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whitestazn88 wrote:Should we have more laws (fewer?) limiting what is put on the web? Should web rules be the same as or different from laws on print media?
whitestazn88 wrote:Some laws I like:
no posting pictures of dead bodies (aside from certain "mass casualty" events not in closeup) without permission of family or prior permission of the deceased.
whitestazn88 wrote:Anti bullying (needs to be evaluated constantly, but roughly akin to anti libel laws).
whitestazn88 wrote:A law I would like (though doubt it will happen): Scientific information has to be "vetted" or is clearly labeled "just opinion". I have no problem per se with people posting their own ideas, be it that aliens are causing cancer or whatever (Who knows? Some "poppycock" ideas wind up being correct). However, they have to go through the process of actually proving their ideas valid. I DO have a problem when they can create a site that kids, even adults cannot distinguish from real, verified, science.











patches70 wrote:Why am I quoted in this thread, Woodruff? I think you got a bit confused or something.....










whitestazn88 wrote:no posting pictures of dead bodies (aside from certain "mass casualty" events not in closeup) without permission of family or prior permission of the deceased.






















Army of GOD wrote:whitestazn88 wrote:no posting pictures of dead bodies (aside from certain "mass casualty" events not in closeup) without permission of family or prior permission of the deceased.
why? they're dead and we're all going to die anyway.
I wouldn't have a problem with someone posting pics of my dead relatives. At least I don't think I would.










whitestazn88 wrote:Should we have more laws (fewer?) limiting what is put on the web? Should web rules be the same as or different from laws on print media?
Some laws I like:
no posting pictures of dead bodies (aside from certain "mass casualty" events not in closeup) without permission of family or prior permission of the deceased.
Anti bullying (needs to be evaluated constantly, but roughly akin to anti libel laws).
A law I would like (though doubt it will happen): Scientific information has to be "vetted" or is clearly labeled "just opinion". I have no problem per se with people posting their own ideas, be it that aliens are causing cancer or whatever (Who knows? Some "poppycock" ideas wind up being correct). However, they have to go through the process of actually proving their ideas valid. I DO have a problem when they can create a site that kids, even adults cannot distinguish from real, verified, science.

















BigBallinStalin wrote:
Nah, I don't like any of that. And it's too costly to enforce for too little benefit.
I enjoy the rules already on the Internet, the informal rules which are created, enforced, and changed by billions of internet users. (call it: spontaneous order).























rdsrds2120 wrote:I'd be down for more strict enforcement of anti-bullying laws. Some people are way too comfortable being able to bully others online.
-rd












rdsrds2120 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
Nah, I don't like any of that. And it's too costly to enforce for too little benefit.
I enjoy the rules already on the Internet, the informal rules which are created, enforced, and changed by billions of internet users. (call it: spontaneous order).
THE INTERNET'S INVISIBLE HAND!! IT'S TOUCHED BBS!!
BBS, do you need to talk about it? Where on the Jack Nicholsaur did it touch you?
--------------------------
I'd be down for more strict enforcement of anti-bullying laws. Some people are way too comfortable being able to bully others online.
-rd

















rdsrds2120 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
Nah, I don't like any of that. And it's too costly to enforce for too little benefit.
I enjoy the rules already on the Internet, the informal rules which are created, enforced, and changed by billions of internet users. (call it: spontaneous order).
THE INTERNET'S INVISIBLE HAND!! IT'S TOUCHED BBS!!
BBS, do you need to talk about it? Where on the Jack Nicholsaur did it touch you?
--------------------------
I'd be down for more strict enforcement of anti-bullying laws. Some people are way too comfortable being able to bully others online.
-rd

















Haggis_McMutton wrote:I'm with BBS on this one. INTERNET ANARCHY FTW!!!rdsrds2120 wrote:I'd be down for more strict enforcement of anti-bullying laws. Some people are way too comfortable being able to bully others online.
-rd
What constitutes as bullying to you? Or rather what constitutes as bullying that should be illegal?
I see any such potential laws as being very dangerous, way too much grey area.
The Internet provides many users an extremely valuable tool: thicker skin.























