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Comment Explanation of "Just use Google cache!" comment (Score 1) 172

I submitted the story and I agree my comment to use Google cache was misleading. To the flamers, yes I know it won't really protect you and that Google isn't the most privacy-loving company in the world.

What I meant to imply was that the defendants could have been using Google cache. The defendant posted links to three articles and copied some text from each. You don't need to load the original page for that. Just the Google cache will do, and often it's faster.

Plaintiffs didn't send a letter to Google, at least not one that's in the court filing. AFAIK Google uses a very distributed and dynamic system to store its cache, so good luck finding which system cached that page at a particular time almost one year ago. But maybe they can try.

Not subpoenaing Google creates some problems, because it could be that the subpoenas have no chance of finding the actual poster but have a good chance of finding innocent readers. The plantiffs' names had been posted numerous times before, and plenty of people could have searched for and found and read those pages without any malicious intent. And of course the plaintiffs are actual people, law students in fact, so they may have had friends, classmates, etc. that innocently searched for their names as well.

But I should put "innocently" in quotes, because who knows if that is about to change.

Censorship

Submission + - Browsing news articles can lead to a subpoena (justia.com)

The Xoxo Reader writes: "A new filing in an internet defamation lawsuit reveals how the plaintiffs' lawyers have attempted to find the identities of the defendants, who posted under pseudonyms on a message board without IP logging. The defendants had posted links and excerpts of several webpages that mention the plaintiffs, including a Washington Post article, a college scholarship announcement, and a federal court opinion. Now the plaintiffs are asking the websites for logs of everybody who accessed those articles in the hours before they were posted. (All the more reason to read the web through Google cache!) The plantiff's motion for expedited discovery includes copies of the lawyers' letters to hosting providers, ISPs, and others. It also includes replies from the recipients, many of whom point out that the lawyers' requests are technically impossible to fulfill. No matter; the plaintiffs are asking the court to issue subpoenas anyway. A summary of the letters in the filing is posted in this thread. Slashdot previously covered the Autoadmit case here and here."
Privacy

Submission + - Internet defamation suit tests online anonymity (reuters.com)

The Xoxo Reader writes: "Reuters reports that two women at Yale Law School have filed suit for defamation and infliction of emotional distress against an administrator and 28 anonymous posters on AutoAdmit (a.k.a. Xoxohth), a popular law student discussion site. Experts are watching to see if the suit will unmask the posters, who are identified in the complaint only by their pseudonyms. Since AutoAdmit's administrators have previously said that they do not retain IP logs of posters, identifying the defendants may test the limits of the legal system and anonymity on the internet. So far, one method was to post the summons on the message board itself and ask the defendants to step forward. The controversy leading to this lawsuit was previously discussed on Slashdot here.""

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