Enter your username and password.
-
posts about #publius more →
You Don't Have a Right to Anonymity
| posts about #publius more → |
You Don't Have a Right to Anonymity |
06/16/09
06/16/09
It was actually kind of a scary experience, and I'd have preferred it all to have kept anonymous, in fact I'd have preferred not to have the media coverage at all to start with. I was just writing for my friends, but obviously blogs are public things.
All I could do was throw up my hands and say "oh well", I mean I did not have any pretense of thinking I had a "right" to anonymity. We all have a right to post anonymously and to try to protect our identities if we wish, but just the same others have a right to try to unmask us. And if they're successful, then that's it. All we can do is congratulate them on their sleuthing abilities.
A world where anonymity was legally protected would likely have all sorts of unintended consequences. For example, imagine thousands of government operatives all out there on the internet posting anonymously, inciting violence against enemy states, or against internal dissidents, their identity as government agents legally protected - trying to unmask them would get you arrested. That's just one example I can think of.
06/16/09
06/16/09
In the example below, a young woman wrote a columnist at the New York Times seeking advice about a terrible situation. It's a moderated forum, but the writer said she'd had to delete only something like four comments out of over 600. In other words, the argument that people who comment anonymously invariably abuse the privilege does not fly.
And if you think the comments would have been of the same depth and honesty had everyone had to use his or her name I have a bridge to sell you.
[parenting.blogs.nytimes.com]
06/16/09
Sure, like a form of digital Cyrano, some people can be far wittier or bolder when under the relative safety of anonymity, but much like IRL, if you say or do something, you have to own and take responsibility for it. Yes, there are extremes on either side of the spectrum when it comes to freedom to explore subcultures without fear of embarassment with the other side being those who commit crimes thinking they'll never be discovered.
06/16/09
People need to stop hiding behind their keyboards.
06/16/09
What about people writing books under a nom de plume?
Damn that Dr. Seuss.
06/16/09
And how!!! I get so tired of Chinese human rights advocates whining about having their heads chopped off for criticizing their government. I'm always all, "You said what you said. Now take your medicine!"
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09
I couldn't agree more.
06/16/09
06/16/09
06/16/09