Policing the net

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Sep 262009
 

This article from the statesman.com caught my attention because it deals with blogging/social media and law enforcement.

Police ready to ‘take on’ commenters, chief says [Excerpt]

People who misrepresent themselves as officials in online comments could face civil, criminal penalties, Acevedo says.

By Tony Plohetski AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF Friday, September 18, 2009

Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo says he and some of his officers have been harassed, lied about and had their identities falsely used in online blogs and in reader comment sections on local media Internet sites.

They’ve had enough.

In a meeting this month with department brass, Acevedo and the group discussed how they think such posts erode public trust in the department and how they have been wrongly maligned.

They have since researched their legal options and decided that from now on, they might launch formal investigations into such posts, Acevedo said. He said investigators might seek search warrants or subpoenas from judges to learn the identities of the authors — he thinks some could be department employees — and possibly sue them for libel or file charges if investigators think a crime was committed.

“A lot of my people feel it is time to take these people on,” Acevedo said. “They understand the damage to the organization, and quite frankly, when people are willfully misleading and lying, they are pretty much cowards anyway because they are doing so under the cloak of anonymity.”

The effort to crack down on potentially illegal statements or comments that are possibly libelous — those published with the goal of defaming a person — is the second time in recent months that the department has confronted new social media.

In March, the social networking site Twitter shut down a fake account that pretended to issue official Austin police bulletins after the department and the Texas attorney general’s office complained.

University of Texas law professor David Anderson said the hosts of sites where potentially libelous comments are posted are granted immunity by federal laws. Those who post comments can still be sued, however.

One of the reasons I signed up for all the major social media outlets I could think of was an effort to protect my “Net name”… such as it is.  I figure if my “name” and reputation are damaged it should be me doing the damage.  While the internet has done much to level the playing field for the vast majority of people, not unlike the printing press did in its day, it certainly has its dark and damaging side.

There is no doubt that the law, and its ancillary legal precedent, are catching up to the way people use – and abuse – the internet.  Like laws and enforcement issues there will be those that we find we agree with and those that we won’t, but like with all laws and enforcement, there is usually a reason they have come about.  That reason is not because of the 95% who understand social norms and acceptable behavior, but because of the remaining 5%.

Rules and laws are a natural consequence of civilization and societies, or even when two or more people find themselves interacting.  Even a family unit has rules of what is and what is not acceptable behavior.  Just because the internet is a virtual interaction doesn’t mean it isn’t an interaction just the same.

I am not a fan of cyber anonymity, yet I know that there is a genuine time and place for such.  Frankly if you can’t “own” what you say, openly acknowledge that what you write [or say] is yours I don’t have much interest in reading or hearing what you have to say.

Yes, much of my writing is published under a pseudonym, but in each outlet that it is I also publish my real name and the area in which I reside, as well as my picture if the outlet provides the means to upload one in a profile.  Studies show that when people hide behind the anonymity of the web they can be far more abusive and ill-mannered than they would be in their real world lives.

As the internet evolves and our usage evolves things will change.  The internet will change and we will change.  I have no delusions that those changes will all be positive, but I hope that at least some of them will.  But I cannot fault people, even police and public officials, wanting to protect their names and reputations.  Not one iota.

Posted via web from SophiaZoe

Sep 262009
 

I’m a self-professed “Disaster Junkie”:  Major earthquakes, major hurricanes, H5N1, super-volcanoes, global cooling, etc.  I’ve always attributed it to being a “Cold War Baby” growing up expecting nuclear annihilation at any moment. What I am not is someone expecting the end of the world on December 23, 2012 because of some Mayan calendar or the Apocalypse unleashed by a ticked-off Christian God.

Few disasters have the potential to have global primary effects, but there are a few: a severe pandemic, a large asteroid, a super-volcano, nuclear war, an ice age event — geographically dispersed EMP bursts over populous nations.  And, oh yeah, Armageddon and TEOTWAWKI when the Mayan calendar ends.

