roddy All American 25834 Posts user info edit post |
wonder how much the job paid?
Quote : | "Montanez, the fired blogger in Pittsburgh, said she's trying to find an upside in what's happened to her. Her former employer, the Negro Educational Emergency Drive, did not respond to CNN requests for comment.
She doesn't like the idea of being in the public eye. She describes herself as shy and said part of the reason she wanted to remain anonymous was so she wouldn't draw attention to herself. She also feels like her larger-than-life persona has been somewhat deflated now that readers know who she is.
But now that she's out, she figures she might as well try to capitalize on her newfound openness.
"I just want to write and get paid for it," she said" |
[Edited on August 21, 2009 at 7:46 PM. Reason : w]8/21/2009 7:46:17 PM |
BubbleBobble Super Duper Veteran 114363 Posts user info edit post |
well then 8/21/2009 7:48:12 PM |
OmarBadu zidik 25071 Posts user info edit post |
oh nice - 0 details 8/21/2009 7:51:47 PM |
chocolatervh All American 22986 Posts user info edit post |
is there a beginning to this story? 8/21/2009 8:33:41 PM |
BobbyDigital Thots and Prayers 41777 Posts user info edit post |
roddy makes shitty threads
what else is new? 8/21/2009 8:34:41 PM |
JCASHFAN All American 13916 Posts user info edit post |
or perhaps a middle? 8/21/2009 8:35:41 PM |
Spontaneous All American 27372 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "I just want to write and get paid for it," she said" |
*Frontal lobe pain*8/21/2009 8:38:45 PM |
miska All American 22242 Posts user info edit post |
maybe she's the next Dooce 8/21/2009 8:39:20 PM |
BigHitSunday Dick Danger 51059 Posts user info edit post |
this thread brings all the boys to the yard 8/21/2009 8:43:50 PM |
Ronny All American 30652 Posts user info edit post |
roddy makes shitty threads
what else is new? 8/21/2009 10:29:01 PM |
ambrosia1231 eeeeeeeeeevil 76471 Posts user info edit post |
jesus, you can't even include a link? 8/21/2009 10:32:28 PM |
ScHpEnXeL Suspended 32613 Posts user info edit post |
wtf
she's shy and wants to be left alone? why the fuck is she a blogger 8/21/2009 10:43:06 PM |
roddy All American 25834 Posts user info edit post |
that little paragraph sums it up...she is a anoymous blogger, she revealed who she was, she got fired...pretty much in the portion I quoted...that was the summary, the rest of the article talked about other incidence...Omar, the lounge is calling....Bobby, Old School might have a new post!
[Edited on August 22, 2009 at 2:27 AM. Reason : w] 8/22/2009 2:26:03 AM |
Ronny All American 30652 Posts user info edit post |
If by "pretty much" you mean "not really" then yes.
[Edited on August 22, 2009 at 2:27 AM. Reason : fuck this thread.] 8/22/2009 2:26:55 AM |
ThePeter TWW CHAMPION 37709 Posts user info edit post |
oh nice - 0 details 8/22/2009 2:27:37 AM |
khcadwal All American 35165 Posts user info edit post |
i get ronny and roddy confused
which one of you is indie and takes pictures? 8/22/2009 2:27:44 AM |
Ronny All American 30652 Posts user info edit post |
indie? what the hell do you mean?
I'm not signed to a label, major or independent. 8/22/2009 2:29:43 AM |
khcadwal All American 35165 Posts user info edit post |
ok FINE
which one of you was at the javelin, l walker, future islands show? 8/22/2009 2:31:13 AM |
Ronny All American 30652 Posts user info edit post |
How do you know only one of us was there? 8/22/2009 2:32:39 AM |
khcadwal All American 35165 Posts user info edit post |
oh jesus christ come on 8/22/2009 2:33:13 AM |
wilso All American 14657 Posts user info edit post |
I have it on good authority that Ronny is, in fact, currently unsigned but looking for a record contract. 8/22/2009 2:34:37 AM |
khcadwal All American 35165 Posts user info edit post |
so it was him that i saw.
sweet. 8/22/2009 2:36:16 AM |
lafta All American 14880 Posts user info edit post |
in other news, Drug dealer in jail
Quote : | "Los Angeles police have captured a criminal and put him behind bars. Srg. Leonel Tuck made the arrest and found what seems to be evidence to link the suspect with the crime. Upon discovery the Srg. did what all policemen do, he arrested the suspect and brought him to jail. When give a chance to make a phone call the suspect refused and opted instead send an email. His trial will on sept. 32 in Los Francisco"" |
[Edited on August 22, 2009 at 2:38 AM. Reason : .]8/22/2009 2:38:21 AM |
Supplanter supple anteater 21831 Posts user info edit post |
I remember reading this earlier today, here is the whole story with the article from whence it came:
http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/08/21/outing.anonymous.bloggers/index.html
Quote : | "The coming-out stories of anonymous bloggers
(CNN) -- Blog fans in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, saw PittGirl as their masked superhero -- a comedian and local commentator who jibed the mayor without reserve and ranted freely about her hatred of pigeons.
But despite her effort to keep her real name secret, people started to figure out who PittGirl was.
Feeling pressure to take control of her identity before someone else outed her, PittGirl on Wednesday posted pictures of herself on her blog and introduced readers to her real-world self: Virginia Montanez, a 35-year-old married mother of two who worked in the nonprofit sector.
"My friends and family call me Ginny," she wrote on her blog. "But you can continue to call me Your Majesty, because I've grown accustomed."
On Thursday morning, Montanez was fired from her job because of her online persona, she said.
Montanez's and other online coming-out stories highlight the complicated way people view anonymity on the Internet and the high stakes that come with trying to keep up an online persona.
