https://www.fantasticfiction.com/v/vernor-vinge/true-names-and-other-dangers.htm
To be honest using one's true name was something I was paranoid about for a 
long time, and yeah, that shows in my character and writing. I believe it is 
naïve unless one is on a professional venue to not use a nom' de guerre. As 
this society polarizes and splits in two, (US) it becomes increasingly unlikely 
that we'll respect each others boundaries. 
For Europeans involved as Nato countries, I wish the best of fortune and would 
urge planning for a an EU defense that is independent on a now unreliable USA. 
Yes, another area to bicker about, but policy changes, when not well planned or 
executed do cause disorder. Definitively not the Scandinavian model, that.  





-----Original Message-----From: Telmo Menezes <[email protected]>
To: Everything List <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, Aug 31, 2021 10:38 am
Subject: Re: The American Taliban

#yiv4347499384 p.yiv4347499384MsoNormal, #yiv4347499384 
p.yiv4347499384MsoNoSpacing{margin:0;}Am Di, 31. Aug 2021, um 13:10, schrieb 
John Clark:

[...]

Hmm.... that would explain why you refuse to sign your real name to your 
screeds, in a way I can sympathize, if I held your opinions I'd be ashamed of 
them too. 


John, I mostly agree with you on this ongoing (and rather boring for a 
non-American) debate over US politics.

That being said, I think that the old Internet tradition of using pseudonyms is 
a good thing. There are many reasons for not using your real name beyond shame 
over your opinions. Maybe you are a non-believer in a strongly religious 
environment, and disclosing this could put your life in jeopardy. Maybe you 
need some job to surive, and you know you could get into trouble if your real 
opinions were known to your employer, and so on and so forth. Maybe spud has 
his reasons, that's none of our business.

There is a relentless push toward "real identities" that, I think, started with 
facebook. Their incentive here is probably mostly about increasing the quality 
of the data that they mine for their advertisement algorithms, but it has the 
side effect of magnifying the chilling effect on public discourse. It is better 
to remain silent than to say something that might get you into trouble. It 
certainly helps the status quo (whatever the status quo is in your country). 
Hummm...

I guess I was influenced by the times when the Internet was young and full of 
promise as a technology that could amplify human agency and freedom instead of 
curtailing them. I now know that that was pretty idealistic and naive, but I 
will still resist anonymity-shaming until my last breath. People who want us to 
force us to use our real identity no matter what are usually the same people 
who wish to control us, and probably not with our best interests in mind.

I do sign with my real name here. Probably everywhere, maybe not. I won't tell 
and nobody should ask.

Telmo
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