Web Site Sues Annoying Pest Troll 386
kongjie writes "Cleveland's The Plain Dealer has a story in the business section about a pest-control web site that is suing someone who obviously has a particular bone to pick with exterminators: he is accused of being a "troll" who "constantly leaving obnoxious and offensive messages" on their pest-control bulletin board. The suit is for $5,000 and is for "violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.""
Let's hope this never happens here! (Score:5, Funny)
Watch out slashdot trolls!!! (Score:4, Funny)
(just kidding...)
Re:Watch out slashdot trolls!!! (Score:5, Funny)
It would be like Chuck E Cheese suing little kids for peeing in the balls.
Somewhere....Taco Smiles and Rubs His Chin (Score:2)
Go get 'em, Taco !
Re:Somewhere....Taco Smiles and Rubs His Chin (Score:2, Funny)
Are you not entertained? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Are you not entertained? (Score:2)
Man, Slashdot is sitting on a GOLDMINE (Score:2)
With that kind of money Taco could buy MS and convert the whole operation to Linux
How sad/non-existent is your life? (Score:5, Funny)
That you've resorted to trolling a pest-control web site?
How sad/non-existent is your life? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:How sad/non-existent is your life? (Score:2, Insightful)
Crapflooding, however, is not trolling, and takes no skill. It is absolutely immaterial what type of site you crapflood: some people will anger easier, but it's usually only a matter of time until you get bored and move on anyway.
I've got a better one (Score:2)
Pathetic human behavior has no bottom
I don't care how annoying/offensive someone is... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I don't care how annoying/offensive someone is. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I don't care how annoying/offensive someone is. (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe the troll cost him money. (Score:2)
"How could you let that filth be on your website."
Also the extra time and effort required to remove said Troll was costing the guy money as well.
If the guy spray painted the store or broke a window would he not be expected to pay damages? How is this different?
Re:I don't care how annoying/offensive someone is. (Score:2)
Re:I don't care how annoying/offensive someone is. (Score:4, Insightful)
The very act of requiring registration ends up cutting down the number of posts a web site receives. I know that I hardly ever post on a web site that requires registration, Slashdot is pretty much the exception for me. I wouldn't have even registered on Slashdot if it required me to put down easily identifiable personal information.
Even if the website in question did have people register, it would have needed a sure way to identify registrants, such as by credit card number. It said in the article that the troll's username was banned but the guy snuck back under other names. Unless they could find a sure way to identify the guy (such as Microsoft's Passport **shudder**), they couldn't stop the guy from posting.
It comes down to this: require people to totally identify themselves (thus causing them to ignore the site), or take the chance that you won't get trolled and leave the site open to all. Trolls are the ones that are driving stuff like Passport and national ID numbers, if people didn't abuse the privacy that certain forums provide then there wouldn't be a need to pin people down with big brother tactics.
No public space? (Score:4, Insightful)
He doesn't get out much, does he?
When you open your site up to anyone, and make the process of getting an account public and easily accessable, you've just created a public space. The vast majority of web-based message boards are this way. No identity verification, no scrutinized application process, no requirements (except possibly vowing that you're over 18). The act of getting an account on these boards is almost totally geared toward providing a constant on-line identity in the forums, but it has nothing to do with who you are in meatspace.
That being said, I'm fine with this lawsuit. It takes money and resources to create such a forum, even if it's free to use. I'm posting on Slashdot's dime right now, in fact.
There are plenty of places for boneheads to go. Selzer's particular place has been targetted for asshole bombardment, and that sucks.
Maybe he should implement a Karma scheme?
GMFTatsujin
Wendy Seltzer is an EFF staff attorney (Score:2, Informative)
Miss Selzer [seltzer.org] is a lawyer for the EFF [eff.org]. She also created the Chilling Effects Clearinghouse [chillingeffects.org]. As far as I know, she has no relation to the pest-control website. She was simply interviewed for the story.
She was commenting that most web forums are privately owned, so if this ruling stands, trolls can be kicked off virtually any website. Note, she didn't actually take a stance on the case, she simply suggested she was uncomfortable with it.
