Are 'Real Names' Policies an Abuse of Power? 318
telekon writes "Microsoft researcher Danah Boyd argues in this article that 'The people who most heavily rely on pseudonyms in online spaces are those who are most marginalized by systems of power.' This comes in the wake of criticism aimed at Facebook and Google for their stance on anonymity and pseudonymity. A related article from the Atlantic discusses how revolutionary the real name requirement really is."
Easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Dont use Facebook or Google+.
Plenty of other methods of communication.
Re:Easy solution (Score:4, Interesting)
Mass market solutions always pander to or exploit idiots. Good marketing tends to win out against good product or even being first to market. So products and solutions that target savvy users tend to be marginalized. Since computing tends to create "compatibility" barriers, this becomes especially problematic.
The sad fact is that most people don't see the danger of broadcasting their lives on the Internet.
So more dangerous solutions proliferate to the detriment of better alternatives.
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And at the same time, I notice certain places, where you can anonymously create accounts (like my newspapers online web page) seems to attract a bunch of morons creating multiple accounts to sit and blurt out crap without thinking.. Maybe, just maybe, if their actual name showed up instead of "LovePalin123" they would actually think about what they are posting..
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It's just terrible, people remaining anonymous online if they wish, and being able to say whatever they want to. There oughta be a law...
No law. (Score:2)
But companies should be able to offer corners of the internet - or even large rooms of the internet - where anonymous speech is prohibited. And they should be able to offer corners, or large rooms, where non-anonymous speech is prohibited.
Then, people can exercise their rights of free association to decide whether they want to participate in environments where anonymous speech is restricted, required, or any where in between..
Personally, I prefer environments where anonymous speech is restricted. I can un
Re:Easy solution (Score:5, Interesting)
Futaba style image boards are a very versatile method of communication.
In my opinion they have a free and openess of communication, which western style forums seem to stifle.
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Quite correct. In the event I get booted from either service for not using my real name, I will not go back. I have a facebook account, but only so I can look at my sons' pages. I don't actually do anything with my own account at all. As for Google? Well, let's just wait and see... I'll give them up just as easily as I gave up cable TV... turned out to be easier than I ever expected it to be.
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I've been stalked by an ex-girlfriend. She is completely goddamn psychotic.
Unfortunately, she stays just to that grey area of the law where the local police "can't do anything" and lawyers are leery of it. She tried to bug the hell out of my boss at work for a while, then he got the hint to have her ignored and barred from the premises. She started trying to look up my friends list on FB, even to the point of getting hold of a friend's FB password and using his account to spy on me. She bothered every femal
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this just shows a lack of understanding. While google said they'd ensure the "real name" thing is followed, guess what? They've quietly dropped it altogether. I know plenty of people on g+ with pseudonyms, bullshit names, etc.
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Even easier solution
Use a real sounding fake name..
If you want to communicate a message far and wide, you do what you can to get it out.
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Easy yes, but it puts you in constant violation of the terms. A griefer could then report you, so your solution isn't ideal.
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How are they going to prove it? What, are they going to start requiring scanned copies of government-issued ID?
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Correct.
Facebook have been known to asked for ID for dispute resolution.
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Easy enough to doctor. It's pointless, unless they require a notary to sign off on it after physically inspecting the card.
Which is also pointless, as I personally know several notaries who would likely do just such a thing for me.
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You're the moron, sir.
If someone like me can get around it, enough people can do so as well to render the whole system pointless.
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What's a griefer?
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Someone who, when he sees an unfamiliar word or phrase, is too lazy and/or retarded to type it into google.
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Even easier solution
Use a real sounding fake name..
If you want to communicate a message far and wide, you do what you can to get it out.
Hell, my real name (it's rather unusual and immediately recognizable, worldwide) has been rejected or tagged as fake a few times by operators of sites where I registered with it. A few times, I got a free mug or T-shirt out of the error, and probably caused an amazed or embarrassed site operator. If I want to blend in, it's easier to use a less remarkable fake name, such as Mohammad Fong O'Reilly or Krishna Obama-Stalin.
