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RE: Dr. Vulis' social engineering experiment
Toto writes:
> Just because an individual claims, rightly or wrongly, to be a
> big defender of freedom, involving himself or herself in causes
> like those of the Electronic Freedom Foundation, does not take
> away their right to stomp on anyone who disagrees with them on
> their own private list.
Of course
> To claim otherwise would be as ludicrous as denying the person
> running the Anonymizer the right to expose the identities of the
> people he feels might perhaps be abusing his private system, or
> using it for nefarious purposes, such as hiding their identity
> from others.
I suspect you intended that to be sarcasm, but to be honest I
wouldn't have caught it at all if I wasn't already aware of your
views in this area. The person hosting the Anonymizer *does*
have the right to do exactly this. I don't believe they would do
so, but that is a reputation issue not a question of my rights.
If I had entered into a contract with the provider of a service of
this nature then I would have a 'right' to expect their contractual
obligations to be fulfilled, but that is not the case with the
Anonymizer and certainly not with toad.com.
regards,
-Blake (freedom of the press for those with presses)