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Thread: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

  1. #1
    Mod Law zombie-a-go-go's Avatar
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    Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Annoying someone via the Internet is now a federal crime.

    It's no joke. Last Thursday, President Bush signed into law a prohibition on posting annoying Web messages or sending annoying e-mail messages without disclosing your true identity.

    In other words, it's OK to flame someone on a mailing list or in a blog as long as you do it under your real name. Thank Congress for small favors, I guess.

    This ridiculous prohibition, which would likely imperil much of Usenet, is buried in the so-called Violence Against Women and Department of Justice Reauthorization Act. Criminal penalties include stiff fines and two years in prison.

    "The use of the word 'annoy' is particularly problematic," says Marv Johnson, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union. "What's annoying to one person may not be annoying to someone else."

    A new federal law states that when you annoy someone on the Internet, you must disclose your identity. Here's the relevant language.

    "Whoever...utilizes any device or software that can be used to originate telecommunications or other types of communications that are transmitted, in whole or in part, by the Internet... without disclosing his identity and with intent to annoy, abuse, threaten, or harass any person...who receives the communications...shall be fined under title 18 or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.
    More:

    http://news.com.com/Create+an+e-anno...2491&subj=news
    "It's easier to give up. I'm not a very vocal player. I lead by example. I take the attitude that I've got to go out and do it. Because of who I am, I've got to give everything I've got to come back."
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    Rally Onion! Chip R's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Quote Originally Posted by zombie-a-go-go
    I guess Bad Fundamentals should be in prison for life then.
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    I was wrong
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    Chip is right

  4. #3
    Maple SERP savafan's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Stupid. To avoid being political, that's all I'm going to say.
    My dad got to enjoy 3 Reds World Championships by the time he was my age. So far, I've only gotten to enjoy one. Step it up Redlegs!

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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    This topic annoys me. Please disclose your real Name, social secuirty number, telephone number and give me $30 so I don't sue you.

  6. #5
    I rig polls REDREAD's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    It will certainly be interesting to see if any trolls are actually prosecuted under this new dumb law. The loose definition of the word "annoy" could get us all put in jail.
    [Phil ] Castellini celebrated the team's farm system and noted the team had promising prospects who would one day be great Reds -- and then joke then they'd be ex-Reds, saying "of course we're going to lose them". #SellTheTeamBob

    Nov. 13, 2007: One of the greatest days in Reds history: John Allen gets the boot!

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    Mod Law zombie-a-go-go's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Quote Originally Posted by Chip R
    I guess Bad Fundamentals should be in prison for life then.

    That's teh funny! You win!!!1!!1!
    "It's easier to give up. I'm not a very vocal player. I lead by example. I take the attitude that I've got to go out and do it. Because of who I am, I've got to give everything I've got to come back."
    -Ken Griffey Jr.

  8. #7
    Maple SERP savafan's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Will the Nigerians be held accountable under this law? Of course not, you can't legislate an international community.
    My dad got to enjoy 3 Reds World Championships by the time he was my age. So far, I've only gotten to enjoy one. Step it up Redlegs!

  9. #8
    He has the Evil Eye! flyer85's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Have you guys received your warrants yet? :

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    Strategery RFS62's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Quote Originally Posted by Chip R
    I guess Bad Fundamentals should be in prison for life then.

    Death Row
    We'll go down in history as the first society that wouldn't save itself because it wasn't cost effective ~ Kurt Vonnegut

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    Member pedro's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    I guess we should all go into the prison building biz then. At least then we can make sure our cells will be nice and roomy when we get there.
    School's out. What did you expect?

  12. #11
    Rally Onion! Chip R's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Quote Originally Posted by pedro
    I guess we should all go into the prison building biz then. At least then we can make sure our cells will be nice and roomy when we get there.
    Just change your name to Pedro if you're worried.
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    I was wrong
    Quote Originally Posted by Raisor View Post
    Chip is right

  13. #12
    RZ Chamber of Commerce Unassisted's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    At a prominent discussion site, an anonymous Federal government lawyer disagrees completely with the writer's assessment of the new criminality of trolling. Fair Warning: Don't click the link if you are profanity-averse.

    http://www.boingboing.net/2006/01/09...ne_anonym.html

  14. #13
    I hate the Cubs LoganBuck's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    DanO is getting ready to wear us out!
    Hugs, smiling, and interactive Twitter accounts, don't mean winning baseball. Until this community understands that we are cursed to relive the madness.

  15. #14
    Member 919191's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    But being annoying in person is still legal, right?
    I've been to dinner at Jimmy Buffet's house, and I've eaten it at a homeless shelter. And there's great joy and harrowing terror to be found in both places.
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  16. #15
    Maple SERP savafan's Avatar
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    Re: Being annoying on the internet now a federal crime

    Now we have our first lawsuit.

    http://www.courttv.com/news/2006/011..._suit_ctv.html

    By J.K. Dineen
    Court TV

    Mike Marlowe fully admits that he sometimes gave George Gillespie a hard time in that AOL chatroom.