Re:No public space? (Score:2, Insightful)
If you check (and naturally I'm to lazy to do it right now), you'll find that what a person can say/do in a private-public space is not as wide as in a true public space. If I were a mall owner, I'd be able to do things like kick people out who were begging, wearing gang colors (as a
Similarly, if I put up a website and open it up to the public, I should be able to kick off people who are behaving in a way I disagree with. It's my web site after all.
However, given that, Seltzer still has a strong point -- where are the true public spaces in cyberspace? Are government hosted discussion forums the same as public property? (I'm not sure but I think that there are also varying degrees of public spaces -- protesting inside City Hall is different from protesting on the lawn outside.) If a gov't forum and public property aren't the same, then have we built ourselves a new world without public spaces? Is every sidewalk and park in cyberspace owned by some corporation or organization? How do we find/build true public spaces?
I don't know.
elsilver.
Re:No public space? (Score:2)
Not that they can't ban him. And I would say that repeated attempts to avoid the ban would be considered a form of harrasment, and thus actionable. And 5 grand is actually a quite reasonable amount of money in a suite like this (No amazingly inflated claims of the amount of money they might have made), so I'm not totally against them.
In the limit, this is true. (Score:2)
I'll ignore your bad attitude towards newbies and try not to hurt you. =:>
I'm happy to see disruptive people thrown off, and so is Selzer. Selzer, however, sees this being a problem with other more disturbing internet trends of consolidation and active control of content.
The worry is that there are no places that are NOT under someone else's thumb. Most ISPs are implementing policies like this and all the large ones prevent you from running your own web site with your own equipment. This is a problem that's larger than trolls. People with unpopular oppinions may find themselves without a place to voice that oppinion very soon. Do you think AOL would let you run a rotten.com? Do you think MSN would let you run a klan site? How about the Free Software Foundation? Right now M$ spends billions of dollars a year discrediting their "competition", we can be sure they would consider the FSF a troll if the FSF lost it's ability to peer. The internet IS a public network because it uses public grounds and servitudes. The root cause of the problem is that ISPs are being regulated less as common carriers and more as some kind of net nanny.
EFF's Seltzer Misses The Point Badly (Score:4, Interesting)
The existence of public space doesn't mean that anybody's obligated to show up at your web site and listen to you, or that anybody's SMTP server is obligated to accept your requests to connect to their Port 25*, any more than the existence of public parks and legality of soapboxes means that anybody's obligated to stick around and listen to you rant about space aliens' plots to destroy us all with volcanoes, but if you've gotten thrown out of the pub because you were rudely yelling at everybody about why they should buy canned meat from you, the commons and the high seas are still public space. The internet works through cooperation, and if nobody wants to cooperate with you because you won't cooperate with them, well, perhaps their lives are drearier for it, or perhaps not.
There are ways in which private groups are trying to take over public space. Various proposals for "internet drivers' licenses" and various governments' restrictions on their citizens' free speech and freedom to read are obvious examples. Australia's attempts to extend local defamation law around the world are especially disturbing, given the number of regimes that make "defaming the state" illegal. ICANN's main objective seems to be to assert trademark-owners' control over the namespace, and secondarily to make sure that some service providers always make money on namespace, rather than to provide technical management and high-quality implementations. You can see this especially in their insistence that registrars get your True Name and True Subpoena-Delivery Address for whois records and publish them, rather than insisting that your Technical and Administrative email addresses go somewhere that doesn't bounce and maybe even get a human to respond. Some big ISPs periodically try to attract customers to a Walled Garden that doesn't really access the full Internet, and the market gradually tells them that people want more than that - that's why AOL now lets you fetch real web pages as well as AOL-provided content, and cellphone WAP systems aren't getting the respect their purveyors expected, so they're trying to find better ways to get real Internet content and not just newswires. The cable modem companies are the big exceptions right now, by trying to prevent their users from running "servers" from home (there were initially some technical reasons for this, but it was always basically the fear that they might not be in control.) That hasn't killed them all yet, though @Home's really dead, and their quasi-monopoly status and TV-content-pusher background has made it take longer for them to realize that they need active users to generate interesting content and develop the Killer Apps that will make everybody else buy cable modem, but they'll get there. The kinds of people who want to tell Google how to rank their pages because everybody uses Google to search the web are another example, not realizing that the reason that everybody uses Google is *because* of the way they rank their pages, and if they want to have a "politically correct web search ranking" system, which is really just an outlet for their own speech and ideas, they should use the Internet's public-space capability, set out their own soapbox with a big "politically correct searches here" sign over it, and hope the public shows up.