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It's difficult to come up with a handle as difficult to trace as JSmith or JJohnson. Plus, if somebody does manage to notice the similarities between two different accounts you can always deny it as those are presumably common names for folks to have.
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I've done something similar. I've started migrating all of my mail, calendars, etc out of Google. I enjoy the social networks and I can get free services anywhere that aren't all interlinked. I don't want to risk losing access to other Google services in order to use Google+.
Well that and the fact that they are all linked together. Everything in my online life seems to be touched by Google lately. I'm not comfortable with that anymore.
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Yes! Why do you REALLY need their watered down idiot filled tribute to mediocrity!
You have the ultimate power, the power to not participate, In stupidity, in war, in unjust government, in rigged elections, in absurd "justice" systems (jury based show trials), political theater, etc.
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"Don't use it" sounds like a logical idea, but over time, you might not be able to "not use" something. It will be forced upon you, one way or another.
A pretty good example is having a checking account. Do you have to have one? It's not like you can't pay with "real" money anywhere, right? The first inconvenience may be that you can pretty much forget shopping on the internet, but you should be able to forgo that, right? I mean, it's not like you cannot buy everything locally. Or ... well, less and less so
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And nothing of value was lost.
Additionally, using a facebook page over your own domain looks ghetto. Might as well be myspace, or geocities.
Re:Easy solution (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem comes from the fact that a lot of products and media companies have started having their own Facebook or Twitter page and give links to that instead of their own website.
What do I see when I try to view a Facebook page? A login page.
Way to BLOCK YOURSELVES FROM YOUR OWN VIEWERS, idiots.
Alas, there appears to be more than enough morons who make FB accounts simply to access pages for Radio Rot or Dampers Diapers or Scandal TV. Those of us who refuse to access FB-based pages simply don't count. Firstly, we're invisible to these idiot companies. Secondly, they may be on FB specifically to catch the moron demographic, so we're irrelevant or would be unwelcome.
their money's still green -- and loose (Score:3)
they may be on FB specifically to catch the moron demographic
You might be right, Brawndo [facebook.com] is on Facebook.
Simple (Score:5, Insightful)
Google is not obligated to join you on whatever your crusade is, no matter how worthy. There are real plusses and minuses to anonymity, and it is reasonable for a social network operator to either allow or disallow pseudonymity.
Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)
If you'd ever had to deal with someone stalking you, you'd understand why having pseudonyms can be so important.
Additionally, I have a friend who insists her kids use a fake name, and she has the password to their account so she can check up on things if she believes anything is wrong. The fake-name is so that nobody can try to trace them in a phone book. And they've already been warned about the punishment for giving their real name out.
The fact that Google and other social networking sites can't seem to grasp this basic concept just surprises me.
Re:Simple (Score:5, Insightful)
Kids on the other hand can't be trusted to judge who is a real friend and not, and also can't be expected to configure their privacy settings. That is why there are age limits on google, and your friend should probably tell her kids that.
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Having my real name on fb/g+ only means one thing: people who don't know me can see my profile picture. Thats all.
Or anyone that runs a facebook add-on/game/etc that any of your "friends" have signed up for. Or anyone with a friend working at facebook. Or anyone working for a government agency that facebook has given privileged access. I'm sure there are more people than just those groups, that's just all I could up with in 30 seconds.
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You just don't get it. Information about you isn't restricted to what you choose to post about yourself in one place. If that was the case, you'd be right.
In the real world, people post and spread all sorts of information about other people all the time. That information is disconnected when pseudonyms are used, but if there's a unique "real name" handle, then all that disconnected informat
or complex (Score:2)
If you'd ever had to deal with someone stalking you, you'd understand why having pseudonyms can be so important.
