GoDaddy Silences RateMyCop.com 561
mikesd81 writes "Wired is running a story about GoDaddy shutting down a police watchdog site called RateMyCop. However, GoDaddy can't seem to give a consistent answer as for why. From the article: 'RateMyCop founder Gino Sesto says he was given no notice of the suspension. When he called GoDaddy, the company told him that he'd been shut down for suspicious activity. When Sesto got a supervisor on the phone, the company changed its story and claimed the site had surpassed its 3 terabyte bandwidth limit, a claim that Sesto says is nonsense. "How can it be overloaded when it only had 80,000 page views today, and 400,000 yesterday?" Sesto says police can post comments as well, and a future version of the site will allow them to authenticate themselves to post rebuttals more prominently. Chief Dyer wants to get legislation passed that would make RateMyCop.com illegal, which, of course, wouldn't pass constitutional muster in any court in America.'"
1984 (Score:5, Interesting)
I might even go so far as to say that I'd _like_ to see the government try and crack down on sites like this (and wikileaks etc), as this will only draw more attention to the problem, causing replication of the data and hastening the process of smart people finding even better general solutions for circumventing censorship.
The current situation in America really does look like 1984 already - not just the spying and media manipulation, but also the continuous fearmongering and blatant lies to justify this protracted and costly war. However I believe there really is hope for us to turn this around, and that the solution lies in leveraging the internet, encryption, and the same technologies being used now to spy on us. Let's keep finding better ways to protect information, let's keep uncovering the corruption, and let's turn this around before it's too late.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
There is a legitimate concern for cops that do go undercover (they tend to do so off and on throughout a career), in that once they do, there's a big, fat online database that folks can check against before even asking "are you a cop?". This can present a legitimate danger if there's pictures or other personally identifiable information right there on the site.
There is a superior need for transparency in any society, but sometimes that has to be balanced against personal safety -
where 1984 comes from (Score:5, Insightful)
I suspect that you all-too easily assume that the erosion of our freedoms is driven mainly by malicious intent.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
competence isn't necessary to suppress (Score:5, Insightful)
it would be easier to put a colony on Mars than to organize that gaggle into any sort of overlord-type Big Brother organization...
I've often rolled my eyes when people have suggested varying data-collection-from-various-agencies kind of conspiracies; here in Massachusetts, they can't even handle informing the Registry of Motor Vehicles when you've paid a parking ticket that was overdue.
However, competence and thoroughness are not necessary to suppress and control. You can have a third world dictator whose goons are lazy slobs and sleep all day and never manage to come to the right conclusions on investigations when they're not taking naps. What makes them feared is whether they run around shooting people.
Want a great example? The TSA. They're feared and hated, and it has nothing to do with them being thorough or competent. Tests have repeatedly shown that they miss more than half the stuff secret testers try to sneak by. Rather, it is their complete ineptitude and nearly limitless power- you never know if you're going to get pulled out for additional screening, or told your car key is a 'switchblade' key and thus can't be allowed on, or told to drink your own breast milk because agents think it's liquid explosives instead of milk for your baby, or, or, or...and there's always the thought that you could end up in Gitmo with a black bag over your head 18 hours a day.
In fact, incompetence and power are more likely to suppress the population, because now they can't even count on living by keeping their noses squeaky clean.
There's no "right" to undercover investigations (Score:3, Insightful)
There is a legitimate concern for cops that do go undercover (they tend to do so off and on throughout a career), in that once they do, there's a big, fat online database that folks can check against before even asking "are you a cop?". This can present a legitimate danger if there's pictures or other personally identifiable information right there on the site.
Where in the US Constitution is the right to conduct undercover investigations, or to do so free from risk? Or to conveniently use the same offic
fuck undercover (Score:5, Insightful)
I should mention that I live in Portland, Oregon. We have one of the lowest crime rates in the country. Whenever there is a story of a shooting on the news, it is most likely a police officer shooting an unarmed man. A few years back, police tasered a man to death while he was still in his car with his seatbelt on. The excuse that the police gave was that it looked like he was putting drugs in his mouth.
A couple summers ago, in the neighborhood I grew up in (A peaceful lower middle class suburban neighbourhood, I never heard of a crime anywhere in the area the entire 18 years I lived there), a woman called the police saying that her 18 year old son was suicidal, and he needed help. When the police arrived, three officers shot him a total of 8 times in the back.
http://blog.oregonlive.com/washingtoncounty/2008/01/previous_stories_and_the_tort.html [oregonlive.com]
These police officers are all back on duty doing their regular routines after murdering all of these people. These are the people that are protecting and serving me. This is why we need services like this.