* There's a corrolary to Godwin's Law which says that all discussions that don't trigger the primary form of it will eventually devolve into discussions about spam.... But then Godwin also used to be an EFF lawyer...
Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:5, Insightful)
"I'm on board X (running software Y) and they just ban someone - you're stupid cause you can't ban someone."
I try to stress to people you CAN NOT ban someone technically in forums on the internet. Well, not easily. Certainly without putting up roadblocks which just annoy the rest of the people.
What can you do?
1. Require username/password - unless these are paid for, it's hard to stop people from registering
2. Require a reply to email (or click on a link) to verify an email address. Big deal - so I know you know how to open a hotmail account.
3. Track IPs and ban on that - great, except for people on dialups, or shared systems, or mobile people.
4. Require moderators to review and approve all posts before they go out. Most reliable, but requires increasing staff time/cost as traffic grows.
There is NO foolproof way to stop this sort of stuff. I hope this suit sends a message to those trolls who waste/abuse resources and do not heed polite requests to play by the rules the rest of us follow.
I'm normally not in favor of legal tactics, and generally favor technical answers to technical problems, but this isn't a technical problem. It's a behavioural one, and we have a legal system in place to deal with bad/wrong/illegal behaviour.
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:5, Insightful)
Hopefully, they will think they're being ignored and go away. Even if not, it means they aren't sure when to reregister.
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:2)
-Mark
Slashdot's /ignore (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:You should be modded Redundant (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it'll help, but I doubt it (Score:4, Insightful)
Which it seems they're doing.
You don't know all the facts. Maybe this IS unethical - he may be going in and posting false/defamatory information about pest control companies, which is causing them to lose business.
My views aren't 'limited', as you're trying to posit. You can't 'outlaw' the GPL because it's not causing harm to anyone. It is simply a set of conditions under which I may or may not choose to share my software.
'Folks like me'? What kind of attack is this? You know very little about me (I'd say you know nothing about me, but that can't be 100% accurate, as I've posted a username, and there are links to my website, etc).
Great way to disagree with someone - slander them as an AC.
I am not homosexual, but have no problem with consenting adults engaging in whatever acts they choose.
How does this AT ALL relate to some trolling abusing terms of conditions, wasting bandwidth and repeatedly posting clearly unwelcome messages to a private forum? PCT has clearly NOT consented to this person posting - they've asked to him to stop, and have presumably filed papers against him to this effect as well. How this related to homosexuality still is beyond me. Care to explain?
NO - '1-5' moderation IS NOT THAT GOOD. It serves a purpose in some settings, but it also imposes extra burdens on people to learn a system, 'browser' at different levels, engage in specific moderation themselves on occasion, etc. That's just unrealistic in small settings. A forum with only 20-30 posters per day/week just can't operate that way. A forum with 20-30 posters PER MINUTE *needs* to operate in some similar way to this, just to cope with various trolls.
Use the restaurant analogy again. If someone is coming in to my restaurant being 'rude' or 'annoying', I STILL have the right to ask him to leave. If he doesn't, or continues to get past security measures I put in place, I'm perfectly justified in getting law enforcement to come in and help *enforce* laws which are there to protect my business and property from vagrants and miscreants - this is what PCT is doing.
Getting back to a previous post of mine - just because there are some technical measures doesn't mean I can't employ legal measures as well. Simply because I don't have the latest lock technology on a door to my house doesn't mean people can some in and take things without violating the law.
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
If found guilty, his punishment could range anywhere from a fine of $500 to a sentence of 2 years of jail time during which he would be forced to read his old Slashdot articles 8 hours a day, Monday through Friday, until released.
If there was ever a thread to read at -1 (Score:2, Troll)
This one is it.
new slashdot business model, step 2 filled in (Score:4, Funny)
2. sue trolls, total=$5k*(number of trolls)
3. profit!!!