Yup,one ex-GF (from more than 20 years ago!) is known to be still fixated on me, and has an actual license-to-kill (i.e. certified insane, legally). This is one of the reasons I don't use my real name online very much, and don't publicize names for my wife and teenage kids. Thankfully, I have a very famous "predecessor" who copiously pollutes all but the most skillful Google searches. So, apart from defensively making and abandoning a slew of diversionary FB accounts with my real name, I prefer to use a fe
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There are real plusses and minuses to anonymity ...
Just no Google Pluses. *Rimshot!*
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Google is not obligated to join you on whatever your crusade is, no matter how worthy. There are real plusses and minuses to anonymity, and it is reasonable for a social network operator to either allow or disallow pseudonymity.
Another concern for someone like Google is what if they allow pseudonyms but screw it up and someone's real identity is revealed?
This is a much bigger problem for Google than it is for, say, slashdot, because Google's reach into the typical person's web usage is so much more expansive. If someone relies on their Google account being pseudonymous but Google's extensive suite of products connected to that account results in the individual's real identity being linked to the pseudonym, perhaps in a way that
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Google is not obligated to join you on whatever your crusade is, no matter how worthy.
But we do have every right to publicly criticise them in order to influence their actions.
Billion dollar corps like Google and Facebook speak with voices that are a million times louder than ours, so for you to even suggest that we don't have the right to call them out for socially destructive policies is like blaming the ant for protesting that the 800lb gorilla is sitting on him.
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There are real pluses and minuses to search results prioritized by economic incentives and it is reasonable for a search engine operator to either allow pay for rank or not. If Google starts to allow you to pay for your rank, just use a different search engine.
Basic American Values (Score:3, Insightful)
First of all, ket's kill this nonsense idea about businesses and their private property rights. Inside your own private home, you can implement whatever racist, sexist, discriminatory policies you like.
Once you form a corporation and open to the public for business, you agree to play by different rules. When you file a corporate charter, you make the explicit black-letter deal that in exchange for limited liability and tax considerations, you are going to serve the public good. Just as it's time we put an e
Yes (Score:2, Insightful)
Pseudonymity is such a core part of Internet culture. "Real names" are a very recent artifact of companies trying to monetize the web. It offers no value to users.
Re:Yes (Score:4, Insightful)
It offers no value to users.
This is demonstrably false. You can say that pseudonymity has great value. You can say that to you, it has vastly more value than "real names". However, to say that real names offer to value to users, whose goal is to connect primarily with people they know in real life, is either ignorant or defiantly stupid.
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In my experience, the wider anonymity of a pseudonym is no barrier to connecting with people one knows. I have no idea why you hold your stated beliefs.
Honestly? Everyone you knew in high school 25 years ago knows the on-line handle you use now? Everyone you've worked with knows your on-line handle? For that matter, all of your family members, including the cousins that you only see a couple of times a year know what on-line handle you use?
You're free to say that you aren't really interested in connecting with those people anyway... and that's just fine for you. But many, many people very much are interested in connecting with those people, and using
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You have that backwards (Score:5, Insightful)
There were a few people running their own servers who bucked the trend, but it wasn't until AOL joined USENET that pseudonyms became a fact of life. AOL allowed each account to have up to 5 usernames, to facilitate families sharing a single AOL account. Obviously these extra usernames were quickly taken up by people wishing to post things anonymously online, which was good for free speech. But not surprisingly, spam was invented shortly thereafter.
So it's actually anonymity which is the "recent artifact". All that's happening now is that the pendulum is starting to swing the other way as netizens struggle to figure out the best balance between real names and pseudonyms.
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Not true, social networking sites function is find people and to be found. To be found you need to use a well known identity. Other sites are about using and often abusing free speech. Slashdot allows people to use an alias or post as an AC. Frankly I wouldn't mind seeing the option of posting as an AC going away because I feel that if you will not take the karma hit for saying I don't need to hear it. Others disagree including the people that run the site and that is okay.
Then you have sites like 4chan an
to hell with the internet (Score:5, Insightful)
(besides i do a good enough job of making myself look bad and i dont want any help from anyone else)
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This.
