beastie wrote:You really don't see the difference between speculating on someone's identity via email with another poster on the board, and contacting family members and telling them that one of their family members participates as "X" on a certain board? And you have never had the impression that doing so would be inappropriate???
I don't see them as precisely analogous. But I also see a family as having more reason to want to know about a family member's comments on a message board than a bunch of idle strangers have to know the identity of a stranger.
I don't see the rule about protecting poster identities as an absolute one, or as a fundamental ethical value. There are other obligations or interests that Trump it, and my view was that, in this situation, the stepfather's interest in knowing what GoodK was saying about him weighed more heavily than GoodK's presumption of internet anonymity -- which, again, I respected scrupulously in every other regard.
beastie wrote:Yes, it does drive me crazy, and I have told you why many times. in my opinion, far worse damage can be done to someone's reputation by hinting that you know terrible things that, if you could only share them, would change everyone's mind about someone. I think it is very unethical behavior. I also think it demonstrates the same sort of personal boundary issues that could explain your inability to see a problem with alerting real life family members that "so and so" posts as "X" on a certain board.
I admit that it's a very troublesome area, and that airy insinuations of wrongdoing on somebody's part can be both baseless and very harmful. But sometimes, when one really does know something and others, who don't know what they're talking about, are going on and on, it's very difficult to know exactly how to respond. One can't violate confidences, but other people might be drawing spectacularly wrong-headed conclusions.
While I don't do this lightly, and don't do it in even a small fraction of the cases where I
could, I think it sometimes very important for people who are gabbing away about a situation to be reminded that they don't know all of the relevant context, and that there are things that, if they knew them, might alter their opinions or cause them to go silent.
In cases where people are gossiping ignorantly and too confidently, I don't believe it's a bad thing to imply that they should possibly withhold judgment because they don't know enough to have valid opinions.
On a completely different topic:
Incidentally, I have a hunch -- though, as yet, no real evidence to support it -- that GoodK's legal threat may be aided and abetted by a certain other person who regards me with obsessively malignant hatred and who has conducted a focused crusade of character assassination against me for the past three years.
I will make every effort that I can, if this goes to trial, to discover whether my hunch is correct and, if it is, to reveal that person's identity and involvement and to dissuade him very powerfully from further attempts to harm me.