Right to Post Anonymously Protected 217
JudTaylor writes " ZDNet has an article decribing a decision by a Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge allowing Yahoo to protect the privacy of posters to message boards.
Lee Tien, an white hat attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, stated "This is a great victory for anonymous speech. I believe Judge Cabrinha's ruling will signal to other companies that judges will not permit corporate executives to abuse the courts in ferreting out their critics." Critics of Pre-Paid Legal Services had posted messages disparaging the company on Yahoo boards. Representatives of the company had no immediate comment." I'm glad to see a decision for freedome can still happen in this country.
As it should be! (Score:1)
The court got this one right. No one can force Yahoo to turn over these identities and no one can tell Yahoo not to allow anonymous posting. This entire matter should have been tossed out of court as frivilous in the beginning.
Protect this (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Protect this (Score:2, Interesting)
If someone's lawyers attacked, would slashdot's database record the actual poster's ID, or does the act of checking the button completely sever the poster's real id? For that matter, is the data truly anonymous (whether the box is checked, or it is posted from a non-logged in person) or does it track your IP address and other data (browser info, whatever.)
Re:Protect this (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Protect this (Score:3, Insightful)
A lawyer friend of mine told me that the BEST way to protect my users, and my site (which is a radio message board, which draws a lot of ire from supporters of Clear Channel Communications) is to NOT keep such information.
I delete IP logs. I do not KEEP such information on record. The best defense is to not keep information around to be subpoened or discovered.
It's unfortunate that more sites don't take the same stance. But, Yahoo!, et all, RELY on tracking their users for marketing purposes, which removes protection from users.
BTW, since Slashcode is GPL software, all it would take is an examination of the source code to find out if any such "secret tracking" of anonymous cowards exists in the code. I'm not a programmer, unfortunately, so I can't do this.
Re:Protect this (Score:3, Informative)
My interpretation of this: If you've got an account, there's the account data to be subpoenad. (Spelling?) I think the only thing you have to give that's _real_ when setting up the account is the e-mail address. There are ways of making that hard to trace, but the FBI has sometimes been able to force "anonymous" services into giving up their users. Or they could put a tracer into /. so that the next time you open it, it will record the IP address, etc. Cmdr Taco might not be overly cooperative with this, but maybe they've got a decent hacker on their side...
If you're an anonymous coward (and you can log out and become one anytime), then apparently the only thing identifying you is a cookie and a log that's erased every 48 hours or less. So if you want to make sure you remain anonymous, use an anonymizer, erase cookies afterwards, and try to keep it low-key enough that they won't react within 48 hours.
Of course, I'll give a scurrilous attack by someone unwilling to even put his screen name behind it the weight it deserves...
Free Dome? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm glad to see a decision for freedome can still happen in this country.
Amen to that, brother! For far too long we noble citizens have been paying way to much for our domes. It's high time we made them free! Dome lovers of the world, Unite(d Center)!
Re:Free Dome? Expensive hair! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Free Dome? (Score:2)
Taco would never refer to free-as-in-beer domes. Obviously, he means free-as-in-speech domes. You can copy these domes, redistribute them or even change the structure of the dome.
I hear a religious war has broken out in the architect community over the difference between the GPL dome and the BSD dome.
Safeweb (Score:1)
Maskirovka
What is a White Hat Attorney? (Score:1)
Slashdot? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Slashdot? (Score:1)
Well, duh... (Score:1)
I use fake names for everything, including message boards, product registration, whatever....
The only way to track me would be to get my IP address, but most message boards don't show that information, even if it is in the server logs. (And rightly so.... sysadmins should still be able to keep your IP on record, even if your post is supposed to be "anonymous". It's just like calling the police from a payphone. If you want to be truly anonymous, use a PC at a library in addition to using fake information.)
Dave
Re:Well, duh... (Score:1)
yeah, but make sure there isn't a security camera watching you use the library's computer.
E.
Thank God for the Federalist Papers (Score:4, Interesting)
Privacy vs. defamation: where's the limit? (Score:1)
What if some of the anonymous posters had been indeed posting trade secrets or posting defamatory statements ("Pre-Paid workers eat alive children for lunch on every sunday, poison their bones and then give those to dogs!!! Really!" or some crap like that)? Where do you draw the line between protected free speech and unprotected abuse of it?