Re:new slashdot business model, step 2 filled in (Score:2)
Simple Solution (Score:3, Insightful)
If the guy has to find a whole new ISP just to post a message that will be killed by a moderator in a few hours he's not going to be doing it for long.
The only way I can see this not being a good idea is if the ISP in question is sufficiently large AND sufficiently unresponsive to your complaints, but I don't see that as being the case here. I think they're spending a whole lotta money on something they're going to lose anyway.
Re:Simple Solution (Score:2)
If the ISP wouldn't do it for fear of a lawsuit, then blocking based on IP just hurts more people than this one guy. If the ISP *would* take on the lawsuit, that means there's merit, and there are legal grounds to go after this guy. If there are legal grounds, let the pest company go after him directly.
Re:Simple Solution (Score:2)
" So you think the guy wouldn't sue his ISP for revoking his account because of someone's complaint? If the ISP wouldn't do it for fear of a lawsuit, then blocking based on IP just hurts more people than this one guy. If the ISP *would* take on the lawsuit, that means there's merit, and there are legal grounds to go after this guy. If there are legal grounds, let the pest company go after him directly."
Good points. I would suggest that there likely exists a ToS (Terms of Service) which he is in violation of. But granted, the ISP might very well wish to take a neutral stance for fear of a lawsuit.
My only real objection to your answer is that simple technical measures don't appear to have been tried yet and they should.
Re:Simple Solution (Score:2)
Re:Simple Solution (Score:2)
Not so simple! Most ISP's outsource dialup to fairly large providers. So, a business that WANTS people to be able to get to it's site should block 10% of them (or more, depending on the troll's ISP) just to get rid of one unreasonable person?
Dialup service good enough to get to a web board is a dime a dozen, and all you need is a credit card. It can be as cheap as $9/month. About all they can do is close the account. They'll probably give him his money back just to avoid trouble. The next day, he'll just pick another ISP and give them the money he just got refunded. You have to remember, if the troll could be expected to behave reasonably, he wouldn't be a problem in the first place.
Little Real Effect (Score:2)
While the plaintiffs case may very well have merits, based on the TOS nearly every website has (and if not, there are still remedies), the fact remains that in this case, as in so many others I have seen, the ruling, if granted in favor of the plaintiffs (GIE, et. al.) will have little real effect. Everyone knows what happens when you feed the trolls. That is exactly what they thrive on. Further, the defendant (Huckaby) can stall the case for years, run up a huge bill for GIE, and still keep it up. If he is not in violation of any criminal statutes, then he can pretty much keep trolling, and there is little the Courts can do.
It is, then, a question of technology.
Drink, Be Merry, Blame the Beergut on Your Genes [xnewswire.com]
Not an issue of free speech. (Score:2)
You could consider websites more like a store or mall. That you are given an implied invitation to visit as long as you comply with their rules, if the rules are not illegal, discriminitory, and unreasonable.
This is a case where this person was told to leave, then came back using other names. The McDonalds manager could ask you to leave if you are sleeping on the table after eating your Taco Bell dinner and if you don't leave, the manager could have you arrested for tresspassing. You could be required not to take pictures in an establishment, as part of the rules of entry is not to take pictures -- even if it does not violate copyright.
Just because there is no bolted door on the front and there is a public sidewalk attached does not mean you can go into and do anything you want.
sue him... (Score:2)
Sue the hell out of him
Great! Less Trolls! (Score:2)
The simple and intelligent solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Any system or forum administrator worth his salt could easily block a range of IP addresses as well as some of the more popular proxy servers that allow deviant trolls to sneak through and continue posting.
Just look at Slashdot and Kuro5hin. Rob and Rusty both, respectfully, understand the dynamics of Web communities and know that court isn't how to solve trivial little troll problems. All you do is give a person a very friendly time out period during which they can't post and you're home free.
The problem here is not trolls or Internet arguers. The problem here is talent, and this pest control company doesn't have anyone in their IT department with half a brain.
K5 and Slash are still running strong through years of low budgets, high troll/contributor ratios, and Dot Com busts. It's not rocket scientry, folks, it's just simple, kind administration on the part of Rusty and Rob Malda.
Wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
PCT seems to be an association or industry portal of some sort - they're servicing a number of pest control companies. Their forum users aren't there to get into popularity contests with 'friends/foes' and moderation totals and all that crap - they're there to exchange business information. Other 'social engineering' answers simply burden the rest of the users who are abiding by the rules.
Block by IP and you potentially block other members. Require moderator approvals and you lose the 'real time' aspect of the forum.
IT people want to look for technical solutions to this because it keeps them in a position of power. If this lawsuit is successful, you won't have to rely on your IT people as much to keep a lid on technical problems. There will hopefully be one more precedent which establishes that 'stop' means 'stop', and there will be a financial penalty for failing to comply.
It's about time (Score:3, Insightful)
That someone started taking these irresponsible cretins to task. I applaud this action. For anyone who wants to cry "free speach", it should be noted that the server, bulletin board, and services involved were totally private in nature. That, and this twonk had to get through some kind of agreement prohibitig such behavior in order to gain access. I'm constantly amazed that people seem to think that because a forum is on the Internet that it somehow enjoys some additional protections covering anything you want to say. If you own the equipment, you get to decide what gets done with it, and who can use it.
wow, a troll in the true Slashdot style (Score:2)
By the way, regarding the latte: if you follow the above link, do not click on the post with subject line "Do you recognize this insect?".
They are suing trolls (Score:2)
First post!!!!!
Watch out! Party Line Warning! (Score:2)
Be careful what you post on this thread. There is some seriously [slashdot.org] unfair [slashdot.org] moderation going on.
It seems that many moderators are confusing the power of a webmaster with the freedom to speak.
New mod option? (Score:2)
Ah trolls. (Score:2, Interesting)
I dunno what's worse; the trolls or the fact that there's an ever growing number of people at the site who find him hilarious and egg him on. Though they're a minority, most people quite publicly think he's a twat. He's stopped attacking forums but continues to infest IRC.
To cut a long story short then, there are some sad, sad individuals like this, and someone or other always has to deal with them. The more people like this get publicly and painfully burned, the better. It's all fun and games until you really make it your mission to just piss everyone off.
Infantilism (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, having posted this story here, the
I just thought of something... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I just thought of something... (Score:3, Insightful)
IN SOVIET RUSSIA... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:5, Insightful)
Once you visit someone elses site you abide by THIER rules. You want free speach? Make your own site then you can say whatever you want.
even more accurate. (Score:3, Informative)
That's close, but it's more like the troll did the same thing with 50 robots and whores so that no one could even get in the door, much less carry on a conversation or enjoy being there.
I like this and hope all the Steve Barktos [essential.org] and their company sponsors are ruined. That's right, whores, I'd like to see you lose your jobs, houses and reputations for such activity.
UseNet = sidewalk; Pest Control Forum = restaurant (Score:2)
Going back to meatspace, for any of you who have actually tried to get a candidate or referendum on a ballot, you know how hard it is to get signatures in suburbia. You have to get permission from the proprietor. In the case of churches, it's illegal thanks to LBJ lest they lose their non-profit status. Sidewalks in suburbia, when they exist, are pointless as everyone is whizzing around in private automobiles.
In urban planning, there is frequently a distinction made between the "public realm" and "private space". (And then there are shades of gray in between, such as office lobbies). In meatspace, the public realm is dying thanks to the automobile (and the war on Iraq -- had to throw that in on this Jan. 18 day of protest). In cyberspace, the public realm of UseNet is dying thanks to fora such as Slashdot, newspapers, blogs, and even pest control companies. Yes, I'm contributing to the problem by continuing to post to Slashdot and even running my own blog [underreported.com] -- mostly because traffic on UseNet is way down.
Going back to the case at hand, yes the Pest Control Forum is the private realm. If that isn't the private realm in cyberspace, I don't know what is. The issue gets stickier when it comes to news sites. Should a newspaper site be able to ban trolls? How about a special-interest newspaper?
