There's a strong correlation between "people who demand the abolition of anonymity on social media" and "people whose wealth enables them to never even think about whether a tweet could compromise their economic security"
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W odpowiedzi do @mtracey
I've always used my real name and picture on here, and I'm *not* wealthy. At all. I don't even *have* a savings account. Why would it be so bad for everyone to say who they are?
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W odpowiedzi do @RealSteveCox
Because they could be penalized economically for expressing their political beliefs.
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W odpowiedzi do @mtracey
Why don't we prevent that instead?
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W odpowiedzi do @RealSteveCox
One way to prevent it is to allow people to express political beliefs online under a pseudonym if they choose.
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W odpowiedzi do @mtracey
It just strikes me as cowardly. I've *definitely* missed out on opportunities for work by stating my political opinions. I know it for a fact. But I think opinions without a human being behind them tend to be given less credence.pic.twitter.com/5YS1O2udcn
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W odpowiedzi do @RealSteveCox @mtracey
Fear of anonymous accounts’ tweets strikes me as cowardly.
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And enforcement strikes me as draconianhttps://www.theverge.com/2017/8/28/16217602/china-censorship-real-identities-weibo-blogging-all-content …
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I'm not afraid of anonymous tweets. Anonymous tweets are way less scary than tweets from a flesh-and-blood person. The only exception to that is whistleblower-type stuff. Which I support, too. "That which can be destroyed by the truth should be."
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