Re:Privacy vs. defamation: where's the limit? (Score:2)
You know its a shame... (Score:1)
Does anyone have the original thread? (Score:2)
I've yet to actually be sued and use my primary coveraged, but as far as I'm concerned it is a good deal. But I'd be interested in knowing what problems other people are having.
I tried searching Yahoo but I end up with a bunch of categories and can't seem to find a place to search posting or wherever these complaints took place.
- JoeShmoe
Re:Does anyone have the original thread? (Score:2)
Don't mention that perspective in your email or telephone conversations, though, or it'll be in management's hands momentarily.
Re:Does anyone have the original thread? (Score:2)
I don't know, I didn't see them. However, a Google newsgroup search may show you what others have to say regarding their service. Their name comes up fairly often, such as this frequent posting. [google.com]
Bashing the U.S. (Score:3, Insightful)
Please focus your venom on the problems, not on the country as a whole.
The freedom to mispell (Score:1)
I'm glad to see a decision for freedome can still happen in this country.
Defamation (Score:2, Interesting)
IMHO, anonymous comments should have less protection from censorship/moderation. How else could I persuade an ISP to remove defamatory material from their site, when no-one is willing to defend it?
Re:Defamation (Score:2)
Simple. In all the cases that protected anonymous postings, none of them have given total protection. What they've said is that you wouldn't be able to force the revelation of the poster's identity just because you made an allegation, you have to prove that the posting was, for example, libel first. So you protect yourself by sueing John Doe for libel and proving he did libel you, then ask the court to force the message board to reveal his actual identity now that you've proved he did commit libel. And if you can't prove he committed libel, you've no legal grounds for demanding that he sign his name to it.
As for the ISP, you can get it removed by proving that the material itself is defamatory. You don't need to know who posted it to do that.
Re:Defamation (Score:2)
Protections (Score:2)
You don't need to know who the person is to determine if something is a trade secret. This might be similar to the standard for a anti-SLAPP [casp.net]
If you file a libel claim against me, you have to show that the statements made are libelous, before you pull off my mask.
Re:Defamation (Score:2)
This was, plain and simple, a partial victory over companies that want to harass you because you said something bad about them and it was true. They can't win a libel suit, and they certainly don't want newspapers covering a jury trial about those allegations -- but under some boneheaded court rulings in the past, they could find out who you were, then they'd drop the suit. And if you were an employee (who else really knows how a company is screwing it's customers?), they could fire you.
The other issue is trade secrets and copyrights. Anonymous posters sometimes quote from company manuals or instructions given to the help desk, on how to give customers the run-around instead of fixing defective products or services. Sometimes the company will then sue to find out who posted that, claiming that the manual was copyrighted or the work instructions were a "trade secret." Of course they don't _want_ to go to trial, that would get their dirty secrets on the front pages, but rather they just want to find out which employee posted it.
If they get a judge that's sufficiently a corporate stooge, in the muddled present condition of the law he might neglect to ask how a procedure that everyone knows a name for ("run-around") could be a trade secret, or to point out that quoting one page of a manual is fair use. This decision provides a precedent whereby a judge _ought_ to ask those questions.
Yeah, what I'd rather see is (1) a procedure by which the case can be defended anonymously and the identity revealed only if plaintiff wins, or (2) a requirement that the plaintiff post a large bond, to be paid to the defendant in the event that after finding his identity plaintiff fails to pursue the case or loses -- plus additional damages if there are concrete losses incident to having one's identity revealed, say 2 years pay if you get fired... But that takes legislation, and don't look for it from the best congress money can buy.
Re:Defamation (Score:2)
Re:Defamation (Score:2)
IMHO, the real problem with defamation is that the credibility of the defamer is ignored, even though it has a significant effect on how much damage the defamee suffers. Anonymous Coward has no credibility, so anything he says carries no weight and does no damage.
If Anonymous Coward says, "Sloppy is a communist child-molesting telemarketing scientologist," it doesn't make sense for me to get mad and sue Slashdot over it, because nobody would believe it, since AC isn't really staking his reputation to back up his words (or rather, he has no reputation). Thus, in that scenario, I have suffered no damage.
So why do we need to protect ourselves from anonymous lies about us?
