Because it makes sense to say something -
May. 30th, 2007 03:22 pmYeah, yeah, I know. Journals dropping left, right and center because of - wait a moment. Stop. Think. THEN react, okay?
catrinella seems to have a handle on things, and in some key aspects, actually has gone out to test the waters on the whole 'journal deletion' issue.
But it doesn't come as any surprise to me. No? Come on - it's all over Google News - OH, but that was MYSPACE.
*facesmacks*
The attorney general sent a letter to MySpace on Tuesday requesting names from the Minnesota registry or those on other states' registries who have used Minnesota addresses.
"Due to the anonymous nature of the Internet, social networking sites such as MySpace.com provide sexual predators with unprecedented access to children," she said. "They're really con men using the Net to develop rapport with unsuspecting kids."
MySpace announced last week that it would assist officials in all 50 states and provide this information.
UH. I can see LiveJournal wouldn't want that kind of burden. That's manpower, money and liability for litigation from people who sue after LJ turns over their private information to law enforcement. (Not that they'd WIN, mind...but litigation is $$$.)
From a simple business perspective, LJ is simply getting out of the business while they can. MySpace is going to get hammered by this stuff - make no mistake about it.
What makes sense to me is to actually put some intelligence into the interests update - if you think some words are triggers, for fekking sake, BAN them.
There's plenty of reports on "false positives" - and I hope in the weeks to come, any found in this first round will be remediated properly.
In the meantime, keep reading, keep listening and watch your ass. Your OWN ass, mind.
But it doesn't come as any surprise to me. No? Come on - it's all over Google News - OH, but that was MYSPACE.
*facesmacks*
The attorney general sent a letter to MySpace on Tuesday requesting names from the Minnesota registry or those on other states' registries who have used Minnesota addresses.
"Due to the anonymous nature of the Internet, social networking sites such as MySpace.com provide sexual predators with unprecedented access to children," she said. "They're really con men using the Net to develop rapport with unsuspecting kids."
MySpace announced last week that it would assist officials in all 50 states and provide this information.
UH. I can see LiveJournal wouldn't want that kind of burden. That's manpower, money and liability for litigation from people who sue after LJ turns over their private information to law enforcement. (Not that they'd WIN, mind...but litigation is $$$.)
From a simple business perspective, LJ is simply getting out of the business while they can. MySpace is going to get hammered by this stuff - make no mistake about it.
What makes sense to me is to actually put some intelligence into the interests update - if you think some words are triggers, for fekking sake, BAN them.
There's plenty of reports on "false positives" - and I hope in the weeks to come, any found in this first round will be remediated properly.
In the meantime, keep reading, keep listening and watch your ass. Your OWN ass, mind.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-30 10:42 pm (UTC)I feel terrible for survivors who have lost their blogs and their communities, though. I find that really heartbreaking. I've read some of their comments and I wasn't really too upset until I did.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-30 10:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-30 10:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-30 11:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-30 11:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-30 11:30 pm (UTC)"LiveJournal, which is owned by San Francisco-based Six Apart, confirmed Wednesday that it deleted around 500 journals this week in hopes of better "protecting children." It said the deletion was prompted by activist groups, including one called Warriors for Innocence that claims to track sites promoting pedophilia, the sexual abuse of minors, and other illegal activities."
no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 04:19 am (UTC)As a parent, I don't think that kids need protecting. Mom and Dad need to be monitoring Internet use, and kids need to see some of this stuff with Mom and Dad, because it's a part of the real world. It's the parent's responsibility, not the rest of the world!
no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 05:15 am (UTC)Also Warriors for Innocence is reportedly funded or associated with by some very right-wing fundamentalist political groups, per some of the links I've been seeing.
More here, check ont he back entries for more links.
http://gehayi.livejournal.com/264200.html
no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 05:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 01:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 01:56 pm (UTC)Meanwhile, you want help with a troll? SOWWY.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 01:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-31 02:22 pm (UTC)I've read in a couple of places that outside folks are able to read lj flocked posts that people within lj itself are not able to read, I haven't seen it so. Must run. May try again later tonight on testing it.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-01 05:11 am (UTC)You used to be able to search on a journal name even if you yourself remained anonymous and were not logged in.
This is no longer the case.
If I enter lj home without logging in, I can only look at randomly-chosen ljs. I tried flipping through a number of these random choices, looking to see if I was getting in where I didn't "belong"--no. I did find one which was blank to me, probably entirely f/locked.
However, this is just using ordinary lj tools, this is not hacking in with any other access programs or SQL etc methods.
Also, when I go directly to my friends page and look around, forgetting to log in, f/locked posts are not visible, which was the concern noted in a couple of places.
RE: outside access programs, I know LJBook requires you to log in using your lj name and password (retained only for 30 minutes), for instance, so it's less likely someone else could archive your data, except with consent from the LJ Abuse Team or similar access.