On Jul 15, 2019, at 10:22 AM, Tom Johnson <[email protected]> 
wrote:
> as professionals who work regularly with authorship, surely we can
> understand that people use and attach their ideas to many names in both
> private and public life for a wide range of reasons. the argument that
> restricting naming here would improve the quality or civility of posts
> appears unsupported.

Have you ever been on Reddit?  Examples of anonymity being used to enable 
abhorrent behavior are legion.  Unfortunately there isn’t any way to restrict 
anonymity to only those using it for understandable, positive purposes.

Something that seems absent from consideration are the less obvious and more 
insidious negative ways that anonymity/pseudonymity can be used in a forum like 
C4L, to advance a particular agenda.  Is that person who keeps raising problems 
that they are (purportedly) encountering with a particular platform actually 
looking for help, or are they working for a competing platform vendor?  
Astroturfing and disinformation are real, and they are very, very effective.

One of the basic tenets of information literacy is understanding the source.  I 
don’t think anyone here is saying that anonymity is not a very valuable and 
necessary tool to allow people to speak up in some contexts without fear of 
retribution, but that potential use case shouldn't override all other 
considerations.

Ed


-- 
Edward Almasy <[email protected]>
Director  •  Internet Scout Research Group
Computer Sciences Dept  •  U of Wisconsin - Madison
1210 W Dayton St  •  Madison WI 53706
608-262-6606 (voice)  •  608-265-9296 (fax)

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