rdsrds2120 wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:I'm with BBS on this one. INTERNET ANARCHY FTW!!!rdsrds2120 wrote:I'd be down for more strict enforcement of anti-bullying laws. Some people are way too comfortable being able to bully others online.
-rd
What constitutes as bullying to you? Or rather what constitutes as bullying that should be illegal?
I see any such potential laws as being very dangerous, way too much grey area.
After saying it, I realize that "law" might not have been the best choice of words. Also, this is how I would define internet bullying (non-exhaustive): cyber-harrassment, death threats, repeated unwarranted approaches, LGBT bashing, your basic bullying package.The Internet provides many users an extremely valuable tool: thicker skin.
Please forward this to the parents, family members, and friends of teens who have committed suicide as a result of online bullying.
-rd























nietzsche wrote:Self censorship should suffice. And If you don't like what some publish, say, avoid those contents.
It's been a great trip so far, in only 20 years we've gone from text based apps to an amazing wealth of graphic apps, including biometrics and dna analizing and all that. From thinking about something and have to stop right there or go to the library, and cross reference 20 books in order to find the outdated answer you were looking for, to simply typing it in in a search site that corrects the spelling, suggest options and when you know exactly what your looking for, it tells you what most people have found usefull/correct.
Let it be govern itself.



rdsrds2120 wrote:The Internet provides many users an extremely valuable tool: thicker skin.
Please forward this to the parents, family members, and friends of teens who have committed suicide as a result of online bullying.
-rd













rdsrds2120 wrote:After saying it, I realize that "law" might not have been the best choice of words. Also, this is how I would define internet bullying (non-exhaustive): cyber-harrassment, death threats, repeated unwarranted approaches, LGBT bashing, your basic bullying package.
Symmetry wrote:Aye, well put. The idea that society should just toughen up and take whatever comes from people on the internet simply because they did it via the internet is dumb.












Haggis_McMutton wrote:Symmetry wrote:Aye, well put. The idea that society should just toughen up and take whatever comes from people on the internet simply because they did it via the internet is dumb.
Sure, there are limits to everything. But I do think people need to grow some thicker skin in general. The number of silly things people get upset over seems way too high. I don't like that saying "that's offensive" is becoming a conversation stopper similar to "it's my faith".



Haggis_McMutton wrote:rdsrds2120 wrote:After saying it, I realize that "law" might not have been the best choice of words. Also, this is how I would define internet bullying (non-exhaustive): cyber-harrassment, death threats, repeated unwarranted approaches, LGBT bashing, your basic bullying package.
But many of these things are very different from their RL equivalent.
Me following you around and talking shit to you repeatedly in RL = harrasment.
Woody calling scotty an idiot in every thread on the forum != harrasment. After all the remedy is as simple as hitting an ignore button or blocking someone's emails.
As long as the "bullying" stays focused on your online alter-ego and not your real person, I don't really see a problem.Symmetry wrote:Aye, well put. The idea that society should just toughen up and take whatever comes from people on the internet simply because they did it via the internet is dumb.
Sure, there are limits to everything. But I do think people need to grow some thicker skin in general. The number of silly things people get upset over seems way too high. I don't like that saying "that's offensive" is becoming a conversation stopper similar to "it's my faith".























rdsrds2120 wrote:The fact that you can infer that difference kind of helps a different point -- most people can tell what's bullying and what isn't. It's mostly when approached with an individual case that it's silly. In any event, I'd much rather enforce anti-bullying and prevent something from happening instead of the opposite.
-rd
Symmetry wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:Symmetry wrote:Aye, well put. The idea that society should just toughen up and take whatever comes from people on the internet simply because they did it via the internet is dumb.
Sure, there are limits to everything. But I do think people need to grow some thicker skin in general. The number of silly things people get upset over seems way too high. I don't like that saying "that's offensive" is becoming a conversation stopper similar to "it's my faith".
But essentially you're arguing for a less lawful society, no? That certain things which are currently acknowledged as crimes- say anonymous death threats, theft of private information or property, destruction of property, etc. should simply be accepted as the new norm. Isn't that essentially a passive acceptance of crime, indeed an argument for its tolerance, akin to "You've moved to a bad neighbourhood, you should accept that you're going to be mugged" as an argument as opposed to "Yeah, that's a difficult neignbourhood, we should do something to make it better".












