Spammers Threaten Techdirt With Lawsuit 303
An anonymous reader writes "Found over at Declan McCullough's Politech, some spammers who had been written up in the NY Times found their contact info displayed on Techdirt, after they wrote about the NY Times story. Apparently, someone was trying to pull a Ralsky on the spammers. The spammers got pissed off and threatened to sue Techdirt - even though all the info was publicly available and other court cases have shown it's legal to post spammer's contact information. Techdirt, interestingly, took the contact info down because they feel that no one should get spammed. I'm kind of torn on this one. On the one hand, I respect Techdirt for taking such a stand, but on the other, I feel that the spammers clearly deserve to be spammed back. The fact that they threatened Techdirt, despite them not having done anything wrong (it wasn't even the folks at Techdirt who posted the info - but some readers), makes me even angrier at the spammer."
You have the money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You have the money? (Score:5, Interesting)
RTFA. Techdirt specifically said the threat had nothing to do with their decision, since it was unlikely to happen and even less likely to succeed. They pulled the information out of respect for privacy.
Personally, I disagree. In general, a business has little or no right to privacy; their address is required by law to be public knowledge. IMHO, a business that intentionally intrudes on people's lives deserves none at all. But more importantly, contact information for Alyxsandra Sachs is public, not private:
Furthermore: from the NYT article [nytimes.com]: "These antispammers should get a life," she said. "Do their fingers hurt too much from pressing the delete key? How much time does that really take from their day?"
Between downloading it from our mail server, sorting it into a local folder, skimming the preview, and pressing delete, my office spends a couple thousand dollars a year in salaried employee time. Does that answer your question, Alyx?
Re:You have the money? (Score:2, Insightful)
If it were only the time to delete the spam, I wouldn't be terribly upset. I did a back of the envelope calculation at a previous job and determined that my employer could save money by dedicating 2 people full time to stopping spam if they could reduce it by at least half. However, here are s
Re:You have the money? (Score:5, Informative)
Sachs, Alyxsandra
112 Catamaran St
Marina Del Rey, CA 90292
(310) 578-1728
the address of the other two (Score:5, Informative)
Albert Ahdoot (NETGLOBALMARKETING-COM-DOM)
Net Global Marketing Inc.
18375 Ventura Blvd
Suite 326
Tarzana, CA 91356
USA
3238459660
2069841344
aahdoot@yahoo
Domain Name: NETGLOBALMARKETING.COM
Administrative Contact:
Richard Stewart support@usmnet.net
219 North Main
Suite 210
Bryan, TX 77803
USA
9798222827
Re:the address of the other two (Score:3, Informative)
Richard Stewart is unfortunately a common name. There are at least 50 matches in Texas.
Ask her the same questions... (Score:2, Informative)
Here's a better for question Alyx. How long does it take to throw out all of those catalogs that slashdot readers have thougtfully sent your way? You know, you could just have someone look through your mail for you (mail filter).
But you complain that the mailman won't deliver your mail when your box is full? Kind of how my
Re:You have the money? (Score:2)
Umm... That's exactly what I did [google.com]. Techdirt's case would have been even stronger, since they merely provided a discussion forum and a 3rd party posted the information.
Re:You have the money? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bullies should not be allowed to win. By allowing a bully to win, you encourage them to bully others.
Re:You have the money? (Score:2)
I did most of the legal research and analysis. Some states provides an anti-slapp statute which provides for a quick resolution to a slapp case.
Casp.net [casp.net] provides a list of state laws about SLAPPs.
Laughable. (Score:3, Insightful)
How very naive of them. Why shouldn't the people that force us to take extreme measures for a little bit of privacy, convenience, not be made to deal with the same garbage that we do?
Re:Laughable. (Score:5, Insightful)
Because they are idealists, which means that they will never get anything done and they will always be inconvenienced by their ideals. That said, we can all benefit from those who believe so strongly in their ideals since the majority of us are weak enough to compromise our ideals any time it is convenient, profitable, fun, or whatever other excuse we invent.
Re:Laughable. (Score:2)
Re:Laughable. (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, what I think is interesting also it that ultimately it is the lawyers that won. Techdirt attracted attention to itself and the issue, the spammers had their information taken down (although I suspect more people will find that information in the Google cache or other websites) and the lawyers got their $500 fee for sending that letter.
