>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