Ubiquitous widely used P2P fora voter-moderated fora would be the best solution to resurrecting the dying public realm in cyberspace. Unfortunately, copyright violators have given P2P a bad name, and corporate entities such as Yahoo! Groups, Google Groups, newspapers, and Slashdot have captured the marketshare and mind share of cyberspace public discourse.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:3, Insightful)
The proprietor of the restaurant doesn't call the police or sue the homeless man, she calls the director of the homeless man's shelter and tells them of the incident. The homeless man is then told by the shelter he is not welcome there anymore and to find one of the other many shelters in or out of the town. She is then forced to hire bouncers to protect the restaurant from future molestation.
The homeless man finds a new shelter, then contacts his buddy trolls-under-the bridges and tells them "Open Season on Ms. Geek's!" They then start attacking the building the restaurant rents, vandalizing it, even to the point of setting up wiretaps in the building's trunk phone line.
The owner of the building suggests that maybe Ms. Geek's should find a new location. The proprietor of the restaurant decides that rents are too high, the frustration factor is way too much, and most people who were visiting the restaurant were checking out the menu, admiring what other people were eating, then deciding "oh no, I mustn't sit down and eat, it's too fattening."
So Ms. Geek's goes out of business thanks to that homeless troll and his buddies. Next week, a Starbuck's opens up in its place. Thanks a lot, WIPO, Vladinator and the rest of you.
Ms. Geek
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:5, Insightful)
The idea that a commercial entity can incur an actionable loss because of the freedom of speech is a new and dangerous trend in our society
No it isn't. It's called private property and the principle has been around just as long as the first amendment. If you make noise on my property, I can kick you off. No questions. If you make noise in the street, I can't do anything about it. The web site could easily be considered private property and posting to the site would require the visitors abide by the terms of use. If they don't fine, they have to go do their own website.
This has nothing to do with corporate entities imposing censorship. It has everything to do with private property and the user thereof.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
No it isn't. It's called private property and the principle has been around just as long as the first amendment.
Let's think about that for a moment. Are you suggesting that the freedom of speech only exists on one's own property? Suppose a landlord doesn't agree with a letter a tenant sent to the editor of a newspaper? Should that landlord be able to evict the tenant?
If you make noise on my property, I can kick you off.
Taking action against someone for criminal trespass is one thing. But you are talking about taking civil action against someone. A jury is not necessarily involved, and because civil law is about money rather than justice, you've just placed the first amendment in the purview of big money. See what happens when you confuse power with freedom?
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
*sigh* That means open to the public, not an exclusive membership thing.
It is still private property, and they are still free to admit or deny entrance or speech to who ever they choose.
The GOVERNMENT cannot abridge your right to free speech, but the second you enter private property and agree to follow a set of rules, the owner can demand you do or say whatever he or she wants you to.
You have the right to get your ass out and bitch in public though.
There not being any sidewalks on the internet, you would have to setup your own private i-estate (har har) and all that, but even that does not effect your right to go outside your house, down to the street, and start bitching.
Which is pretty much all the "right to free speech" guarantees you in the end.
You have the right to free speech, others do not have to give you access to their mediums. (unless they are government sponsored mediums, in which case you DO then have a right of access to them. Thus those Public Access TV channels.)
Re:So how do you criticize the restaurant? (Score:2)
If you're lying about it, the owner of the restaurant has the right to sue you for slander/libel.
"freedom of speech" != "freedom from responsibility"
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:3, Insightful)
You can scream 'FARK THE USA' on the street all you want... just don't go into corner store and start doing it.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
Accepted in the sense of submitting a form from a page containing a hyperlinked credit to the alleged agreement?
Doesn't sound like an agreement to me. Sounds like a website TOU, which isn't worth the disk-space it's stored on.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:5, Insightful)
And if he kept sneaking into my business to do his musical number, I have the right to have him charged for tresspassing.
Freedom of speech does not mean you get to use other people's property (in this case, a website) to practice it.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2, Insightful)
If he were to continually sneak in to your house every time you kicked him out, would you not take action against him?
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2, Insightful)
Too many people act like shitbags then try and hide behind 'freedom of speech'.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
If you're walking down 5th Avenue in Manhattan and some homeless guy is beating away at a drum and chanting "Fuck the USA. Don't bomb Iraq" you cannot sue him because it would breech the freedom of speech laws.