Everyone wins, except us.
Every time a
Re:Laughable. (Score:5, Insightful)
If they want to send unsolicited junk mail, either because they think that it's okay, or they don't care that it's wrong, they've got no right to complain about the same thing being done to them, and people who have been spammed by them suffer no karmic penalty for doing so.
Likewise, if the spammers are going to try and claim that the right to free speech protects them, they've certainly got no right to try and sue people who use their right to free speech to tell their friends which incoming email addresses they should block.
Re:Laughable. (Score:2)
But do we let the victim into the thief's home and let them pick out something to keep?
or when the murdering bad guy in a movie gets killed
In the movies, murdering bad guys usually don't have families that care about and love them. In the real world, they do.
Your analogies are weak.
Re:Laughable. (Score:2)
We return the stolen items to the victem and/or give them some cash, and let the thief figure out what to sell to come up with the cash, so? How exactly does that relate to the question at hand? An eye for an eye is a metaphorical example, and even people who believe in the general idea don't insist that it be carried out in an exactly literal way for every case.
In the movies, murdering bad guys usually don't have fa
Re:Laughable. (Score:2)
Personally i think having Bush as my unelected "god-king" is more than punishment enough thank you very much. It certainly meets the stupidity requirement in my opinion.
They were wrong (Score:2)
Perhaps some of the readers might have only had physical injury or substantial property damage to the spammers.
The techdirt people should also remember that spammers are in the most literal sense, enemies of all humanity and we are entitled to know who our enemies are and where to find them.
Which spammers? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Which spammers? (Score:2, Insightful)
they're missing it (Score:3, Funny)
For instance, I would benefit those rich guys so much by offering some business opportunity in Nigeria I'm into.
Ah, praise the lord for those helping guys, always wanting to inform you about the latest and greatest offers, and refusing to accept anything in exchange...
Re:Which spammers? These spammers (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Which spammers? These spammers (Score:2)
Re:Which spammers? These spammers (Score:5, Funny)
"These antispammers should get a life," she said. "Do their fingers hurt too much from pressing the delete key? How much time does that really take from their day?"
By contrast, she said, "70 million people have bad credit. Guess what? Now I can't get mail through to them to help them."
Did anyone else reading that feel a powerful compulsion to punch her in the face? As someone who recieves anything up to 200 pieces of spam a DAY now, I know I did.
Re:Which spammers? These spammers (Score:2, Informative)
Alyxsandra Sachs
112 Catamaran St
Marina Del Rey
CA 90292-5769
(310)578-1728
info@netglobalmarketing.com
Albert Ahdoot
323-871-2000x11
Fax Number: 323-871-0625
aahdoot@yahoo.com
Congratulations (Score:2, Funny)
Congratulations on your intelligence. On the other hand, I guess if you were smart, you might not have to be a spammer for a living.
The reason you're torn... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:3, Insightful)
Leviticus 24:19 If anyone injures his neighbor, whatever he has done must be done to him: 20 frac
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:2)
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:2, Funny)
Ah, but in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man
is king!
Moral? You get one eye poked out, hide out and wait
for the poking to stop, then declare yourself king.
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:2)
I've been to a country where they cut off your hand for stealing. I didn't notice any amputees. But my father accidentally left his wallet behind in plain view on a busy street. It was still there the next day.
I'm not arguing for amputation justice, but if there was a hefty fine for speeding and lo
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:2)
Yes it is. With "them"= 'those that hurt others' and "us"= 'those that don't'.
Ever exceeded the speed limit? Ever crossed a street against the light?
Both of those are victimless crimes. No victim 'blinded', no need for the one who broke the law to be 'blinded', either.
?But our society embraces the idea of proportional
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:2)
Well you'd better tell that to all the justices over the years who've awarded exemplary damages.
Exemplary damages are awarded in addition to general damages, where the court wishes not only to compensate the victim of a tort, but to punish the defendant. They are also known as punitive damages or retributive damages. The court is more than happy to award retributive damages and cares not a whit for the motivation of the applicant.
Re:The reason you're torn... (Score:2)
Spamassassin helps. (Score:2)
Maybe we should just resign ourselves to having to treat spam like viruses. Fixing the symptoms and not the cause.
It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:5, Interesting)
When you are a small site, or an individual person without a tremendous income (read: everyone short of a CEO), that basically means "any company, or even individual, can threaten to sue you, and there goes whatever you were working on."