Haggis_McMutton wrote:However, as I said above, it's a matter of degree. We will be trading something in exchange for the extra safety. And there's a significant difference between an actual death threat and your typical internet death threat. For the former , you call the cops, for the latter, you do this










Haggis_McMutton wrote:rdsrds2120 wrote:The fact that you can infer that difference kind of helps a different point -- most people can tell what's bullying and what isn't. It's mostly when approached with an individual case that it's silly. In any event, I'd much rather enforce anti-bullying and prevent something from happening instead of the opposite.
-rd
Better safe than sorry? Isn't that the exact type of thinking that leads to old ladies getting molested by TSA agents in airports?
Safe doesn't come free either. In this case it seems impossible to remove the bullying without also removing at least some of the freedom we have on the internet.Symmetry wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:Symmetry wrote:Aye, well put. The idea that society should just toughen up and take whatever comes from people on the internet simply because they did it via the internet is dumb.
Sure, there are limits to everything. But I do think people need to grow some thicker skin in general. The number of silly things people get upset over seems way too high. I don't like that saying "that's offensive" is becoming a conversation stopper similar to "it's my faith".
But essentially you're arguing for a less lawful society, no? That certain things which are currently acknowledged as crimes- say anonymous death threats, theft of private information or property, destruction of property, etc. should simply be accepted as the new norm. Isn't that essentially a passive acceptance of crime, indeed an argument for its tolerance, akin to "You've moved to a bad neighbourhood, you should accept that you're going to be mugged" as an argument as opposed to "Yeah, that's a difficult neignbourhood, we should do something to make it better".
Wait, I thought we were talking about extending anti-bullying laws rather than diminishing them. If it gets to the stage of realistic death threats or guys on 4chan posting my RL address and saying they're gonna hack into the police system and send a SWAT team to my home (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swatting), then I'd say we're definitely past the "take it like a man" stage.
However, as I said above, it's a matter of degree. We will be trading something in exchange for the extra safety. And there's a significant difference between an actual death threat and your typical internet death threat. For the former , you call the cops, for the latter, you do this



rdsrds2120 wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:I'm with BBS on this one. INTERNET ANARCHY FTW!!!rdsrds2120 wrote:I'd be down for more strict enforcement of anti-bullying laws. Some people are way too comfortable being able to bully others online.
-rd
What constitutes as bullying to you? Or rather what constitutes as bullying that should be illegal?
I see any such potential laws as being very dangerous, way too much grey area.
After saying it, I realize that "law" might not have been the best choice of words. Also, this is how I would define internet bullying (non-exhaustive): cyber-harrassment, death threats, repeated unwarranted approaches, LGBT bashing, your basic bullying package.The Internet provides many users an extremely valuable tool: thicker skin.
Please forward this to the parents, family members, and friends of teens who have committed suicide as a result of online bullying.
-rd

















Symmetry wrote:nietzsche wrote:Self censorship should suffice. And If you don't like what some publish, say, avoid those contents.
It's been a great trip so far, in only 20 years we've gone from text based apps to an amazing wealth of graphic apps, including biometrics and dna analizing and all that. From thinking about something and have to stop right there or go to the library, and cross reference 20 books in order to find the outdated answer you were looking for, to simply typing it in in a search site that corrects the spelling, suggest options and when you know exactly what your looking for, it tells you what most people have found usefull/correct.
Let it be govern itself.
What would you suggest when self-censorship fails? I appreciate what you're saying other than that- I've spent too long looking at the problems governments and religions had with print back in the day to think that there isn't a need for an adjustment, but I don't see anarchy as the way forward either.

















Symmetry wrote:Haggis_McMutton wrote:Symmetry wrote:Aye, well put. The idea that society should just toughen up and take whatever comes from people on the internet simply because they did it via the internet is dumb.
Sure, there are limits to everything. But I do think people need to grow some thicker skin in general. The number of silly things people get upset over seems way too high. I don't like that saying "that's offensive" is becoming a conversation stopper similar to "it's my faith".
But essentially you're arguing for a less lawful society, no? That certain things which are currently acknowledged as crimes- say anonymous death threats, theft of private information or property, destruction of property, etc. should simply be accepted as the new norm. Isn't that essentially a passive acceptance of crime, indeed an argument for its tolerance, akin to "You've moved to a bad neighbourhood, you should accept that you're going to be mugged" as an argument as opposed to "Yeah, that's a difficult neignbourhood, we should do something to make it better".

















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