Aye Aye.that's what real-life friends are for.
User Charged With Felony For Using Fake Name On MySpace
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- lifeisbetterwithketchup
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Bingo. Hit the nail on the head, Sparkfist. My thoughts exactly.Sparkfist wrote:I think the reason Lifeisbetterwithketchup was nervous is that it's been common in the past for a very sound judgement on something to be twisted and changed to fit a different situation, just so they plentives could win the case. And as most people don't know crap about technology, and worse yet lawyers can manipulate laws, we have something to be concerned about even a little.
Rekarp wrote:Cause I am Abe F#!@ing Lincoln.mako321 wrote:What makes you head ninja, anyways?
People often take things at face value, not realizing how severe the <i>precedences</i> set by the actions of people are. I've brought this philosophy up before, making up an extremely improbable yet still realistic scenario, and I remember someone responding with "oh, that would never happen."
If you allow someone to get prosecuted for falsifying their identity on the internet as a backdoor scheme to jail them for previous, unproven crimes, it sets the <i>precedence</i> that falsifying one's identity on the internet is a serious crime. It is not, in fact, that's one of the reasons that the internet is as big as it is, anonymity. When people look back on this, they won't see a malicious impersonator getting her just desserts, they'll see a kid getting convicted for using a fake name on a kid-oriented web site, and that is what they will base their opinion off of.
When you let someone go without penalty for a crime, it sets the precedence that crime is okay. But when you prosecute people for unjust crimes, you set the precedence that the difference between right and wrong has been blurred, or that it simply isn't considered.
If you allow someone to get prosecuted for falsifying their identity on the internet as a backdoor scheme to jail them for previous, unproven crimes, it sets the <i>precedence</i> that falsifying one's identity on the internet is a serious crime. It is not, in fact, that's one of the reasons that the internet is as big as it is, anonymity. When people look back on this, they won't see a malicious impersonator getting her just desserts, they'll see a kid getting convicted for using a fake name on a kid-oriented web site, and that is what they will base their opinion off of.
When you let someone go without penalty for a crime, it sets the precedence that crime is okay. But when you prosecute people for unjust crimes, you set the precedence that the difference between right and wrong has been blurred, or that it simply isn't considered.
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- Negative_Creep
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