No relation to Bill O'Reilly, but I think Tim O'Reilly has a point. If you allow threats or libel on your blog or web site from anonymous contributors it opens up your website or blog to lawsuits.
Free Speech does not give one the right to threaten others or speak lies about them. In real life cases people who make threats end up in jail, and people who spread lies end up getting sued for libel or slander. This is not responsible behavior and it is just as bad as yelling "fire" in a crowded theater and then getting upset that one gets arrested for a false fire alarm for yelling "fire" and there was no fire.
It is just asking for a code of conduct, of decency, of responsibility which is not too much to ask of. One can still have free speech but they have to avoid making threats and avoid telling lies.
Then again this sort of thing was meant to protect those who make threats and spread lies. How about we just allow them to post whatever they want, and when someone asks who they are, we give them the information so they can sue over the threats being made and the libel being posted so that the posters are held responsible for their free speech. After all, only a true moron would think that they can make threats and spread libel and get away with it scot-free.
I have no problem with websites developing their own posting guidelines and moderation; if someone doesn't like the the rules of conduct on a site, they're always free to start their own.--Cur etiam hic es? [ Parent ]
I suppose the old:
"You are an idiot!"
"Go kill yourself!"
"Morons like you shouldn't be allowed to live or hold those views."
and the like are really abusive and are more personal attacks that distract the rest of us away from a debate or interesting conversation.
On that I agree, and it is more common on political blogs.
I can recall trying to hold a conversation about a Swedish man who defaced pictures of The King in Thailand. I used the argument that freedom of speech is not an issue because the pictures were not his property and he vandalized them, and that makes it a crime. While the other person kept saying that Thailand is medieval and that the man has a right for the freedom of speech to deface and destroy property that isn't his and that by his will they should change the law in Thailand. I tried to explain that vandalizing property that isn't yours is a crime in the EU and the USA, and that hiding behind the freedom of speech does not excuse one from criminal behavior. Anyway the conversation was not worth continuing as this person has no idea of how a Constitution works let alone what is a crime and what is not a crime and thinks that the freedom of speech means you are able to do whatever the hell you want with other people's property including damaging it without being responsible for it.
I tend to think that a blog or a web site is someone else's property, unless you are the one paying for it. The owner has a right to list what the rules are and evict anyone who breaks them. The Swedish man was a guest to Thailand who agreed to obey the law given to him when he showed his passport to visit Thailand. If he vandalized his own pictures there would be no crime. What he did was vandalize government property and got arrested for it. In the same way a web site or blog can be vandalized when a poster makes threats, uses bullying, stifles viewpoints, or just plan write libel. While it is not physical property, it is intangible property, and the owner of said property has rights and freedoms and is responsible for what gets listen on that property. So the owner has the right to remove comments and also users if they break the rules.
The two points aren't exactly the same.
Wumpus [ Parent ]
As far as bloggers go, the host sets the rules and if you don't like it, leave. --Cur etiam hic es? [ Parent ]
http://www.yaledailynews.com/articles/view/20557--Cur etiam hic es? [ Parent ]
Now if this Swedish guy is a guest in someone's house and vandalizes the family pictures of the host and his/her family, it would still be vandalism. If he vandalizes pictures of his own family that he himself owns, then it is not a crime.
Now I understand that the Thai people take their King and Respect of their King very seriously. Perhaps that is why the Thai people had an outrage. Yet it does not change the fact that the guy vandalized government property that did not belong to him.
Imagine if he vandalized pictures at the USA White House, or vandalized pictures at the UK Parliament, I'd expect he'd be charged with the crime of vandalizing just the same. He might even have a civil case filed against him to pay for the bill to restore those paintings to what they were before he vandalized them.
Might be a story here, if I had the time and wanted to work that hard. Earth First! (We can strip mine the rest later.)[ Parent ]
1 I hate that word-- This is not a psychotic episode. It is a cleansing moment of clarity.
camFreedom, liberty, equity and an Australian Republic
Suck it[ Parent ]
I think what comments and conduct are allowed on a site do reflect on the site itself and those who administrate it. If someone allows asshats and related conduct they can cry “free speech” all they want but I don’t think it washes the administration’s hands of it. In my experience sites that allow all but the worst of conduct don’t seem to have gained anything except a bit of an attitude about how they won’t “censor” people because they support free speech. Rather in practical terms allowing such behavior in my experience just creates more such crappy behavior. I think it is reasonable to ask folks not to host such things. Force them no (obviously) but that code of conduct seems reasonable to me.____