This seems to be a rather disturbing new part of our market reality.
Recall the DeCSS case. Several dozen named defendants, and several hundred "Does", were threatened in court by the DVD-CCA, acting as a representative of the interests of some of the largest companies on Earth. Whammo, most of the people capitulated, the courts bowed to the pressure of the RIAA's fat pocketbooks, and the DVD-CCA's will became law-- DeCSS is now effectively "illegal". Cases like this spam one seem to be the result of "trickle-down" thinking-- or as Star Control 2 would have it, "dribble-down"-- whereby smaller and smaller companies begin to adopt the same nasty tactics.
Let's face it-- if you run a small and/or non-profit site, and if some company or businessperson with lots of money (or even a moderate amount of money) makes a credible threat to send in the lawyers, you're at least as likely as not to give in to their pressure. It's simple survival instinct-- no one wants to get sued, especially (A) in this economy and (B) by someone with much fatter coffers than themselves.
What this is leading to is a situation where the rich can effectively (and, as close to possible, directly-- about the only more direct way would be to put a gun to one's head!) force the poor to do whatever they want. No laws (legal, moral or otherwise) really seem to touch the really "big fish" (RIAA, MPAA, Microsoft, etc.), and they get away with a slap on the wrist-analogue at worst; now, even smaller entities like these spammers can effectively throw their monetary weight around to silence dot-bomb-impoverished techies running innocent sites.
I fear that this trend will become far more pervasive, and will get far worse before it gets better. If it ever gets better... I personally do not believe that the current Powers That Be in the US really care that much about "the little guys" getting spurious lawsuit threats every time they do something someone Richer-Than-Thou happens to dislike...
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't pretend this to be the disease of the 21st century just because we're using the law instead of money or guns. And then again, the laws have always been bent by the guys in charge.
While i don't approve of it, it seems to be the nature of the human beast. It's amazing how we haven't exterminated ourselves.
As a side note : i find the way Berlusconi is CEO of Italy far more frightening than what the US is doing. After all, we europeans excpect US politicians to be puppets in the hands of the big corporations. But Berlusconi is a whole other matter.
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2)
thats' why i'm so afraid of the situation. In the usa, you know that the bigshots can be kept happy by keeping the public quiet and the bigshots rich. Berlusconi gives the impression that that isn't eonough for him. I mean, the guy is a fucking billionaire ! He's stinking rich. He doesn't need to be prime minister to achieve power & wealth because he allready had those BEFORE he went into politics. The guy is quite hard to pinpoint on the
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:4, Interesting)
I realize this is wishful thinking, and way too late, but what do you suppose would have happened if the various DVD-player-for-Windows software houses had taken that lesson to heart and declined to produce their players? Would the sudden lack of legal players for Windows have had a noticeable effect on the MPAA? It would certainly have had some effect on their potential market, but would it have been enough?
Ah well, too late now. And anyway, it would only have required one software house to not give a damn...
BTW, do any of the legal Windows DVD players work well in Linux?
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2)
Anyway, getting back to the topic, if all of those companies had done that, then they wouldn't have to deal with MPAA licensing, an
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:4, Insightful)
The issue here is your "comfort zone." If you, a geek, start talking tech in a threatening way to your techno-phobe neighbor, he's not going to argue with you or try to fight back. He's out of his element. Same with a geek who is being intimidated by someone who is law-savvy. We tend to cringe, apologize and hope they go away. The fact that they might be able to hurt us financially makes us take their threats seriously. If they did the same thing to a lawyer they would probably get a far different response.
Think about it - you and you neighbor have a little spat about a fence or a barking dog or something. You threaten to "route his Roadrunner connection through your proxy sniffer and VPN his DoS to every kiddie-porn site in the country." Imagine the expression on his face. What are his options? Hire a techie to defend himself? That costs money. He doesn't even understand what you said, except that it sounds bad and you sound serious. He's gonna fold.What we really need to do to stop this legal-bullying is to get more familiar with the law.
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2)
More like a sad fact of modern US life.
