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When putting someone into a killfile, one should do it without hesitation, and without bringing attention to the fact. Killfiling someone and telling them beforehand is on par with running around with your fingers in your ears while screaming LALALALALALA -- Poindexter Fortran
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After 7 or 8 years of this World Wide Web thing, we've all come to know the story: a
great piece of art, of news reporting, of critique or of satire goes up on the Web
somewhere. It gets hits, it gets kudos, it gets involvement from the world. And then, one
day, it's gone. Why? Where'd it go?
More often than not, there's a pathetic little page linked in where the piece used to be,
along the lines of,
I got a cease-and-desist letter today from [name of Bad Guy here]. I think I
have a pretty legitimate case, but they're bigger, they're richer, and they've got more
lawyers than they know what to do with. I'm just a guy/girl with a computer and an idea.
I can't fight them. I'm sorry, but I had to take the site down. Thanks to everyone who
enjoyed it.
It's always a heartbreaker to see this. The mind reels -- couldn't they have fought it?
Couldn't they have stood up? If we all bend like this, won't they take us out one by one?
Am -- uh -- am I next?
The Web has been really spectacular in allowing practically ANYONE with sufficient skillz
to publish their dream work. But the flipside of that opportunity to publish is that Web
publishers tend to have far less experience with legal issues, and access to legal
resources, than traditional publishing powerhouses. We're divided and isolated. Face it:
we're easy pickings.
That's why I'm pretty excited about the new project from a coalition of cyberlaw
organizations called Chilling Effects. The point of the project is to document and
track legal threats against Web publishers and their ilk, with the hope of developing
strategies for small publishers to deal with these type of threats.
Maybe with Chilling Effects starting to catch some steam, we'll see a time in the
not-so-distant future where First Amendment rights of free expression and a free press
are protected on the Internet, instead of squelched de facto by legal teams with
too much money and time on their hands -- and too much to lose from letting the truth be
told.
Check it out yourself
mustard@pigdog.org
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