Until we stop hearing about mass data loss every other day in the headlines, why would I want to provide real data?
Basing your assessment of risks on headlines provides you with a very skewed sense of what those risks actually are. News, by definition, is the uncommon and the unusual.
I'm not saying the risks don't exist, but given that hundreds of millions of people do provide all that information to social networking sites without having their identities stolen should give you one clue. Reading the articles and seeing what data is lost and from where and what the results are should give you another. In practice, y
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Ah...PudFuckers!
I mean FudPuckers!
or..was it....ah hell I can't recall.
Google can do what they want, but it is a bad idea (Score:3)
On the other hand, there are MANY MANY MORE reasons to not use real names.
The question is, which is the bigger market size? Which do people want? From what I can tell, the far majority of people do not want to use real names.
Frankly, if you want to make a forum safe for kids, then yes, real names would be appropriate. But I am not a child. I can take an insult. My privacy and protection is far more important to me, and to most people.
The idea to use real names for a general forum for use by everyone is an insane idea. Companies and corporations want it, people don't. Build a website based on what the users want, not the corporations, governments. etc.
I would love to use Google+ - if they let me keep my privacy. I won't use it as is.
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You or others like you might not care about w
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As for the Ad hominem attack on my social ties, (irrelevant and just put in to insult me - don't worry, I can take it). I tell you three things: 1. Any person that thinks the internet is a good way to make strong social ties needs to get OUT a lot more. Social Ties are built in the real world, not online.
2. If you can't commit the energy to identify them then you are NOT really inte
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Frankly, if you want to make a forum safe for kids, then yes, real names would be appropriate
Huh? I say it is the very reverse of that. Unless you think having your kid read a bunch of swear words that they probably hear at school everyday is a greater risk than some malicious stranger figuring out how to make contact with your kid in real life.
Microsoft is rolling out a new product. (Score:2)
These policies are why I set my profiles private (Score:2)
It is because of these policies that I set my profiles to private and not searchable, and why I don't put my picassa pictures to public. I'd share more if I didn't have to provide my real name, but as it is, I share as little as possible and still have the services be usable.
Verified user (Score:2)
Why not just allow the users to choose to use a verified profile or not and then decide if they want to communicate with unverified profiles?
Slippery slope (Score:5, Insightful)
One may simply say "if you want to remain anonymous don't give up your information. There's no one forcing you to use these sites" But there's a side-effect of this requirement.
Like it or not "what a lot of people do" always defines what is okay and good and normal. to most people. It makes it much easier to pass laws that forbid anonymity in many areas offline and on. So even though I don't use facebook, google plus, or other such services specifically because I prefer to remain anonymous, this "real name" crap is indirectly harming me.
Re:Slippery slope (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. My non-use of social media has made me (more of?) an antisocial weirdo to most people. Facebook has redefined social norms, and even relies on the erosion of humanity's concept of privacy to grow.
My Pseudomyn is Blocked by Google+ (Score:2)
I had a feeling (Score:2)
This is what Google and Facebook seem to ignore (Score:4, Insightful)
I wish they'd deconflate identities (Score:3, Interesting)
What I call someone, what they call themselves, and their real identity are three different things. Why force them to be the same?
A) if Google/Facebook only grant accounts (or verified account status, as others have suggested) to people who disclose their personal identity... that's the company's choice. It certainly makes me more likely to use their service (for the obvious spam/troll prevention reasons).
B) but there's no reason they need to publish that information for anyone else. They could then let my friend Robert Snee sign up for an account, choose his public name to be "Dread Pirate Snee" and then, most importantly, let me override his name and avatar with one of my own choice... probably Bob Snee with a picture of something other than his newborn baby.
C) And if Rob wants to use a total psueodonym but still accept his friend request/add him to a circle... he'll need to tell me in private "who he is" and prove it to me. Possibly by *choosing* to reveal his google/FB-verified real-identity. If he doesn't, I'm not going to let him into my friends/circles... which is the difference between social network-based sites and open communication tools like email/forums which have global acceptance for historical/practical reasons.
