1993-02-28 - Re: more ideas on anonymity

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From: Theodore Ts’o <tytso@Athena.MIT.EDU>
To: tony@morgan.demon.co.uk
Message Hash: 3922560d623e6405548cae1b4505cdae867c326cc496a559e16a06c9f38a0881
Message ID: <9302282156.AA25135@SOS>
Reply To: <2829@morgan.demon.co.uk>
UTC Datetime: 1993-02-28 21:57:19 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 28 Feb 93 13:57:19 PST

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From: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@Athena.MIT.EDU>
Date: Sun, 28 Feb 93 13:57:19 PST
To: tony@morgan.demon.co.uk
Subject: Re: more ideas on anonymity
In-Reply-To: <2829@morgan.demon.co.uk>
Message-ID: <9302282156.AA25135@SOS>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


   Date: Sat, 27 Feb 93 23:59:30 GMT
   From: Tony Kidson <tony@morgan.demon.co.uk>

   > Ah, I see you are an absolute free-speach advocate.  The problem is that
   > the line between speech and acts can be fuzzy at times, especially in
   > the world of cyperspace model.

   What you say is true, but I still think that you need to have a 
   substantive act,  before you can apply *legal* sanctions.  The 
   way to prevent threats, is, as people have said in other posts, 
   to prevent the reception of anonymous mail by those who do not 
   want to receive it.  

   Speech does not harm anybody.  People acting on other's speech is 
   what does the harm.  *Free* speech is indeed useful. It's when 
   widely disseminated speech is in the hands of the few that its 
   power can be wielded against the citizen and then it is 
   unhealthy.

I see.  So you don't believe in libel or slander laws.

And NBC was perfectly justified in faking an explosion in a GM truck to
show it was unsafe, and broadcast it on prime-time TV.  And it didn't do
anybody any harm at all.  Uh huh.

Try again.....

						- Ted





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