Hi, just to clarify this particular off-topic:  Dnia 12 czerwca 2019 21:35 Andy 
Mabbett <a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk> napisał(a):  On Wed, 12 Jun 2019 at 
18:51, Todd Allen <toddmal...@gmail.com> wrote:   It is not always 
necessary for everyone to see everything,  but it is crucial for the accused 
party to. They have the right to defend  themself.   Do they, really?   If your 
local restaurant or supermarket decides to ban you, do you  have that right 
then?   Yes, you have. In many countries you have laws controlling this issue 
and you can go to court, e.g. citing antidiscriminatory regulations or other 
terms of contract/service. Then your case is settled by a third party and 
usually the parties know the claims of the other side.   aclu-co.org 
aclu-co.org    What about Facebook, Twitter, or Flickr?   IMO regulation of 
Facebook, Twitter and other big Internet services is just a question of time 
(in Western world) or already happened (some places elsewhere, U.S. national 
security). Besides that I thought we are striving for the best practice.    
Best,   michał "aegis maelstrom" buczyński
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