Re:fuck undercover (Score:4, Insightful)
That is entrapment. It is illegal, and the evidence cannot be used in court. On the other hand, I would like police to be able to infiltrate criminal organizations and gather evidence.
Most people with an attitude like yours bring it on themselves. If you are polite to the cops, then things tend to work out. If you are rude, they do so less so. Is it ideal from a moral standpoint? Probably not. But it does work.
Remove your tinfoil hat, sir (Score:3, Insightful)
It is truly unfortunate that people make up their minds with ridiculous assertions based on anecdotal evidence. And yes, your personal bad experience with law enforcement does count as anecdotal evidence.
Fortunately, most criminal cases do NOT involve coercion or entrapment. I have been around lawyers long enough and participated in enough criminal trials to know that even the most inexperienced lawyer is much more likely than not going to be able to
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:1984 why give cops more protection from civ (Score:5, Insightful)
Cops who are problems to other cops sometimes get dispatched to an "upcoming shootout" radioed as a domestic disturbance or petty theft or 2-11 in progress, or something. If s/he's riding alone, it's easier to take him out. The shoot out starts, s/he agonizingly awaits non-arriving backup, and other radios and their freqs are blacked out or knowingly ignored until it's pretty certain that s/he's a a gonner.
i've sometimes tell people that the Rodney King incident would NOT have happened had things been different. Oh, you ask, "what?" Well, as i understand (read/heard from a source), it was a FEMALE CHP officer in pursuit, but she was (purportedly) bullied by LAPD officers assisting in the pursuit. If this is true, then since CHP has authority to pursue and arrest just about ANYwhere in the state, whereas local LE has to make a courtesy request (can't have Rosemead police running over Glendale or Burbank pedestrians or crashing into property outside PD jurisdiction...), she recalled the history of "The Jungle's" PD (LAPD) and knowing she was outnumbered and could be felled, she likely assented to their demand to take him into custody themselves. Likely THEY wanted him because he had a history with them.
So, had SHE taken custody of him, the LA Riots might VERY WELL not have happened.
A rate-my-cop system might very well have weeded out overly-aggressive cops and forced them to resign or STAY undercover instead of interacting with the general public. I'm not for "rooting out and endangering" u/c cops. I'm just saying, just as in war and spying, they KNOW the risks/statistics when putting on the uniform, taking/making the oath, and hitting the beat or warrant task. I'm not trying to be inhumane. It's a dirty, dangerous job at times. Not one I'd rather do, mainly because i'm not one for suppressing corruption and malfeasance if I see it. So, DEFINITELY, i'd be set up for a fall, most likely, if I were a cop in a PD of over, say, 2 officers.
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe that this additional layer of transparency is helpful. Cops should embrace it, and try to be the best darned cops they can be so they get good ratings on the site. It isn't easy to make an arrest and leave a good impression. But if a cop is a real jerk, there shouldn't be anything preventing someone from posting that on the internet.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
So what? Free speech has nothing to do with what's "fair".
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
No, but the Internet is a little skewed, don't you think? "Reviews" are often "criticisms", especially when anonymity and charged opinion is concerned. Check your local gaming forum for details. (Hardware and book reviews do a better job, mostly because there are user accounts tied to the reviews...not always. But even then, it's anonymous accounts -- and a rateyourcop site isn't going to have the single-author prolificness to tell whether they're
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Informative)
I wont speak to teachers and professors, but I'd say the police review mechanism may be a little flawed.
Here in my hometown, 40-odd people have been killed by police officers since 1980. Number of cases where a fatality shooting by a police officer resulted in criminal prosecution? Zero. Not zero since 1980. Zero since the establishment of the city.
I don't have any particular axe to grind with the police. I don't get pulled over very often, and the few times it's happened, the officers have been polite and professional. But please. Not one criminal prosecution in over 150 years? Just from a point of statistics, I'd say something is wrong here.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:4, Insightful)
The example you post is silly; people will judge the comments too, they just won't blindly agree with them.