I beg your pardon! (Score:3, Funny)
I bid you good day.
No need to deface bathroom stalls (Score:3, Interesting)
Seems like a silly comparison, but think about it. Without anonymity on the web, where else can you express a thought when you have concerns for your safety or future?
Perhaps those that argue no one should have the "right" to speak anonymously due to liable risks should re-think their priorities and think through where this will lead us. It is only natural that people will attribute more veracity to attributable news than it ever will to anonymous postings. Nothing wrong with that. This is a good thing.
Great!! (Score:2)
Damn double-edged swords.
Anonymous mail and usenet. (Score:2, Informative)
You Know, Taco... (Score:5, Funny)
The courts have also ruled dictionaries and spell-checkers are completely legal, Taco. :)
Don't encourage him.. (Score:2)
He does it on purpose you know.. *Nobody* can spell *that* bad.
Hee jist deos it too git a reeacshus out of yoo al.
Re:You Know, Taco... (Score:2, Funny)
"There, just over thar ridge lies the Free Dome. If we can just stay one step aheard of General Tharr, we just might make it!"
Re:You Know, Taco... (Score:5, Funny)
Upon Yahoo, the sacred message board, ran
Where posting disparaging remarks anonymously one can
A great victory, proclaimed Tien, Lee
Re:You Know, Taco... (Score:1)
Re:You Know, Taco... (Score:1)
...and they say we live in a time of lowered expectations!
Re:You Know, Taco... (Score:1)
Victory! (Score:1)
It's like the editorial page in the paper (Score:3, Insightful)
Someone else will get sued (Score:2)
The right to block anonymous posts (Score:2)
Re:The right to block anonymous posts (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree with your right to ignore anonymous posts, but I bet you're happy to enjoy the safer products and cleaner environment that anonymous corporate whistle-blowers have helped bring about. Just as long as there's someone who's not ignoring them...
Re:The right to block anonymous posts (Score:1)
Re:The right to block anonymous posts (Score:1)
I Can See It Now... (Score:5, Funny)
"Note: This is not a message board."
A victory for anonymous speech? Sure, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A victory for anonymous speech? Sure, but... (Score:2)
The key thing here, as far as I can see, is whether the company could go after people who might have defamed the company, violated trade secrets, or whatnot. PPL wanted to get the names before proving any damage was done; and the court rightly stopped them.
Teensy slashdot bug! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Easy does it!
This comment has been submitted already, 277168 hours , 16 minutes ago. No need to try again.
Easy does it! (Score:1)
Feature. (Score:1)
Remember its never a bug its a feature.
Re:Feature. (Score:1)
31 years ago?
Re:Feature. (Score:1)
err, close... the time would be 1970-01-01 00:00:00
decribing? (Score:1)
The Commander was having an off day.
Anonimity... (Score:2)
Full disclosure on saved information (Score:4, Interesting)
Until there are enough of these encouraging court cases to set an iron-clad precendent, people must be told if information about their identity is going to get stored with an 'anonymous' post.
Of course, the truly paranoid (hello, slashdot readers!) already know to go through anonymizing services to prevent this kind of backtracing. But average users will appreciate knowing whether or not it is even possible to reconstruct their identity from saved information about an anonymous post.
Maybe it would even be possible to sue a site that claimed full anonymity for deceptive practices if they saved an IP address, etc.
this might be offtopic... (Score:2)
i've been checking google, but have come up empty so far.
does anyone know what exactly "exercising their First Amendment right to criticize the company" means? what were these people saying to incite defamation lawsuits?
if their right to anonymous free speech is so protected, where have all the records of it gone?
a friend of mine is involved with this company, and it really sounds sketchy to me...as most MLM-type things do. i'd love to be able to cite some links though.
to all you karma whores out there, here's a chance to modded up.
Definitely off-topic (Score:1)
The reasons why many MLM and network marketing organizations try to restrict online advertising is to reduce the amount of spam that is circulated, and to preserve the person-to-person contact that has made this business popular and profitable. Depending on the organization, the penalty for not adhering to advertising guidlines could be as severe as having your rights to your distributorship revoked.
But what about this? (Score:2)
It's an abuse of the legal system; they have no intention of actually suing anyone; they are just trying to find a way to force the ISP to give up the users anonymity.
