Den 14. sep. 2006 kl. 23.00 skrev Jonathan Sterne:
I'm turning the question around to you: at what point do people have a responsibility to "intervene" in something they see online and if that point comes, what form should their reaction take?
Before one takes any action, one needs to know if it is truth or fiction, made by a real person or a pseudonym, a plan, a threat, or a joke, etc. If Bree (a.k.a. LonelyGirl15) was openly satanist in her YouTube videos, or her father punished her so hard it would be a crime, should we take action? The trouble with language is that it always can be used to tell a lie. I am not arguing that we as readers don't have responsibilities, but I agree with those who say that the people who know the author(s) personally are the ones that should care first. By the way, if you are researching this, you might look into the case of the black metal artist calling himself "Greven" ("The Count"). Varg Vikernes, as his real name is, was convicted in Norway about ten years ago for killing a former band member and burning several churches. He has now turned an extreme nationalist (you need to be an expert to understand what separates him from Nazism), and still has an international following, much of it is Web based. -- Anders Fagerjord, dr. art. Associate professor, Department of Media and Communcation, Unversity of Oslo P.O. Box 1093 Blindern N-0317 OSLO Norway http://www.media.uio.no http://fagerjord.no