Anyway, according to the Techdirt folks, they didn't consider a lawsuit when taking this down. Quote:
Please note: we did not remove this info due to the threat of the lawsuit, but simply because we think spam, of any nature is bad. Even if it's against those who practice it on others. I, also, am not sure what sort of lawsuit they could level against us. We did not do this to "play it safe" - because I don't believe there's a real threat. We did this (after some int
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2)
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:4, Insightful)
If this is indeed how americans view their legal system, then I think it's time for them (you) to do something to change it.
It's one thing that your only measure of quality of life is wealth, another one entirely that relative amount of money is the only thing separating right from wrong. While the judicial system is no absolute in right vs. wrong in theory, it is in practice.
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:3, Insightful)
The sad fact of the matter is that there hasn't been an effective widespread protest movement since the '60s here in the US. And there won't be any time soon.
The apathy of the American population is growing, not shrinking. Attempting to motivate them to protest anything at all is an exercise in futility.
Not to be a pessimist, but... that's how I see it. YMMV.
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2, Insightful)
I disagree, the problem is not apathy but how out of touch the wanna-be protest organizers are with America.
Of course anti-war protesters, many of whom cut their teeth in the 60's, couldn't mobilize America as well as they would have liked. Most of America saw right through their outrageous lies and bombastic rhetoric. (Hint: No matter how many times you saw i
The end of Slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
Okay everybody, the game is over and JessLeah is the winner. Slashdot will now be closed.
LAST POST!
Re:The end of Slashdot (Score:3, Interesting)
The post started at 2 (cuz I have nice karma), and got a bunch of mod-ups and ONE mod-down ("Offtopic"). So the Slash code did the math and dutifully reported the score as 5 (correct)... and of course focused solely on the fact that my post was modded "Offtopic". Of all the modding done to my post, it only noted the ONE NEGATIVE MOD in the Score line.
And I thought I saw the world through
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:3, Interesting)
This of course will mean they are civil service rather than high-flight professional jobs, but will democratize access to legal representation. Since it won't be he-who-has-the-best-lawyer-on-retainer wins, it will be a much chancier thing to threaten a lawsuit.
It might even make people take a deep breath, step back, and think whether we really need 1/5 of our economy or more to be
pro se (Score:3, Interesting)
Throwing some cash at a good paralegal in
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2)
Re:It's a sad fact of modern life... (Score:2)
sounds like spammers can't take their own medicine (Score:5, Interesting)
we should launch the friggin holy war of tech against spam.
we have bayesian filters, RBL lists, white lists.. all sorts of tools that only attack the tip of the problem. We all need to get together and destroy the many bases of spam. The US government has its war against terror. We nerds should launch our war against spammers. We are just as capable to fight this war as the US is to fight theirs.
Re:sounds like spammers can't take their own medic (Score:5, Funny)
I thought that the war for all the bases wasn't scheduled to start until A.D. 2101 [allyourbase.net]...
Re:sounds like spammers can't take their own medic (Score:2)
"all your spam are belong to marklar"
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:sounds like spammers can't take their own medic (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:sounds like spammers can't take their own medic (Score:3, Funny)
Thankfully, they'll be able to enlarge their penises (penii? :) one to three inches with the new herbal supplement they're e-mailing each other about.
And your surprised why? (Score:4, Insightful)
The mind boggels....
Re:And your surprised why? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:And your surprised why? (Score:5, Interesting)
They caused you headaches
To you and your customers they lost the ablilty to send mail with your servers. You probibly lost customers, right?
b. Loss of time to get off the RBL's and to explain it to angry customers.
The people who recieved that spam the other ISPs that paid for the bandwidth and on and on and on
More then simple bandwidth theft.
But then I really hate spammers.
Two wrongs don't make a right. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Two wrongs don't make a right. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Two wrongs don't make a right. (Score:2, Interesting)
That's true -- Mohandas Gandhi favored ten eyes for an eye. When the Nawab of Maler Kotla issued an edict demanding ten Muslims dead for every Hindu killed in the state, Mr. Nonviolent-Resistance gave it his blessing. Oh, and let's not forget the fact that up until World War I, he was just fine being an officer in the British Army (fought in the Boer Wars and the Zulu wars). Or that he let his wife die because he didn't want her to receive a penicillin injection to fight her pneumonia (hey, the guy had h
So the only question is... (Score:2)
the motto (Score:2, Insightful)
"I hate spam, please let me spam you"
There is no question that they deserve it. (Score:5, Interesting)
That if spammers had what most slashdotters considered a fully-functional mind, the old "giving them a dose of their own medicine" routine would wise them up.