Yeah, but that's a public street owned by the govenment. If he tried to go into, say, the superbowl and march out onto the field doing the same thing, he would not be allowed.
There's also the argument that he's specifically trying to disrupt other people's conversation. If he's more interested in stopping the others from talking (rather than "more interested in expressing his opinion") he's actually harming freedom of speech, not excercising it.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
I'm not saying the lawsuit is the best solution, but the right to troll is, as they say, essentially identical to the right to yell fire in a crowded theater, and the latter has been explicitly named as *not* protected speech. And there is NO constitutional right to use a message board against the wishes of its owner.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:3, Informative)
Second, though the drummer may not be arrested for merely drumming and chanting, he can be arrested under charges of Disorderly Conduct and Disturbing the Peace if:
enough people complain about him
he causes interference with the normal course of business on that street
he degrades the business occuring in the shops on that street
You have the right to free speech, but not to be destructive.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:3, Insightful)
This case is more like a troublemaker walking into a bar, shouting at everyone in the room at the top of his lungs, and demanding his right to pee on their shoes as a speech action. I don't have any problem with bouncers (in the employ of the guy who pays the rent on the building) showing guys like this the door.
This guy wasn't walking down a public street. He was abusing a privately controlled, open space. He was repeatedly making a disturbance that violated the agreement as to his conduct he made when he walked in the door. He was warned, bounced, but kept coming back. Effectively, he was tresspassing, and thus, legal action can and should be taken.
Open forum on the Internet !== non-regulated open space.
GMFTatsujin
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2)
The first amendment doesn't even apply in this case.
Nathan
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:3, Interesting)
What we really need to know, is how the ammendment does apply to this. For instance, if the bum goes into the corner grocery, does the same thing... he could be prosecuted for trespassing. But what if someone had a business with the primary purpose of allowing someone to speak their opinion? In the real world, there is no such thing that I'm aware of. But on the internet, slashdot certainly comes to mind, and possibly kuro5hin is an even better example. Would it be wrong to ban only some of those that want to express their opinion, while allowing others?
And if so, to what degree does this bulletin board accomplish the same purpose? Their primary business isn't providing a forum like slash or kuro5hin, but it does somehow seem deceptive of them to only want to allow "good speech". Would there be any difference if the guy were telling nasty truths about the company, instead of outright trolling?
I'd be much more comfortable if they were suing for slander/libel, to be honest. Then it could be decided solely on what he said, and how true it was. They'd still nail him, without reinforcing the power to silence anyone they didn't like.
Mind you, they already have that power technically, but it doesn't mean they have the moral right to use it capriciously.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2, Troll)
Being that this is a shared space and random person is neither point A nor point B, there is a level of conduct expected by the ppl that are A and B, and you can be bounced if they deem fit. Please recall that you as A or if so given power as B have the right to control your network, everything coming in and going out.
If you wanan run your own space with your own rules go ahead.. but i'll clue you in here, you wanna let ppl run amok and piss of everyone, you aren't going to get anyone there over then people pissing on each other.
Not on my dime you don't.All freedoms have limits. (Score:2)
Also your drum beating hobo analogy has serious flaws. In most places you can't yell and do such things without a permit. Have you never heard of "Disturbing the Peace" laws?
All freedoms have there limits:
Free Speech doesn't allow you to yell fire in a theater, to incite a riot, or make obscene displays. You are only allowed "free" speech when the public lets you.
Free Press is mostly limited by resources. Yes you can print almost anything you want but the goverment doesn't have to pay for it. You do. Nor can you by force shove your pamplet in my hand.
One element if "freedom" you seem to forget is "I" also have the right to ignore you and not listen to you.
If you do anything to distrupt that right then I am allowed to stop you. See above for examples. So on MY private BBS I have the right to stop you from invading my privacy!
He's Free To Speak; They're Free Not To Publish (Score:2)
If a newspaper doesn't publish your letter to the editor, it isn't a violation of your free speech.
If a privately-held website doesn't want to publish the comments of this character, it isn't a violation of his free speech, either.