    But never in his wildest imagination did he expect to be sued in court for what he characterized as "razzing."

    "We gave him crap," said Marlowe, a 33-year-old welder in Fayette, Ala. "I'm not going to deny it. I teased him and he teased me back. He gave it back better than he ever got it."

    A generation ago, such petty personal beefs might have been settled with fists outside the corner bar, but now it's the Internet age — and Ohio resident George Gillespie instead filed a $25,000 lawsuit against two erstwhile cyber chums he met in the sprawling 900-room, mostly anonymous society that makes up AOL's chat universe.

    Gillespie, 53, claims that Marlowe and Bob Charpentier, a 52-year-old Oregon resident, insulted him and harassed him in the AOL chatroom called "Romance — Older Men" to the point where it inflicted "severe emotional distress and physical injury that is of a nature no reasonable man could be expected to endure it."

    The complaint, expected in court on Jan. 31 for a pretrial conference, also names AOL as a defendant for allowing the alleged harassment to take place.

    Gillespie alleges that the duo intruded into his "private affairs." The complaint states that Marlowe actually drove from Alabama to Ohio to photograph the plaintiff's home, which he then posted on the Web. He also allegedly went to the courthouse in Medina to dig up personal dirt on Gillespie, which he then also disseminated over the Internet.

    The case is not simply "someone conversing in a chatroom" but also involves "harassing someone in Ohio," which gives Ohio courts jurisdiction, according to Gillespie's lawyers.

    "Had the defendants stayed in the chatrooms, there would be no jurisdiction here, case closed" Gillespie's attorney Theodore Lesiak stated in the complaint. "Defendant did not."

    But Marlowe said he works 60 hours a week at an autobody shop and laughed at the notion that he would drive from Alabama to Ohio to take pictures of Gillespie's house.

    "I have never been to Ohio and I have absolutely no desire to go to Ohio," Marlowe said. "There is nothing there — the Cincinnati Bengals are there, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame maybe, and that's about it."

    Even if Marlowe did take a trip to Ohio, posting a picture of someone's house on the Internet does not violate privacy laws, according to Chris Hoofnagle, attorney with the Electronic Privacy Information Center.

    "Those norms require the aggressor to engage in behavior that is highly offensive to a reasonable person," he said. "Taking a picture of somebody's house and putting it up on the Web is not that."

    Hoofnagle said Gillespie's emotional distress claim will also be tough to prove.

    "We live in a rough society, as compared to Europe, where offending someone or directly cursing or attacking their dignity can give you a cause of action," he said.

    Power Struggle in 'Romance — Older Men'

    Charpentier said he first encountered Gillespie more than five years ago and at first, the two chatters were friendly. But Charpentier says he quickly became disenchanted by what he saw as Gillespie's mean streak.

    Things really turned ugly four years ago when Charpentier traveled to Kentucky to meet another chatroom regular, a woman who was also a friend of Gillespie's. The blind date did not go particularly well, and when Charpentier returned to he discovered that Gillespie had gone on the attack.

    "He just came in slamming on me, saying all kinds of derogatory crap: that I was a fat, bald, broke old man who sits around in a rusted wheelchair," said Charpentier, who has a chronic back injury. "I don't even own a wheelchair."

    Charpentier, who has filed a response seeking to reserve the right to file a $125,000 countersuit against Gillespie, said Gillespie threatened to kill him and "made sick and disgusting remarks about the passing of my grandmother."

    "He is an AOL computer thug, that is all he is," Charpentier said.

    Marlowe characterized the dispute as a petty power struggle. He said Gillespie was the de facto leader of the "Romance — Older Men" chatroom, and didn't like it when he and Charpentier challenged his authority.

    But Marlowe said he never took the chatroom antics personally — until he was served with a lawsuit.

    "I don't know how four years of bantering back and forth led to this insane nonsense," he said. "It's just the Internet, for God's sake. It's nothing important."

    Michael Gordon, an attorney for AOL, declined to comment, saying, "This is just the beginning stages of this thing."

    Megan Gray, a Washington D.C.-based intellectual property attorney who specializes in cyber issues, called it "a loser of a case." She said the Communications Decency Act gives AOL immunity from chatroom misconduct.

    "AOL cannot be held liable for the actions of people on the site," she said.

    She also suggested the case against Marlowe and Charpentier was doomed.

    "The Internet is such a vibrant, young medium, these types of cases are not taken seriously," she said.
    My dad got to enjoy 3 Reds World Championships by the time he was my age. So far, I've only gotten to enjoy one. Step it up Redlegs!


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