Since spammers seem to have selective ethics at best, all we can really do is enjoy them drowning in their own kind of filth for a while without the warm fuzzy that they're actually learning their lesson.
I firmly believe that people who engage in anti-social behaviour that negatively affects their social group should be subjected to appropriate retribution from the affected group... I'm very disappointed that as I post this, I have yet to see someone suitably sleuthful track down and post the censored information.
The BEST way to stop spammers (Score:5, Interesting)
The target must be those who hire the spammers. After all, spammers are doing this for the money. No money, no spam.
Target the spammers income stream.
Re:The BEST way to stop spammers (Score:2, Insightful)
I know this isn't a very good analogy, but the point is: Everybody involved in commiting a crime should suffer the consequences. Not just who paid for it.
Re:The BEST way to stop spammers (Score:2, Funny)
Now I'm envisioning the commercials with the Bambi-eyed teenagers saying "I helped waste bandwidth"... "I helped clog thousands of mail servers worldwide"... "I helped send penis enlargement ads to my grandmother".
"Where do spammers get their money? If you buy drugs, some of it might come from you."
shudder
Thanks.
Re:The BEST way to stop spammers (Score:2)
But if current spammers are grossly inconvenienced, their costs to do business will go up. That cost will be passed on to the people who hire the spammers. (Guess what--spammers don't send junk email just for kicks. They're in it for the money.)
If spamming becomes unpleasant enough for its practitioners, they'll have to price themselves out of the market just to try to break even. Fewe
Okay, bring 'em on (Score:5, Interesting)
112 Catamaran St
Marina Del Rey, CA 90292-5769
(310)578-1728
Sue me. I'm a poor college student with plenty of free time and malicious friends. Make my day.
Re:Okay, bring 'em on (Score:2)
Re:Okay, bring 'em on (Score:5, Informative)
Free Catalogues! [google.com]
Free Samples! [google.com]
Free Magazine Trials! [google.com]
my favourite:
Free Serenity Pads! [young-america.com]
and a load more here...
Free Stuff! [thefreesite.com] More Free Stuff! [freestuffcenter.com] More Free Stuff! [1freestuff.com] More Free Stuff! [freestuffcentral.com] More Free Stuff! [totallyfreestuff.com] More Free Stuff! [free-n-cool.com] More Free Stuff! [justfreestuff.com] More Free Stuff! [freechannel.net] More Free Stuff! [free-stuff.com] More Free Stuff! [freestuffpage.com]
A free gift for anyone who signs him up for more than 100!! Just post your address...
It is our duty to reward them for making a stand for spammers everywhere. These free items will come in handy for filling the extra space in those big houses.
Re:Okay, bring 'em on (Score:2)
thad
Don't forget (Score:3, Funny)
heh, heh.
from google (Score:4, Informative)
and
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20030424/20232
not the original, but has the links to the spammers involved.
Spammers are scum (Score:3, Insightful)
Rus
New York Times culpability for attacking spammers (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder if the NYT hates spam as much as the rest of us do, and knows that publishing articles about specific spammers will cause certain unpleasantnesses for those spammers?
I wonder whose e-mail addy this might be? (Score:5, Funny)
What happens (Score:5, Interesting)
Would it be funny or just then ?
Re:What happens (Score:3, Insightful)
after your scenario happened once or twice, I think we would see a dramatic reduction in spam.
I'm actually surprised that there hasn't been a case of spammer lynching as yet.
Like most people the only thing that keeps me from doing it is the thought of spending 30 years in prison. Not worth taking the chance of getting a couple of fellow rabid anti-spammers to sit on your jury.
That said, if you were sitting on a jury for the trial of someone who killed a spammer, would you
Re:What happens (Score:4, Funny)
Um, yes? Premeditated murder is one of those things that most civilized societies prefer not to condone. (Save for when approved by the state in times of war, or when commited by the U.S. 'corrections' system.) Talk about a disproportionate response. Spammers are really, really, really annoying, and they're thieves without question--but we stopped hanging thieves more than a century ago.
On the other hand, maybe if someone just gave a spammer a really good beating, I could let that slide...
Re:What happens (Score:2)
Not only that, but I would seriously think about convicting the website proprietor who posted the spammer's personal information (assuming this was pivotal in the incident).