Freedom of speech does not mean compulsory publishing.
Re:What ever happened to free speech? (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe I'll bring along my drum.
Re:next headline.... (Score:2)
It even looks like a slashdot headline, what with the splalling errors and all.
Re:Wow! Taco has a new paying job! (Score:2)
No... Since sometimes the editors also troll, *we* got the pay... eh, Taco? ;-) Just kidding...
Re:Wow! Taco has a new paying job! (Score:2)
Well, since I'd imagine the vast majority are still (supposed to be) in school/kindergarten, I'm thinking, "not much"...
Re:The solution... (Score:2)
Re:The solution... (Score:3, Insightful)
If the government and corporations had their way, they'd slam down every irate customer or voter out there.
Look, site manager's know this--you moderate or you don't. You require logins or you don't. If it's private site, then they can restrict him by the moderation or login requirements and a site usage agreement. If it's a public forum, then it's a public forum. He has the right to express himself on their site; they have the right to restrict him through blocking, etc., just as
It's amazing the number of sites that get by without using federal law to help them, and yet you somehow find validity in this absolutely frivolous BS argument of "play by the rules." It's their forum. It's theirs to manage. If they can't, that's their stinkin problem. You EASILY have more solutions, strategies, and recourse than real life physical moderation, and in the latter case, most of us would not stand our free speech rights being slammed shut (of course, there are numerous limits you could site, but the general scenario of a fellow on the street corner with a sign in front of a business is legal expression, despite the many laws, usually local, regarding conduct, profanity, slander, libel, disorderly conduct, etc.).
Play by the rules. Gee whiz. Down the page, you have network associates stifling reviews of their own product, which they release for sale to the public. Pathetic that the legality of such conduct is even in play, and you want now to "play by the rules." Yeah, you and what other obstinate whiners?
Re:The solution... (Score:3, Insightful)
Quit being so damned whiney about this. It's pct's forum, they can do what they want.
Re:The solution... (Score:3, Insightful)
That would be like making your own website complaining about the company. 'Entering" their website and using their boards is more akin to walking into the store, taking their paper, using their markers, making a sign, and protesting inside the store.
Re:Money$ (Score:5, Insightful)
Depending on how much time and effort (and legal bills) GIE has invested to keep him off their forums, and how much damage their reputation has lost because of the trolls on their forums, I can believe $5000 is the actual damages. An organization I work with has persistent trolls, and we spend a huge amount of time to remove them when they act up.
I wonder, though, if GIE has talked to the guy's ISP(s) and reported him for abuse. In my experience, that is much more effective than trying to unmask and sue someone over the Internet.
Re:/. should be millionaire's then (Score:3, Informative)
Nice try, mathboy. That's only 100k.
-72
Re:fp [you are in for it now!] (Score:2, Funny)
For your failure, and your troll, you now owe
Re:Klerk (Score:2)
No, but that's not the point here. First off, if "Klerck" knows that you have a 4 year old son and a 5 year old daughter, you're doing something wrong. That's not the kind of thing that you want to post here, even in normal conversation about whatever. It's natural to want to post a link to pictures of the new baby and whatnot, but IMO Slashdot is not the kind of place for that. Not because it's "offtopic", but because you're opening youself up to these sort of things.
Second, don't let it get to you. He does it because he wants it to get to you. If you get pissed, then he wins - and you're still pissed so you've gained nothing.
Re:Klerk (Score:2)
Re:I'm torn here.. (Score:4, Insightful)
I think it's a bad thing, and they could've taken more measures (even as
Why? Why in the world should they have to hire moderators or anything else to get rid of some a$$hole who has nothing better to do with his time?
If he came into their physical place of business and did that, they'd be expected to ask him to leave and not come back (like they did on the web). Failing that, they'd be well within their rights to have him arrested for tresspass and thrown in jail. On the web, they just sued him.
Personally, I think the troll should get paddled in public until blisters form, but that's not a legal option in the U.S.
A troll of this nature is no better than someone who sits down at other partie's tables in a restarant and starts spewing obscenities for no apparent reason night after night.
I do have a problem with ISPs limiting what users can say on their personal website, but that doesn't mean other people's websites should be used instead.