As far as cops having sucky jobs and "wondering if they'll be shot." Well, my only response is they choose that line of work. Given that I've been directly bullied by cops, and that none have ever directly protected me, I can't say that I really want them around anyway. Not talking about detectives.. I'm talking about the more or less useless ones that drive around randomly or park near an interstate with a radar gun.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
So, criminal investigations notwithstanding...
Would this even be permitted by their department? I don't see why it wouldn't be. A police officer is still private citizen. Maybe he'd get in trouble for doing so while on duty but there is no real premise to prevent him from commenting on his own time.
How do they know the identity of who they're responding to? This is a minor sticking point, perhaps. I h
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Are some cops assholes on a power trip? Sure. Are most just decent hard working people? Yep.
Re:1984 (Score:4, Interesting)
Hold on there! Anecdotal evidence a universal case does not make.
Personally, I've seen both but it really depended on where you live. Generally, in larger cities you'll see cops that are too busy deal with little things whereas smaller municipalities often have quotas simply to meet budgets.
However, there are always cases of high level corruption everywhere and I've heard some nightmare stories about NYC cops. The real reason you haven't met any bad cops is because you haven't traveled enough.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I've only been pulled over once in my life. It was going into the queens midtown tunnel, aka, going from queens into manhattan. So yes, this qualifies as a NYC cop.
Going up to the toll booth, the cop was standing there, chatting up the tool booth lady. I probably should have picked another lane - you see, my registration had expired. The police officer noticed this and had me pull over. When he came up to talk
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah, so your anecdotes totally overrides his anecdotes.
You're making huge generalizations.
So are you. One problem with even "good" cops is that are extremely hesitant to turn in "bad" cops.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Funny you should mention those numbers. Virginia finally decided to do something [usatoday.com] about those idiots.
Needless to say, I can hear the folks on here whining about how the money is just another tax. Which in a sense it is since the fine is designed to add money to pay for road maintenance. But that is beside the point.
There will always be those who feel the rules shouldn't apply to
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Funny)
(caps filter ruined this joke jfkl jflkdjlkfj skldjf lksdjklf jaskdlj fkldj ealkjfkls jfkljsdaklfjsdkl )
Re:1984 (Score:5, Interesting)
He didn't have to. We could have easily waited 4 hours for another cop to come along.
He was very nice and professional, calming the girl whose car was pushed into mine in a chain reaction.
I wrote a note to his superiors about how great he was.
They sent me back a thank-you which had also been copied to the superior's superior, the cop himself, and the cop's service record.
Always Always Always Always try to reward good behavior when you observe it.
Cops don't actually get shot that much. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Interesting)
And police officers aren't like game designers. Police officers have the right to come into your house and kill you. Given that, I think they deserve a bit of scrutiny. Hell, I think they deserve a LOT of scrutiny, like 24/7 surveillance, GPS implants, weekly gas spectrograph drug tests, yearly competency testing, affirmative action, no unions, etc.
Obviously the problems with police officers aren't getting handled, that's why there is all the guerrilla surveillance going on.
Back to the fundamental issue: GoDaddy. (Score:5, Informative)
Go Daddy Usurps Network Solutions [slashdot.org] (2005-05-04)
GoDaddy Serves Blank Pages to Safari & Opera [slashdot.org] (2005-12-08)
GoDaddy.com Dumps Linux for Microsoft [slashdot.org] (2006-03-23)
GoDaddy Holds Domains Hostage [slashdot.org] (2006-06-17)
GoDaddy Caves To Irish Legal Threat [slashdot.org] (2006-09-16)
MySpace and GoDaddy Shut Down Security Site [slashdot.org] (2007-01-26)
That incident prompted this web site:
Exposing the Many Reasons Not to Trust GoDaddy with Your Domain Names [nodaddy.com].
Alternative Registrars to GoDaddy? [slashdot.org] (2007-02-03)
GoDaddy Bobbles DST Changeover? [slashdot.org] (2007-03-11)
850K RegisterFly Domains Moved To GoDaddy [slashdot.org] (2007-05-29)
GoDaddy Silences RateMyCop.com [slashdot.org] (2008-03-12)
Any error or stories not included?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
your free to say what you like, but you have to be prepared to take responsibility for it.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:1984 (Score:4, Informative)
Um... that's not correct at all. It's not fair to people in a movie theater to yell 'fire!' and create a panic, and that's why such speech is not constitutionally protected.