I would dance on their graves (Score:3, Insightful)
What I'd really like would be to see these guys thrown in jail. Most of these people are "hackers" at least, and could probably charged under the PATRIOT act for 'cyber terrorism' or something, if the government actually gave a shit...
Re:What happens (Score:2)
Yes. In fact I'd pay to watch...
Re:What happens (Score:2)
There is no way to defend against a lone wacko, in fact, if a lone wacko decides you are the target, you're in serious trouble. Because of this, it's probably best to not let these wackos think of you at all. A bad way to stay off of wacko's lists is to send email to half of the Earth every twenty minutes. Eventually you are gonna hit Ted Kaczinsky or John Hinkley Jr.
If the house gets burned or the kids get snatched that's an unavoidable side effect of unsolicited commercial email.
The next best thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Create and post a HOWTO showing how to find the information yourself. You can't find everyone on Google and unless you want to pay a service $$$, there is an art to finding someone's meatspace info.
This COMES from /.! (Score:5, Informative)
The Address of Alyxsandra Sachs was not posted on techdirt but a link to... you guessed it, slashdot! Someone only posted this [slashdot.org] link
I find this extremely funny
Didn't Bernard Shifman try this stunt a while back (Score:2)
Spamming = DoS attack? (Score:4, Interesting)
Has anybody tried to prosecute spammers for executing what amounts to a denial of service attack? When 99% of your email is unsolicited commercial bulk email, it makes that 1% very hard to find. Isn't this a small scale DoS attack on an individual? Isn't the cumulative effect on ISPs huge?
When I moved into my new home, I discovered the previous owners were mail-order people. I was receiving 100-120 catalogs every week (literally). My recycling company refused to cart off our weekly junk mail. Bills were getting lost, wedged between the pages of catalogs. I registered with the DMA, and I sent over 350 letters and made more than 100 phone calls to snail-mail spammers. Eventually it made difference. Now (three years later) we get about 10 catalogs a week. I spent a lot of time and money (postage, envelopes, etc.), but at least most of the 200 companies respected our wishes (in time, after multiple notices).
With email spam, we don't even have the option of complaining and opting-out. And yes, email bills are sometimes blocked by my ISP's spam filters. So haven't the spammers effectively eliminated our email service by flooding it? Isn't that a denial of service attack?
Re:no. (Score:3, Insightful)
That depends if he has friends with guns.
> Do you think doing so would leave you with any credibility?
Depends.
So a burgular breaks in and punches you. You beat him up enough so that he flees. The wife is happy because now your home is safe. You gained credibility for not being a wimp.
Re:no. (Score:2, Funny)
What kind of idiot are you? (Score:2, Interesting)
If somebody punches me (and I didn't deserve it)... I'd do whatever it took to ensure he never hit me again.
What would you do, Mr. Idealist? Stand there and take it while saying, "Please don't do that!"? Perhaps if you one day end up lying on the ground in a pool of your own blood you'll rethink this and consider that MAYBE you should have defended yourself.
Re:What kind of idiot are you? (Score:2, Insightful)
What would you do, Mr. Idealist? Stand there and take it while saying, "Please don't do that!"?
Some people have suffered that same plight often enough to a) start thinking it's normal and b) take pride in it...quite often it starts in school gyms for one reason or another.
For those who are either young enough to still be in school or old enough to have kids in school already...yes, it is ok to hit back, and it's even better to give the other kid taking a beating a hand. Standing next to it and looking a
In my family... (Score:2, Insightful)
We tell the kids, "Never throw the first punch, always throw the last one."
Note that we use the verb, 'throw' and not 'land'. There is, of course, no need for the guy swinging at you to connect with your nose before you take action.
Re:What kind of idiot are you? (Score:2)
Actually, while this is way-OT, I'm old enough to be the proud genitor of 65lbs of Canuck-hyperactivity (kid).
One of the first thing I taught him when he started school was that he was never to start a fight (by words, action, whatnot.) but if one started, he had to do his best to end it.
Lo and behold, a c
Re:An eye for an eye (Score:2)
*poke*
Oww! *poke*
Oww! *poke*
(etc)
Re:Nuremberg files (Score:2)
The Nuremberg files did the same thing. In this case, no one feels for the spammers. But if any prosecution does go foward - the Nuremberg case will be used as a precedent.