G
whee! (Score:2)
probably signed by GoDaddy...
Welcome to the PC BBS scene, circa 1989. (Score:3)
I'm reminded of the "Real Names" policies on many of the BBSes (especially the early IBM PC-based ones) of the pre-Internet era. It wasn't about any real advantage, percieved or not, with using real names in online discorse.
It was solely about a petty dictator and his fiefdom, and maintaining some sense of "control."
I now view Facebook and Google with the same pity and indignation as I viewed the dickish SysOps of the pre-Internet era, who were more worried about somebody stepping on their dick than building a community. Congratulations.
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Vernor Vinge would agree (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/True_Names [wikipedia.org]
If you never have read this book, you need to drop everything and get this right now by any means necessary and read it.
Revolutionary shmevolutionary. (Score:2, Insightful)
I call BS.
"Anonymity" is a nonsense commodity generated by the information age, and which has had much emo-currency invested in it by those with vested interests, but which is a complete sham.
Until the age of the telephone, anonymity was a rare and unusual thing.
You were known by what you said, and your words carried meaning. Because of the general immobility of the population, these words hung around you like a cloud, which then made up (along with deeds) your 'reputation'. This could last GENERATIONS.
Li
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Anonymity has always existed. Back in the day they were called "strangers". They were the people we would see walking the streets, but would never talk to. They were the names and numbers in the phone book between those that mattered to us.
The problem today is with those who confuse "strangers" with "people". To be a person, one must acquire an identity, or they do not deserve to be taken seriously. An anonymous phone call warning of a bomb is not courteous, but suspicious. Why would they hide their identit
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Nice troll, "Styopa". If anonymity is an information age commodity, you must extend the definition of the information age into the 18th Century [wikipedia.org]
Or are you really that ignorant of political history? It would be astounding if your obtuseness were genuine.
Wake up! You don't have to. (Score:2)
I am quite sure at this point no one is forced to be on google+. Yes, this may change if google starts leveraging its other services to pressure or force people onto goolge+, but that would be an abuse of their monopoly, not the authoritative abuse of power postulated in this article.
Since when has google had authority over any of us?
Wake up people! Just because you got an invite, doesn't mean you have to.
"Real names enforcement" was just a bad idea, and just because it sucks. And for no other reason, excep
I'm reminded of this quote (Score:2)
"Many names were almost as good as none, when a being wished not to be found. But some name was necessary, if a being wished to be found sometimes."
--Daniel Keys Moran, Emerald Eyes
Maybe this is a good thing... (Score:2)
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On a long enough time line, EVERY ONE has something to hide.
That includes the high and mighty. Actually, it's probably even more true for the high and mighty.
Re:It's only an abuse if you have something to hid (Score:5, Insightful)
Then you don't go posting about it online...
Free speech is the ability for you state your beliefs without having to worry about the government jailing you for saying it. Nothing about doing it anonymously. Free Speech is something to be valued and not used anonymously. If you are going to stand out and say something important then you should do it so people know who you are, and realize that even in a place of Free Speech there is risks.
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The problem is that you may say something that you have no reason to hide now, but every reason to hide in the future.
E.g. there may be no reason to hide the fact that you're not a big fan of Colonel X of the army now. But 3 months later, after a successful coup attempt, and rounding up of those critical of him, you may very well have every reason to want to hide it.
Anonymity means you don't have to worry about those future situations, be that an extreme such as
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That's not realistic. Think of all those folks that had converted to Islam during the 90s, do you really think it's reasonable for them to have expected the backlash following 9/11 when the made their choice?
The point is that you can't be sure what's going to be OK at some arbitrary point in the future to be on record as having said.
