>This begs the question... Why would you want have a public view and a
>private view?
a very good philosophical question of contemporary relevance - hint wiki leaks

> It is one thing to say crazy/funny stuff to a group of people, albeit a
> large and largely unknown one, but within a "closed" setting, but it is
> quite another to say something for anyone to see.

>How does it make a difference? You still don't know many of the people
>who will be reading this, right?

It doesn't matter u know them, they might know u ;) 

Anish Mohammed
Twitter: anishmohammed
http://uk.linkedin.com/in/anishmohammed

On 15 Dec 2010, at 10:15, Venkat Mangudi <[email protected]> wrote:

> Just for the fun of it, here I go. Wheeee.
> 
> On Wednesday 15 December 2010 03:31 PM, Shoba Narayan wrote:
>> Recently, I googled Arundhati Roy, for no reason :) and discovered that
>                                     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ There has to be a
> reason... Come on, out with it. :-)
> 
>> the posts I had made about her on Silk were in the public domain.  I
>> strongly protested when I met Udhay at the Bangalore Silk Meet.  Heated
>> discussion ensued.  Someone spilled beer and all was forgotten.
> 
> This begs the question... Why would you want have a public view and a
> private view?
> 
>> It is one thing to say crazy/funny stuff to a group of people, albeit a
>> large and largely unknown one, but within a "closed" setting, but it is
>> quite another to say something for anyone to see.
> 
> How does it make a difference? You still don't know many of the people
> who will be reading this, right?
> 
> --V

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