Fairness has nothing to do with it. The risk of trampling injuries and such combined with the intent being to cause a panic rather than to communicate is why it's not protected speech.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
When it comes to slander and libel, from an anonymous post, I would wager most people reading the post would consider the source and move on. Or at least I would.
Anonymous posting is great when it comes to combating injustice via the dissemination of information. The dissemination of vital information outweighs the risk of government retaliation of the poster is known. The elimination of this form of posting would hurt those working towards keeping the
our legal tradition (Score:4, Informative)
Re:1984 (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:1984 (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
But what if you were the Police office who unfairly got poor reviews because you arested someone who deserved it...
Man up, nancy-boy.
Re:1984 (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree; there are good cops and bad cops. My wife used to be a police dispatcher where I live, and by virtue of that, I met a lot of cops. Every one I met was a pretty good guy (or gal), but I have had run-ins with cops who seemed to have a severe case of "Barney Fife syndrome". For example:
* when I stopped behind the stop sign at an intersection, waited for a car to clear the intersection, then drove through the intersection (all as I was supposed to do), but was pulled over by a cop who couldn't see me stop at the stop sign because of a bush on the corner of the third street where he was stopped. He intended to give me a ticket for failure to stop until the passenger in the car with me verified that I had, in fact, stopped;
* when, as a teenager, I was asked for ID while standing in my own driveway in front of my own open front door at dusk. I was doing absolutely nothing suspicious (talking with my g/f), I was in a place where I absolutely had a right to be, and I most likely hadn't been anywhere else since I was barefoot at the time (in fact, I had been in the shower until my g/f came by).
IMHO, web sites like this one are *exactly* what the framers of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights had in mind when they drafted the First Amendment. While that doesn't preclude GoDaddy from terminating a domain (it's a private entity, not a public one), it does reflect poorly on GoDaddy.
Re:1984 (Score:4, Funny)
Hot or not? (Score:5, Funny)
Hot-or-not-cop.com.
The site is back up now. (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The site is back up now. (Score:5, Funny)
Big Companies==Arm of Government (Score:3, Insightful)
GoDaddy is the largest registrar and webhost. Do you think, even for one second, that they would dare sully their good relations with government by allow a "seditious" site like ratemycop.com to exist on their servers? Of course, we can talk about the rights of "private companies" and "free association", but lets face it; that's mostly a crock of shit.
Western governments no longer officially nationalize companies. They now get the companies to come into the fold all by themselves.
Re:Big Companies==Arm of Government (Score:5, Informative)
Regards,
Re:Big Companies==Arm of Government (Score:4, Insightful)
The people who disagree and would work to change that are being marginalized via media and communications industry "cooperation" with government...
I may think Ron Paul and Ralph Nader are a bit out there myself, but on this I heartily agree with their followers.
Chief Dyer? (Score:3)
Re:Chief Dyer? (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
My oh my, but why should being hoisted by your own petard not be permitted?
not enough boobies, that's why (Score:2, Interesting)
Reasons not valid... oh, those are numerous and probably why the cops freaked and GoDaddy's knees buckled.
Re:not enough boobies, that's why (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:not enough boobies, that's why (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe the guy was the driver for a disabled guy, and the card was proof of disabled vehicle exemption to parking restrictions in that area?
Don't be too quick to assume corruption.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
handicappped permit trumps all, in some places (Score:5, Interesting)
Had she been blocking traffic, that might have been another question, but the simple reality of it was that she never got a parking ticket in a town that lives on parking ticket income.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Now, what do you think that guy showed the cop to make him reverse a legally given ticket?
Perhaps proof that it was his house? With a tale of how he was just in-and-out, and thus the equivalent of "standing" instead of "parked"?
Some punk kid shoots out my headlight with a BB gun. I'm driving to the store to get a replacement. You're saying I should get pulled over on an equipment violation that I'm in the process of correcting?
How about speeding to the hospital because I've got someone suffering a heart attack in the back seat, and the ambulance would have taken another 10 minutes. I'm doin
Easy, a license to park illegally? (Score:3, Insightful)
Doctors for instance have them. Think next time will you?
Re:not enough boobies, that's why (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I was there; that martian bastard ate my neighbor.
Of course, I also have some photos of you molesting little boys (Dubya had them in his car), so I wouldn't stir up trouble if I were you.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Regardless of whether you believe police discretion is fair (it should be, but it isn't, because police officers are people too and therefore by definition unfair) it is necessary for them to do their jobs.