Or all those tapes that Bill Maher had on Christine O'Donnell. Granted they were stupid things for somebody professing to be a conservative Christian to say on tape, but still,
Re:It's only an abuse if you have something to hid (Score:5, Informative)
Two quick examples of U.S. law the link anonymous speech directly to the Constitution Right to Free Speech that I found are "Talley v. California, 362 U.S. 60 (1960), the Court struck down a Los Angeles city ordinance that made it a crime to distribute anonymous pamphlets. In McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission, 514 U.S. 334 (1995), the Court struck down an Ohio statute that made it a crime to distribute anonymous campaign literature."
If you half an open mind, you might also want to check out the EFF site and try to look at it from another point of view. https://www.eff.org/issues/anonymity [eff.org]
Anonymity/pseudonimity is not purely for Trolls and F**wads.
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Can you anonymously make a transaction with your bank? (Money is recently viewed as "speech" by the supreme court? I haven't tried walking in with a mask lately..
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I strongly disagree. Anonymity is a necessity for true freedom of speech, in order to ensure that people can speak their minds without fear of any consequences whatsoever. Anything else gives you a chilling effect on speech, wherein people may censor themselves because they don't want to be ostracized by their community, or fired from their job for going against the corporate political position.
What support do you have for your assertion that you should always attach your identity to anything important that
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Or your employer firing your, a potential future employee not giving a job to you, or a lone lunatic deciding you need to die.
Humans are a social species living in interdependent societies, and as long as that remains true you need anonymity to have free speech.
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Free speech is the ability for you state your beliefs without having to worry about the government jailing you for saying it. Nothing about doing it anonymously
Interesting perspective. Interesting, but wrong. Provably wrong in the context of anonymous political speech, under the authority of the Supreme Court of the United States:
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Frankly, I'm surprised at the number of people taking this attitude lately. It goes along hand in hand with the thinking, "if you don't want anyone to know about it, you probably shouldn't be doing it." I, for one, think people should be less judgmental of situational considerations they are not privy to and just accept that situations do exist which break from over-simplified reasoning.
For example, it is essential to enable expression of
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The US Supreme Court has decided that corporations, which are effectively anonymous, have the same right to free speech as individuals. Not only that but through a corporate shield, wealthy anonymous individuals can spend millions of dollars to spread the message and effectively bribe public officials through campaign contributions. We can't seriously argue against anonymity of free speech until that decision is repealed.
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While I agree with you that the first amendment is about controlling the government suppressing speech and not a lot of other things that people try to stretch it into, there's a corollary. That is, any time someone has to resort to anonymity because of a genuinely well founded fear of a private stalker, nut-case fan (like Letterman's), paparazzi, identity thief or similar, that person has immediately had enormous damage done in a free society. The stalker, identity thief, or whatever has taken away their n
Re:It's only an abuse if you have something to hid (Score:5, Insightful)
So was Publius a troll, fraud, or a spammer? What about George Orwell? What about Mark Twain?
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You know, "George Orwell" and "Mark Twain" weren't their real names, right?
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The problem is that you may feel that you have nothing to hide, but you may not realize that you have divulged information that can be used to do you harm. Posted a picture of you at some location? That proves you were in that location. Linked to your mom on Facebook? She may have her maiden name somewhere in HER profile, frequently right up on top in parentheses so her buddies from before her marriage can find her. That means that a very common security question is now in the hands of whoever can do
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Not everyone is proud of everything they do (and have ever done). For example I have posted some dumb-ass things on Slashdot that I regret. Those will never come back to bite me in a job interview though because they're not attached to the same name that is on my resume.
I believe that the intended use case of Facebook/Google+, to post a lot of updates and photos under one's real name, is a fundamentally bad idea. The reason it's a bad idea is
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This is the same line of reasoning that the police use when they try to convince you to let them search your person or property without probable cause. All regimes are potentially repressive and one does not need to be an "activist" to legitimately seek to minimize exposure.
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I use http://www.fakenamegenerator.com/ [fakenamegenerator.com]
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I suspect that the a naming policy that supports using things that aren't your common personal name but serve as brand identities like this will be pa