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The Internet Your Rights Online

Lying Online No Longer a Crime In Rhode Island 127

stevegee58 writes "In a sudden outbreak of common sense, Rhode Island repealed an obscure law enacted in 1989 that made it a crime to lie in online postings. Violations of this law carried a maximum penalty of $500 and up to a year in prison. From the article: '"This law made virtually the entire population of Rhode Island a criminal," said Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island American Civil Liberties Union. "When this bill was enacted nobody had any idea what its ramifications were. Telling fibs may be wrong, but it shouldn't be criminal activity." The law aimed to stop fraud, con artists and scammers, but also outlawed the "transmission of false data" regardless of whether liars stood to profit from their deception or not.'"
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Lying Online No Longer a Crime In Rhode Island

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  • Interesting... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bratwiz ( 635601 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2012 @05:39AM (#40465005)

    One wonders if this would have covered all of those "Campaign Promises" made by politicians in their zeal to get elected... or any of the other spewage which regularly emanates from their persons...??? If so, this law might have had a useful purpose after all. What would it take to get such a law enacted in Washington D.C.?

  • Back in 1989... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bmo ( 77928 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2012 @07:22AM (#40465457)

    RI resident here...

    Let me think about what we had back in 1989...

    In South County RI, we had a handful of BBSes and URI's access to Bitnet if you had an academic account or begged for one, not even the Internet. Everyone was still at 300, 1200, and a few at 2400, and almost nobody had v32 (9600bps) modems because they were new in 1989 and ridiculously expensive.

    If you had more money than sense, you subscribed to CompuServe, Prodigy, or GEnie (to be called AOL later) and paid by the minute and also paid for the long distance to the Warwick or Providence numbers (Yay in-state long distance in a state only 47 miles the long way!). BBSes were free.

    The community was so small. You could literally visit all the boards from Block Island to East Greenwich and read all the messages in an hour if you ignored the redialling. We also didn't have OmniNet or LOCNet yet to tie north/south RI and the Islands/East Bay together yet. That had to wait for the heyday of BBSes in the early 90s, and even then, you could fit everyone who cared about OmniNet administration (north AND south!) into one Baskin Robbins ice cream parlor (we couldn't meet at Casey's because half of everyone was under-age).

    And everyone knew each other.

    There wasn't much to lie about online at all. Really, there wasn't. It puzzles me as to what prompted this legislation that far back.

    The only big whopper of a lie I remember was Matt saying his BBS couldn't be hacked, some time in the early 90s. This was a challenge to everyone at the meeting and pissed off his co-sys, who gave him up to the rest of us hyenas.

    Shout out to LizardKing on here, who is the only RIer I know on here from that era.

    --
    BMO

  • Re:Ends for Means (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2012 @08:38AM (#40465935) Journal

    When I teach my child about why she shouldn't lie, what I tell her is this:

    Yes, when you lie, your peers will punish you when they find out. But that's not the real issue.

    When you're a liar, you're projecting a false self as a problem solving tool. This forces you to keep multiple versions of reality in your head.

    Carried systematically across a lifetime, this will cause you to become a person made up of many people, none of whom are you.

    Eventually, you will not know who you are, or what you believe, and when you meet a strong person with integrity, you will be unable to hold a form of your own in their presence.

    This is a road to hell on earth, a hell contained within ones own mind, where the wind can blow your identity to and fro at a moments notice, and you live in a constant state of fearful reactionary adjustment of self.

    What it all boils down to is this: people are not worth lying to.

The last thing one knows in constructing a work is what to put first. -- Blaise Pascal

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