---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Jan 25, 2011 at 9:33 AM
Subject: Anonymity has its time and place
To:



*
PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
January 26, 2011
*
Anonymity has its time and place*

By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

Anonymity  has its time and place. The U.S. Supreme Court recognizes it as
"a
shield from the tyranny of the majority" -- not a bad thing! American
forefathers' Federalist papers were written under a nom de plume,
 "Publius."

But in this Internet age, many anonymous postings are uninformed,
 misleading
and ignorant. Some are venomous attacks to hurt and  discredit.

On Nov.  29, 2010, Facebook product design manager Julie Zhuo's New York
Times
article, "Where Anonymous Breeds Contempt," cited psychological research
 that
has "proven again and again that anonymity increases unethical  behavior."

Zhuo contended that in the online world of total anonymity, "People -- even
ordinary, good people -- often change their behavior in radical ways."  She
dubbed it the "online disinhibition effect."

Zhuo says "trolling" -- the posting of inflammatory, derogatory or
 provocative
messages in public forums -- has its roots dating back to  the 4th century
B.C.
Classical Greek philosopher Plato told the parable  of the mythical ring of
Gyges, which gave its owner the power of  invisibility. A habitually just
man
with the Gyges ring would become a  thief. For Plato, morality comes with
full
disclosure -- without  accountability, a man behaves unjustly.

*Accountability*

Zhuo's piece brought letters from readers.

Aden Fine, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, spoke of
 "the
long American tradition" of anonymous speech and the benefits of  permitting
people to express themselves without revealing their  identity. He admitted,
"There will always be people who abuse anonymity,  but people abuse all
sorts of
things that we wouldn't want banned.  Anonymity permits people to say things
that they might not otherwise  say. That's a good thing, even if we don't
always
like what they say."

Zhuo argued that before the Internet age, when someone spoke in public, his
audience would see who was talking; anonymity was then "a rare thing."

Zhuo said the "knowledge that what you say may be seen by the people you
know is
a big deterrent to trollish behavior."

"Instead of waiting around for human nature to change, let's start to rein
in
bad behavior by promoting accountability," she said. Curbing "uncivil
 behavior"
through "raising barriers to posting bad comments is still a  smart first
step."

Ed Tant of Georgia, a columnist for The Athens Banner-Herald, said that just
as printed newspapers require letter writers to sign their  submissions,
online
comments should use the same rule. He quoted former  New York Times
publisher
Arthur Hays Sulzberger: "Along with responsible  newspapers we must have
responsible readers."

David Evans of Massachusetts contended that had those exposed by WikiLeaks
known that their names and writings would be revealed, their messages  would
have been refined or not transmitted at all.

Evans cites President Abraham Lincoln's words to Congress in 1862: "In times
like the present men should utter nothing for which they would not
 willingly be
responsible through time and in eternity."

Darienne Gutierrez of Washington, D.C., supported everybody's right to free
speech, "but it seems that the Internet has opened the doors to a  worrisome
accumulation of irresponsible speech." She backed Zhuo's call  for the
Internet
to replicate real-world social norms and agrees that  "users should be held
accountable"

By requiring Internet users to identify themselves, "Maybe that will make
 them
think twice about what they are about to write," Gutierrez  reasoned. She
quoted
Lincoln, who said, "Better to remain silent and be  thought a fool than to
speak
up and remove all doubt."

*A balance is needed*

On  the same day of Zhuo's article, juxtaposed was the Times's David
 Brooks'
"The Fragile Community," on WikiLeaks, which drew several  hundred letters
from
readers.

Mark  Moorstein of Virginia, commented Brooks' piece "presents an
interesting
moral dilemma inherent in Internet speech," evident in Zhuo's point  that
anonymity permits Internet users "to abuse and to defame," and  WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange's view that "public accountability  always trumps
private
speech."

Moorstein  argued, "Ultimately, we can't have a functioning society without
a
balance of privacy and accountability." He said: "We can't exist as a
 society"
if everyone has a right to know everything about everyone, or  if no one has
a
right to know anything.

Moorstein called for a balance -- "not on any absolute principle, but on an
evaluation of the public and private intentions of the speaker, his good
 faith,
and the consequences of the action." He viewed Zhuo as  "correct," that
public
accountability encourages morality; and Brooks as  "right," that public
accountability -- especially concerning the safety  and protection of our
society -- can go too far, and that "Assange has  gone too far."

I am rather bemused to read vicious anonymous postings that are totally
irrelevant to the subject examined. To insert irrelevant, even
 mean-spirited
commentary into a discussion is far from being  indispensable to civil
debate of
the issue in hand. It is tantamount to  what Plato said: "Wise men speak
because
they have something to say;  Fools, because they have to say something."

I am reminded of Austrian psychiatrist Alfred Adler's definition of an
"inferiority feeling," sometimes apparent by a tendency to blame someone
else:
"Behind everyone who behaves as if he were superior to others, we  can
suspect a
feeling of inferiority which calls for very special  efforts of concealment.
It
is as if a man feared that he was too small  and walked on his toes to make
himself seem tall."

*A. Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam.
Contact him
at [email protected].*

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201101260400/OPINION02/101260321

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