Discretion in itself is fine with me. What's not OK is laws that are only tolerable because discretion allows them to be ignored most of the time and lawmakers who write them that way under the assumption that discretion WILL be used.
Quite frankly, I don't see a point in a website like this. There
Re:not enough boobies, that's why (Score:5, Insightful)
I disagree VEHEMENTLY. I don't think Secret Police belong in any country that claims to be a free society. IMO every police agent should be in uniform with his or her badge prominently displayed. Rather than bring a slashdotting to my site, I'll reproduce a blog posting from September 2005 [mcgrew.info] here in its entirety.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Guns are legal. Why should a legal item need to be smuggled?
While I agree that we should all have the right to bear arms, I don't think criminals convicted of violent crimes should necessarily have that right - and illegal weapon smuggling gives them those weapons.
So does burglarizing the home of someone who legally owns that weapon. Criminals don't go to M
Is it that unbelievable? (Score:2)
Maybe I'm missing something, but that doesn't seem too absurd. Someone tell me where my math is off...
3 TB a month or a day? (Score:2, Insightful)
Where did you get the 30 days from?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Streisand Effect World Tour t-shirt (Score:3, Insightful)
This will earn its place on the list for sure.
This is not the first time. (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing to hide argument (Score:5, Insightful)
We should definitely have websites like this.
Bandwidth explanation reasonable (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Office of the President Response
Dear xxx,
The situation with the Web site RateMyCop was absolutely NOT about censorship in ANY way.
The site's operator has publicly disclosed the concerns were over bandwidth. More accurately, Go Daddy's concerns were about how the RateMyCop site was far exceeding the amount of server usage for which it had contracted.
This customer paid for a shared server plan. The connections to his site were
Godaddy is not so good. (Score:2)
I'm moving off godaddy.
Get Involved as well! (Score:5, Interesting)
All you gotta do is just simply watch the police go about their usuall routine. If they threaten you to leave remind them that they are public servants and that you are fully within the scope of the law if doing so
Go on and observe, It is your patriotic duty!
you can do better... (Score:4, Informative)
GoDaddy is the Self-Proclaimed Internet Police and just because they have the ability to interfere with certain websites they think it's OK. Of course they'll argue Terms of Service, but no company should be able to interfere with one's First Amendment rights. Also why should they want to disable websites in this manner anyway? All the negative press must affect their profit margin.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
There are horror stories about every domain registrar I've heard of, Verisign, register.com, network solutions, they charge way too much, and there are a huge number of bad stories about all of them... Horrible customer service, domain front running, and I'm sure they pull domains at a moments notice too.
The other options are small time bit players that you have to worry will go out of business and take your domain with them.
So... what is your list of A grade registrars?
Actual current domain status (Score:3, Informative)
Right now, it looks like the site is being moved. The name "ratemycop.com" is registered with "name.com", not GoDaddy. GoDaddy was providing hosting only. So moving it to another server is easy.
Checking with the authoritative name server for the domain (NS1.MYCPANELHOST.INFO), we get back [205.234.222.18] [205.234.222.18] as the IP address. That's actually "mycpanelhost.info", indicating this is a site using named virtual hosting (many domains on the same IP address). So addressing the site by IP address just gets you a default "Welcome to Apache" page.
The new IP address hasn't propagated through DNS yet. My local DNS is returning "Addresses: 72.167.159.53, 205.234.222.18". That 72.167.159.53 address is the old GoDaddy address. There's a 7 day TTL on the DNS entry, with 6 days 5 hours to go, so it may take a while for the DNS system to purge the GoDaddy address worldwide. Some users are seeing the new site; some are seeing the old GoDaddy page.
GoDaddy is already out of the picture and has no control over the site. We're just waiting for DNS propagation, after which the new site should be visible everywhere.
Protection must be inversely proportional to power (Score:3, Interesting)
Those in positions of power must not have the same protections as those who are powerless.
1: The position of police officer is a position of great power.
2: The position of police officer is extremely attractive to sociopaths [wikipedia.org].
3: Some (many) police agencies are--umm--less than perfect at filtering out these especially-eager applicants. Some departments do not filter at all (i.e. they don't perform personality inventories on applicants), with the obvious results. Given that non-sociopaths generally strongly dislike working with sociopaths, it stands to reason that these departments quickly become dominated by the latter. I've lived in city with a police department that did not test its applicants for mental disorders, and that's a large part of the reason I now live in a city with a police department that does.