Here Here! (Score:2, Insightful)
But, I really feel to have true freedom of speech, you need the freedom to be anonoymous.
PS: Taco, I'm all for Freedome, but we need much more freedom before we can fight the freedome war
where does one get one of these free domes anyways?
White Hat Attorney (Score:3, Interesting)
So we're dividing shyst^H^H^H^H^Hlawyers into 'White-hat' and 'Black-hat' categories now, like cowboys or crackrs? I knew a description would come along that would suddenly make legal proceedings make sense.
Wait a second... if ethics are what we use to divide any group into 'Black' and 'White' categories, how can any group that holds holy the concept of client-attourney privalege be anything but 'Black Hat'?
Re:White Hat Attorney (Score:2)
Re:White Hat Attorney (Score:2)
On the other hand, lawyers do this to preserve their client's 'innocence' in front of a court, even if that person actually has done what they're being accused of. In many cases this is essential to a client's privacy and safety, but in many cases, both criminal and civil lawyers are required to ignore facts in order to best represent their client.
I had a conversation recently with a friend from high school who got in pretty serious trouble with the law while I was away at college. He told me that his defense attorney told him not to tell him if he had done what he was accused of or not. While this 'suspension' of ethics is professionally responsible, my opinion is that an ethical attorney would have instead advised his (guilty) client to pleade guilty and then try to get him off with as light a sentance as possible.
Re:White Hat Attorney (Score:2)
It's not too dissimilar from science. A scientist might reject certain theories, not because he knows them to be right or wrong, but because they can't be tested, and his field deals with testing.
Presenting the case for your friend's guilt is the state's job, presenting the case for his innocence is his lawyer's job, and judging is what the court does. The only reason I know the defense might want to avoid some questions is that the rules forbid him to lie in court.
Look at the bright side. In theory, even if a lawyer believes his client to be guilty as hell (perhaps because he's a member of some despised minority, or he's been well-framed), this system lets him have a defense.
Re:White Hat Attorney (Score:2)
Not to quibble, because it's been a long time since I was Catholic, but I recall that pennance is not a requirement for forgiveness, which like God's grace is a gift not to be bargained for, but rather a task for the good of the sinner. If nothing else, final contrition would be pretty pointless otherwise: "Oh, too bad, we're out of time! Maybe you could come back next week on... no, I guess not."
Because (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Because (Score:2)
Whether or not information should be free is a different question.
Re:Because (Score:3, Interesting)
Are we saying that the "Information Wants To Be Free" includes my personal medical information? My personal legal information (the status of divorce proceedings should be public???) My consumer habits/profile information should also be free?
I think this is one of those "free as in beer" distinctions that we have to draw. The "Information" that wants to be free are ideas, methods, processes, software, things that Slashdotters believe should not be patented or owned, but shared by all. My doctor/lawyer/marketing information should NOT be part of this "information"
So getting back to the initial thread, lawyers who decide to defend our individual liberties and rights to privacy do deserve the "White Hat" moniker. Attorney/Client priviledge should have nothing to do with this.
Benbox
Anonymity is Service of FoI (Score:2)
Furthermore, anonymity lifted once discourages future human data avenues from transmitting in the future, since they have a reason to expect that the anonymity is a farce.
In a similar way, priviledge of information encourages it's freedom, since the priviledged party can adjudicate the transmittal of collatoral information that might never have flowed overwise.
Lastly, strict adherence to the "All Information wants to be perfectly free" credo doesn't typify white hat anything. A white hat cracker doesn't distribute your credit card data, out of respect for personal property.
"Information wants to be free" is more properly an axiom than a motto, IMO, anyway. It describes how data behaves; sometimes it's behavior is desirable (for instance, new product releases, security hole updates) and sometimes it is not desirable (any data-based security mechanism), and when it is desired, you get it free, otherwise, be prepared for vigilance.
Re:White Hat Attorney (Score:2)
Re:White Hat Attorney (Score:1)
Insider trading... (Score:4, Insightful)
An interesting thing happened at a former job. I used to work for a company that provided capital markets trading services. Someone found a post on a very popular web forum which included information that was *clearly* insider trading information. This is information that could only have come from *inside* the company, and released like this put the entire company in jeopardy with the OCC (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) and the SEC (Security & Exchange Commission).
