about how it served him right and Scientology killed his kid, etc. Several others (if not all the same person) chiming in agreeing how terrible Scientology is and how it served them right for not putting him on this or that medication. My God! He lost his child!!

Using that opportunity to slam Scientology was horrifying. When there is a debate about whether or not Scientology should be able or not be able to do something, sure, go ahead and post your opinion, and do it anonymously if you'd like. That is your right and I 100% agree with it, but people, there is a time and a place and the more you pick your time and place, the more your voice will be heard. People get sick of seeing the same old anti-scientology stuff and it loses its effectiveness when it's everywhere like a shotgun.

My 2 cents,
Boris

Smells like Stalin to me...

The concept that anonymity somehow prevents intellectual conversation reeks of totalitarianism in my opinion. Anonymous speech is protected under the first amendment, as it should be, and was ruled on directly by the US Supreme Court several times, including in 1995 when the court stated, โ€œAnonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the majority. It thus exemplifies the purpose behind the Bill of Rights, and of the First Amendment in particular: to protect unpopular individuals from retaliation -- and their ideas from suppression -- at the hand of an intolerant society."

Anonymous Commenting

"I am opposed to anonymous commenting."

That's silly. It's the quality of the comment, not the name attached to it, that matters.

I'm "anonymous", but never write anything that is illegal or worthy of a lawsuit.

I believe in privacy. I am not interested in having every word I write become part of my Permanent Searchable Internet History. That just gives me the creeps.

The Right to Anonymity

I'm so glad I live in a country where, so far, no one blocks my access to any websites (as they do in China and some other countries). What I say and do on the Internet (as long as it is legal) is none of your business and therefore it is none of your business who I am, where I live, what my social security number is or anything else. Once we let the control freaks have the upper hand, well, you might as well move to North Korea.

Long live anonymity!

well....you just gave your

well....you just gave your location away. Social security number?

Comments on Anonyimity

"In times past, anonymous speech sheltered the Founding Fathers' revolutionary arguments and emboldened commentators such as Mark Twain (aka Samuel Langhorne Clemens) to criticize common ignorance."

If being anonymous is good enough for them, then it's good enough for me. As for a response from Anonymous on the arrest of one 18 year old over the course of more than a year? I am anonymous, and my response is that if the kid was caught, than the kid really isn't anonymous - now is he?