Annoying someone via the Internet is a federal crime
- Dregor Thule
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- Aabidano
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It will be determined in a Trial by Buggery: Both offenders will be locked in a room with Cletus, the 400lb cross dressing albino gerbil afficienado. The first one to win his affection goes to trial.Wulfran wrote:So if you annoy someone who was annoying you first, is it self defense or do you both go to jail?
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- noel
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My thoughts are... fuck that. Are we far away from having to agree to a disclaimer that you won't be an overly-sensitive fuck when someone flames you on the Internet? What happens if I say a congressman or senator is doing a bad job. Seriously what a waste of resources if they intend to enforce this shit.
Oh, my God; I care so little, I almost passed out.
By extension, isn't flaming just another extension or expression of free speech? I mean I know up here we have some pretty stupid laws (such as verbal abuse being a type of assault: if they want to try and enforce it calling someone profane insults can result in that charge) and we also have more tolerance for infringing on free speech if it transcends the personal level and becomes something espousing violence against a particular group (in essence our definition of hate crimes): both of these are limitations that Canadian law accepts. I'm just curious how this could be constitutional in the U.S.noel wrote:My thoughts are... fuck that. Are we far away from having to agree to a disclaimer that you won't be an overly-sensitive fuck when someone flames you on the Internet? What happens if I say a congressman or senator is doing a bad job. Seriously what a waste of resources if they intend to enforce this shit.
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- Boogahz
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Ok, I just read bits and pieces of the original link here. I think the biggest problem is if it actually includes the word "annoy." Hell, there are times I get annoying IF someone posts, not just WHAT they post. So, does that mean they should be charged?
I can understand, what I am guessing to be, the actual intent of the law and I agree with it. It would cut down on people basically doing things that would otherwise be illegal now while anon. Our comments to each other here are not what I am interpreting my limited exposure as. It would be different if we were roommates, co-workers, etc. and I went all over the place writing false things about you without saying who I was. *shrug*
Who knows what the heck they really meant, but if it's worded the way the article infers.......wow
I can understand, what I am guessing to be, the actual intent of the law and I agree with it. It would cut down on people basically doing things that would otherwise be illegal now while anon. Our comments to each other here are not what I am interpreting my limited exposure as. It would be different if we were roommates, co-workers, etc. and I went all over the place writing false things about you without saying who I was. *shrug*
Who knows what the heck they really meant, but if it's worded the way the article infers.......wow
I am surprised no one has noted that it is anonymous flaming. Hell not too many people here have that problem.
Most of us are honest about who we are and where we are, well excepting some of those cowards who have never even posted an image.
Most of us are honest about who we are and where we are, well excepting some of those cowards who have never even posted an image.
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The fact that we don't use our real names in our handles could be signified as being anonymous. I don't think this law will ever be successful though because it goes directly against the 1st amendment. This law is just another back door law that law enforcement can use to hold people in jail while they beat a confession out of you for something else.
Deward
- Boogahz
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Ars technica had a summary of this as well. Here's an excerpt from the summary itself:
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060110-5947.html
Full link is here:If I could boil my reading down to a few sentences, it would be as follows: the statute makes it illegal to send communications with the intent to "annoy," when those communications are sent anonymously. Previously, it was already illegal to attempt to annoy others with telecommunications services, anonymous or not. Now anonymity is explicitly addressed, but incidental annoyance is still not the same thing as intentional annoyance, which often requires a pattern of abuse to establish (since it is often otherwise very difficult to establish someone's state of mind when engaging in a particular behavior). Yet this has been illegal for some time. In fact, this entire amendment to the statute is only updating a rather old prohibition against malicious telephone usage.
In a phrase: the more things change, the more they stay the same. Why add this language then? That's a good question, and if I had to guess, I would say that this looks like a rather lame attempt to address the burgeoning VoIP world, which will soon include all instant messaging clients supporting making calls to Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS). But this bill does not make anonymity illegal, nor does it make everyday annoyance illegal. However, if you attempt to hide your identity while engaging in a campaign to annoy someone electronically, you could find yourself on the other side of a lawsuit. But this was already possible before this bill was passed.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060110-5947.html
- Arborealus
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well there is some CAN-SPAM compliance issues that are certainly out there for companies like the one i work for to be VERY careful about.
even if my company doesn't send you an email or so forth - affiliate marketing is a very common, useful, and more or less unpoliced process out there where consumers are potentially vulnerable to spyware, etc.
for instance if at the top of this page the banner was an advertisement for BestBuy.com, if I clicked it and bought a TV, Xouquoa might get $50. That's cool, Best Buy and VV have an affiliate agreement, and its all good.
but if somebody else passed that referall through this site from a site previous to that, then the money exchanges become more tricky, then there are parties that are involved that are unknown to the merchant (Best Buy in this example), things can get messy.
And i think the legal burdon is on the merchant too. There is real legislation out there, maybe not a lot, that is starting to make the bigger brands (at least) a little more careful in how they message online.
even if my company doesn't send you an email or so forth - affiliate marketing is a very common, useful, and more or less unpoliced process out there where consumers are potentially vulnerable to spyware, etc.
for instance if at the top of this page the banner was an advertisement for BestBuy.com, if I clicked it and bought a TV, Xouquoa might get $50. That's cool, Best Buy and VV have an affiliate agreement, and its all good.
but if somebody else passed that referall through this site from a site previous to that, then the money exchanges become more tricky, then there are parties that are involved that are unknown to the merchant (Best Buy in this example), things can get messy.
And i think the legal burdon is on the merchant too. There is real legislation out there, maybe not a lot, that is starting to make the bigger brands (at least) a little more careful in how they message online.
- masteen
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Excellent post. Then you misspelled "burden," at then end.
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