We were under SEC & OCC requirements to track down who posted this thing, or potentially shut down all of our operations. But that wasn't the only pressure. We had an ethical obligation to track this down. A crime was being committed. The ability of this person to continue to post to this forum, enabled them to perpetrate a fraud and steal money from our investors. At the time there was not a single reason that I could think not to try and get this person's identity, and I can't think of a reason now, either. Failure to do so meant that someone (potentially lots of people) lost money (potentially *LOTS* of money).
So, we checked our firewall logs, and found a couple of *possible* leads, but nothing conclusive. After checking as many internal logs as we could find, we came to the conclusion that we had to get the web forums to give us the email address of the person who registered the account. We called the web site, explained that a crime was being committed and politely asked them to provide the identity of the person who posted the comment. They declined, citing their privacy policy.
This is the point where I no longer have first hand experience with what happened. But as I understand it, our attorneys drafted a letter to the web site stating that this information was absolutely required. Eventually, the web site backed down, provided the information. The person who allegedly posted the information was arrested.
I post this here because there seems to be a huge number of folks who seem to think that under every circumstance internet anononymity should be retained... and most of the time I agree. But sometimes it can enable crimes and I think we have to be careful about how far we take the demands for internet privacy.
$.02.
Please, commence with the karma draining moderation.
Re:Insider trading... (Score:2)
However, it is also a sort of case where giving the poster a chance to respond before outing him seems to be critical -- maybe what you think is insider info had already leaked out, or never was much of a secret. E.g., his response might be to cite pg 27 of the Wall Street Journal the day before he posted, or something like "I am not a corporate officer and do not have inside information about sales. My posts were based on the observed, public facts that sales have been falling for two years and the company still hasn't come up with a new product that will keep working throughout a sales demonstration, therefore sales are going to continue dropping."
Questions (Score:3, Interesting)
What would happen if the insider posted it via a truly anonymous distribution mechanism? Example:a web board that doesn't keep track of the email address, or an anonymous newspaper ad.
In the above cases, would it be right to shut down the message board or the newspaper? Or would the govt. step in and require filtering? And why would anyone believe anonymous information like this? If I post that company X is laying off 500 workers tomorrow, am I in trouble? Is Slashdot?
Re:Insider trading... (Score:5, Insightful)
Your example is bad for this purpose, because a real, honest-to-goodness crime is being committed; your company never considered merely unmasking the suspect and internally disciplining them. But there are other cases that have occurred. Suppose someone was merely badmouthing the company, in such a way that they clearly worked inside the company. Companies have been bringing frivolous slander lawsuits against "John Doe"s, finding out who "John Doe" is, then dropping the suit and pursuing internal discipline against the now-unmasked employee. These disciplines are often on the wrong side of legal.
Nobody with any sense is supporting the idea that anonymity is some sort of ultimate goal; instead, people like me recognize that this abuse of the law system is dangerous, and insist that the courts establish that some crime was committed before issuing the unmasking order. Normal procedure up to this point was to unmask before establishing the existence of a crime, and it is this fact that people have been abusing. If a crime is committed, unmask away! But if the statements ticking off the company aren't truly illegal, then they have no particular right to unmask these people, and it is this anonymous speech we support: legal anonymous speech.
Thus, as far as people like me are concerned, your company acted perfectly ethically (as well as legally). You established the existence of a crime (and a rather serious one at that; insider trading seems harmless (due to its abstractness) in some ways but it truly is a victim-crime), then pushed a bit (legally) to discover who was doing it. As far as I'm concerned, if you had to go to court to get that information, more power to you!
I run a weblog tracking this sort of stuff and this story isn't actually interesting enough for me to run; this kind of decision is actually fairly common at this point. The judicial system has "seen the light" of this argument and basically agrees, unless you get unlucky and get a bad judge.
Re:Insider trading... (Score:2)
I agree with you 100%. All I'm saying is that in our zeal to prevent wrong applications of the law, lets not also prevent appropriate applications of the law. If, for example, the /. community is able to create a law that makes it illegal for anyone, under any circumstances to unmask identities on the web, that would create a lot of freedom, but it would also create problems. For example, I could legally threaten to kill you, and you would be unable to investigate whether or not that threat is realistic or false bravado.