I enjoyed reading this on yesterday’s Salon.com:

The Four Horsemen send their regrets [Excerpt]

A list of failed predictions of the end of the world, including a few current theories that probably won’t pan out

By Gabriel Winant

Sep. 25, 2009

In a recent poll, 8 percent of respondents in New Jersey admitted to thinking that Barack Obama is the antichrist. As in, they think the president is the Beast of Revelation, he whose coming portends the rapture, the battle of Armageddon, and the end of the world as we know it. Thirteen percent weren’t sure, perhaps waiting for more and better evidence to arrive via chain e-mail.

If you’re shocked by those stats, remember just how many Americans think the apocalypse is right around the corner. In a poll from earlier this decade, 17 percent said they expected the world to end in their lifetime. Perhaps that’s why, even though Jesus may have admonished that no man knows the day and hour,  so many people can’t resist making a pseudo-educated guess about the day and hour.

One of the more popular theories making the rounds lately has centered on the Mayan calendar, which runs out in 2012. You get the drift — don’t make any plans for 2013. The New Agey claptrap is popular enough that it inspired Roland Emmerich’s upcoming apocalypse-porn blockbuster “2012,” due in multiplexes everywhere this November. With a hat tip to the citizens of New Jersey, Roland Emmerich and the ancient Mayans, we present this honor roll of doomsday panics and false messiahs — a whole lot of past predictions that didn’t pan out, and a few more current revelations that are looking iffy. This is the way the world doesn’t end. No bang, lots of whimpers.

I enjoyed reading it for several reasons but the main one is that since things have tended to look sorta “Apocalyptic” these last few years I have taken to reminding people [when appropriate] that each generation [at least in Western Civilization] tends to view their age as The Last Days.

While I have a certain morbid fascination with large scale disasters, and lived through one [1989 Hurricane Hugo] and I like to think that I have an appreciation for “the science” that underpins our understanding of the threats, I do not believe that I will necessarily live to see any of them happen.  But, more importantly, I do not believe that they would be driven by anything more that the “Crap Happens” rule of life or humanity’s stupidity and/or arrogance.

We can smugly snicker at the beliefs of others, and that can be cathartic in some ways, but can we risk not believing that something could happen along “Biblical Proportions”?

My own favored global disaster scenario, a severe pandemic [A/H5N1] is a potential threat I believe so real that I’ve dedicated the better part of four and half years to watching – learning – and advocating on.  How great is the actual potential of it coming about is something that I do not know, and frustratingly, no else does either.

Having been caught ignorant of what a strike from a major hurricane would visit upon my world I vowed to never be caught so ignorant [and unprepared] again.

So, sometimes I quietly snicker at the beliefs of others, Armageddon, Peak Oil, Global Warming, and 2012 to name a few of the current crop, but I do have my own, and no doubt plenty of folk quietly [or not] snicker at me.  A genuine case of to each his/her own TEOTWAWKI scenario I suppose.

Which brings up the point: What does TEOTWAWKI mean?  The popular acronym stands for The End Of The World As We Know It.  But it is worth a further definition…

When the world ceases to be the world we know that is the end of the world as we know it.  An event of such scope and magnitude has happened with regularity throughout humanity’s run.  The effects are not usually negative however, such as the invention of the printing press, personal computers, vaccines, the Renaissance, etc., each having very positive impact.  But sometimes they’ve been bad, such as the Black Death.  Or in the case of future events, have the potential to be negative, such as nuclear war, major asteroid strike, or a severe pandemic., to name but a few.

The world forever changed or will change – a clear line of demarcation: life before event – life after event.  My favorite TEOTWAWKI event happens to be one I view as positive: when computers become self-aware, Ray Kurzwiel’s Singularity.  And oh how I hope I live long enough to see it.

I guess that means I am eagerly awaiting TEOTWAWKI – but in a good way – I hope.

Posted via web from SophiaZoe

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