The reasons people want to be anonymous online vary. Political whistle blowers fear retribution; employees want to separate the personal from the professional; artists want their work to stand up without an attached biography; and some writers like Montanez take on a sort of Everyman quality by keeping their real names off their posts.
But there also are reasons why a person with an online persona might want to come out of the closet.
Some anonymous bloggers, like PittGirl, worry their veils of anonymity will be pulled back against their will, and plenty of news events validate their fears.
Earlier this week, for example, a New York Supreme Court judge forced Google to reveal the identity of a blogger who had been posting rants about onetime cover girl Liskula Cohen on Blogger.com, which Google owns.
No true anonymity
That case, and similar ones before it, send the message that the cloak of online anonymity easily can be lifted, said Judith Donath, a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University.
But it's difficult to say whether the Web is becoming more or less anonymous, she said.
"What's increasing is the range of forums and the types of anonymous environments people have to choose among," she said.
Some sites, like Facebook, encourage people to give lots of information about their real-world selves. Blogs are more of a mixed bag, she said, where many people write under assumed names or put their words in the mouths of invented characters.
But such split identities can easily be merged -- either through the judicial process or by using technology.
Courts have set general guidelines that a plaintiff must meet before forcing a person out of online anonymity. But the rules are still in the making and are up for interpretation, said Daniel Solove, a law professor at the George Washington University Law School and author of "The Future of Reputation."
On one end of the spectrum, a court could out a blogger simply because a legal action is filed against the person. That's troublesome because any good attorney could leverage the courts simply to expose a person's identity, he said.
At the other extreme, a judge could say a plaintiff must prove the blogger defamed someone before forcing a company like Google to reveal the person's identity.
Technology also can be used to unmask someone.
Matt Zimmerman, senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which advocates for the rights of anonymous speech, said there are tools people can use to try to hide their footprints online. But none is 100 percent effective, he said.
That leaves some online writers who use pseudonyms in the stressful situation of not knowing if or when their real names will be revealed.
Blogging waiter wants publicity
For Steve Dublanica, a New York City waiter who ragged on his customers for years through a blog called Waiter Rant, the tension of being outed gnawed at his stomach like a bad cheeseburger.
Dublanica said his boss and co-workers knew of his blog. But as his site got more and more popular, people started having contests to figure out who he was.
He valued his secrecy because he says it afforded him creative freedom and access to good material. "If [the customers] know you're going to write down what they're saying or what they're doing they tend to act differently," he said.
Dublanica didn't out himself because of the stress of keeping the secret, though. He got a book deal. And he wanted the publicity and recognition that came with it.
"The nice thing about not being anonymous is I can take credit for all the work I do," he said. "The bad stuff ... was that it was terrifying in the beginning. You just didn't know how people were going to treat you."
Alaska blogger outed by politician
Jeanne Devon, a 43-year-old political blogger in Alaska, had her identity revealed after a state legislator published her name in a newsletter.
Devon, who blogs on a site called The Mudflats, says she has mixed feeling about being forced out of the closet. In one sense, she says, she was able to be more herself while writing under an assumed name.
"There are things that you know, or that you feel sort of in your heart of hearts, that you might not want to put out there in a public way" with your name attached, she said. "If people always spoke without filters, we'd learn a lot more."
She also says she has felt more support from her readers and her community since her real name was published.
Some bloggers who post under their real names say that those who write under pseudonyms have something to hide or don't want to be held accountable to their audiences.
Getting 'dooced'
Heather B. Armstrong, who was fired from her job after her employer discovered her blog, Dooce, where she posted under her real name, said there are few valid reasons a blogger should veil his or her identity.
"I think if you're doing something anonymously you've got some issues going on," she said. "There's a reason that you're hiding."
People now use the term "dooced" to refer to being fired because of a personal blog.
Armstrong, who writes about her family, says she's received all kinds of hate mail -- from people who call her kids ugly to those who tell her she's an unfit mother and should have her children taken away from her.
Being honest about her identity has helped Armstrong get through those criticisms and through other hard times.
"I credit my audience with saving my life back when I had postpartum depression because of all of the encouraging e-mails they sent me," she said. "The good far, far, far outweighs the bad, and my life has been incredibly enriched through the Internet."
Hero unmasked
Montanez, the fired blogger in Pittsburgh, said she's trying to find an upside in what's happened to her. Her former employer, the Negro Educational Emergency Drive, did not respond to CNN requests for comment.
She doesn't like the idea of being in the public eye. She describes herself as shy and said part of the reason she wanted to remain anonymous was so she wouldn't draw attention to herself. She also feels like her larger-than-life persona has been somewhat deflated now that readers know who she is.
But now that she's out, she figures she might as well try to capitalize on her newfound openness." |
Short Version:
Quote : | "Story Highlights # Formerly anonymous bloggers share their coming-out stories with CNN # The writers can be forced to give up their identities by courts or technology # Earlier this week, a judge ordered Google to give over the identity of a blogger # Another outed blogger says she was fired for her online opinions" |
[Edited on August 22, 2009 at 2:52 AM. Reason : .]8/22/2009 2:51:22 AM |
GREEN JAY All American 14180 Posts user info edit post |
fired for beign an alias 8/22/2009 4:17:40 AM |
kiljadn All American 44690 Posts user info edit post |
Suspend roddy for being a fucking moron
give Supplanter $5 for making the save 8/22/2009 12:01:32 PM |
ThePeter TWW CHAMPION 37709 Posts user info edit post |
^almost...he didn't bold the relevant highlights from the main article 8/22/2009 12:05:31 PM |
EMCE balls deep 89771 Posts user info edit post |
O_o8/22/2009 12:10:12 PM |
69 Suspended 15861 Posts user info edit post |
internet tuff guys called out 8/22/2009 1:45:21 PM |