4: It does not make sense to give a person in a position of power all the protections that are afforded to others. For those in a position to cause suffering to members of society, the interest of the society in preventing abuse clearly outweighs the interest of the individual. (If you want all the usual job protections, don't pursue a job that lets you hurt people.)
Yes, some police officers will be treated unfairly in such a forum. Some will be publicly embarrassed when they don't deserve it. If the forum is effective, some will lose their jobs when they shouldn't. I would think it would even make undercover operations more difficult. All these issues are far outweighed by the benefit of exposing those who should not be allowed to be in positions of power.
civilian oversight (Score:3, Insightful)
However, there are enough bad cops, and enough other cops who will protect their own even if they are doing something clearly wrong, that *some* kind of civilian oversight is needed most places to avoid the worst abuses. That said, I think this board is a really bad idea, and is actually probably illegal.
First, why it is a bad idea:
The fact is that it will get a lot harder for police to do their job if anonymous systems like this become widely used. Anyone from someone receiving traffic ticket, to someone who got busted for heroin trafficking can them go online and anonymously pretend to be some totally innocent guy who suffered horrible police brutality for no reason whatsoever by officer John D. Law. Hell, people could go online from *jail* and talk smack about their arresting officer in a totally anonymous system.
Second, why this is probably illegal:
Libel and slander are and always have been illegal. The fact that it happens on "the intertubes" where information "wants to be free" does not change the law. If you start false rumors (the false part is important here) about someone being a murderer or something equally horrible and that person can't get a job and their wife leaves them, etc because of it, that person can legally sue the crap out of you. To make this clear why this is, consider if there were a website called "ratemyemployee" and people could go online anonymously and say that they were your boss and give you a performance review. Now, since that person did not have to identify himself, he could be anybody including some random guy you never worked for who had a grudge against you. You could easily lose your current job and not be able to find a new one in such a situation. Suing the person who started the rumor provides a way to clear your name in court and get monetary compensation.
As it stands, the web site may be liable for slander or libel if they don't give up information on who posted.
I think the correct thing to do is for the site to hold users contact information in escrow, and to provide some kind of means of redress, without immediately handing out addresses to police officers who just want to find out who talked smack about them. Futhermore, the site itself should probably require a contract is signed and make it clear it will fine users if they make a habit of posting slander on their site.
People on both end, police and civilians, need to be held accountable for their actions.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
http://forums.nodaddy.com/index.php?board=3.0 [nodaddy.com]
They've all got those escape clauses somewhere. Every single alternative someone points out has at least one person popping up and posting a horror story. There are no real alternatives.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Free speech isn't all rainbows and butterflies.
Re:Just because you can, doesn't mean you should (Score:5, Insightful)
I can show you countless documented cases where cops have killed innocent people or severely hurt them that were given paid vacations and then let back on the streets as a cop again. Make it so if a cop screws up they are removed from ever being a cop again and I'm all for it.
Until then, our only recourse is to publicly police the police. They refuse to do it themselves and refuse to clean up themselves. Hell most people know a cop or two that happily breaks the law daily simply because they are a cop. They speed like they are above the law in and out of uniform. That act alone should get their asses fired. If you are a cop you need to be held to a HIGHER standard than the rest of us.
Fix that nationwide and I will personally convince the guy to take down his website.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
the truth is, you have control over your cops: via your government.
There was an article a while back by a Miami-Dade, Florida television station. They sent guys into police stations to ask for a complaint form. The results were pretty bad across the board, and in multiple cases the complainant was physically threatened by an officer, for merely requesting a form to make a complaint against an officer.
http://cbs4.com/topstories/Miami.News.CBS4.2.395528.html [cbs4.com]
CBS4 News found that, in police departments across Miami-Dade and Broward Counties, large and small, it was virtually impossible to walk in the door, and walk out with a complaint form...there was one incident in which our tester went in to file a complaint. After several times asking for a form, being told "you're not leaving without a form," he was asked to leave and actually walked off the property, to the point where the officer reached for his gun, put his hand on his gun and said, "Take a step closer, and see what happens.".
I think part of the problem is that a bad cop can hurt a lot of people before he hopefully eventually gets punished.