Freedom of speech is not unlimited. The unchecked pursuit of it can be exploited, and abused into just as devilish of things as the unchecked pursuit of censorship. Yelling "Fire" in a crowded theatre is illegal because people were hurt by it.
The point? That there has to be a reasonable middle ground. Because the extremes are awful.
So do I. Just be careful not to take it too far and legalise things that currently are, and ought to remain, crimes.
Interesting question... (Score:2)
Duh! You give the truth and clear up the rumors yourself. Unless, of course, what is said is the truth. *tongue in cheek* Then you should obviously prosecute those anonymous posters *tongue out of cheek*
What did they say? (Score:2)
Someone spending some time to summerize could make the lawsuit backfire, not only do they go unrevealed, their opinions are spread everywhere...
Changes Coming? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Changes Coming? (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah right. Like you have some RIGHT to post anonymously to MY server. The case tested the right to defend anonymous postings from being exposed due to court order, not everybody's right to post everywhere anonymously. RTFA.
options (Score:2)
Anonymous posters, but not web site owners (Score:2, Interesting)
Yup.. the message board web site owners.
In other California legal news... (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.cnn.com/2001/fyi/teachers.ednews/08/14/ studentrights.ap/index.html [cnn.com]
Quoth the court: "Just don't abuse it too much."
So I guess this kinda cancels out that "victory for freedom" you mentioned.
Don't Get To Excited-This Doesn't Mean Much (Score:2, Funny)
How much anonymity is reasonable? (Score:4, Insightful)
OK, so as a starting principle, let's suppose that anonymity is a Good Thing. It lets people post what they like, without fear of reprisal. Clearly this has benefits, particularly for people living or working under oppressive regimes.
But now, stop and think objectively for a minute, please. How many of the big problems with the internet are a direct result of anonymity? Let me offer some suggestions.
Basically, this all comes down to crime. Anonymity lets criminals -- quite literally -- get away with murder. (Yes, really -- remember the site listing doctors in the US prepared to carry out abortions, who were systematically being bumped off?)
So, while I support the notion of anonymity from the general public, I think it's equally important that lawful authorities can always identify someone using the internet to effect, encourage or facilitate illegal activities. Of course, that runs the risk of encountering downright unreasonable or abusive authorities, but you get that all the time in real life, too. It's a small price to pay for the many benefits that come from letting the police and courts identify someone on-line in cases where it's necessary to achieve the right result.
Re:How much anonymity is reasonable? (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a flaw in logic. Although it can be used for crime it can also be used for great good. The person (Anonymously) reporting discrimination at the work place. The person (Anonymously) reporting his boss, spouse, brother, cousin, etc for illegal acts. The list goes on. The above statement is like saying that GUNS allow criminals to murder, steal, and escape. With out admitting that it is the person that commits the act not the tool. Anonymity is just a tool. Criminals can and will be anonymous with or with out a law making it illegal!
When anonymity is a crime, only criminals will be. (Score:2)
Re:How much anonymity is reasonable? (Score:2)
I'm thinking back to the ones I received today, and with the exception of the single cable descrambler one, I can't think of another one that's illegal. Could you please give some examples?
Re:How much anonymity is reasonable? (Score:1)
In some parts of Europe, an opt-in policy exists, or is very likely to exist shortly. I believe that in the US, it's illegal to send spam without meeting certain restrictions (providing a valid removal address to prevent future spamming, for example), though I'm prepared to stand corrected on that one. Many spamming companies must be breaching UK data protection legislation, since they send me details they have obtained that, it could be argued, could be used to personally identify me. Under these sorts of conditions, almost all of the spam mails I received in the past week would be illegal in some places at the moment. If (please!) our beloved governments ever get around to enacting sensible anti-spam laws, this position will become even more conclusive.
Re:How much anonymity is reasonable? (Score:2)
Start standing; that bill never passed either house of Congress.
Nothing new here. (Score:2)
well... (Score:2)
hash and post it so I could tell anonymous posters apart...
Or at least if a poster with a real name was using anonymous posting to try to make a
not-so-clever post that bombed so bad they didn't want it attributed to them...
Oh wait, sorry
Re:well... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:You have no privacy anyway. (Score:1)
Re:hurray for freedome! (Score:1)
Re:Anonymous Cowards rejoice! (Score:2)