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If you wonder why JPP has strongly-enforced rules against the posting of people's private info, consider this:
In what was a horrible random matchup, Tyler Clementi and Dharum Ravi were assigned the same dorm room at Rutgers. The two freshmen could not have been more poorly matched. Clementi was gay and Ravi was not comfortable with a gay roommate.
After Clementi asked for their shared room one evening to meet a male friend, known through court documents only as M.B., Ravi set up a webcam to secretly film the encounter. He watched from a friend’s room.
And then he tweeted about what he saw. He tried to set up a second filming when Clementi asked for the room again, but by then, Clementi had become aware of the first video-streaming and pulled the plug on Ravi’s computer. Ravi had been inviting people to watch his roommate and M.B.
If there is a lesson to be learned it is that the electronic gadgets that people enjoy are not toys for casual use. Anyone can easily video, text or email.
But there are consequences to all actions. Invasion of privacy is not a prank. Targeting someone because of his sexual orientation is not fair sport; it’s a hate crime. And for all the ease there is in texting and emailing, there is an electronic trail that cannot be deleted.
It was not a childish prank. It was not an accident. It was a despicable invasion of privacy, one motivated by Clementi’s sexual orientation. To Ravi, his roommate’s private life was potential entertainment. There will no doubt be a legal appeal. We are confident justice will prevail.
http://www.northjersey.com/news/opinions/143030915_Justice_for_Clementi.html
In what was a horrible random matchup, Tyler Clementi and Dharum Ravi were assigned the same dorm room at Rutgers. The two freshmen could not have been more poorly matched. Clementi was gay and Ravi was not comfortable with a gay roommate.
After Clementi asked for their shared room one evening to meet a male friend, known through court documents only as M.B., Ravi set up a webcam to secretly film the encounter. He watched from a friend’s room.
And then he tweeted about what he saw. He tried to set up a second filming when Clementi asked for the room again, but by then, Clementi had become aware of the first video-streaming and pulled the plug on Ravi’s computer. Ravi had been inviting people to watch his roommate and M.B.
If there is a lesson to be learned it is that the electronic gadgets that people enjoy are not toys for casual use. Anyone can easily video, text or email.
But there are consequences to all actions. Invasion of privacy is not a prank. Targeting someone because of his sexual orientation is not fair sport; it’s a hate crime. And for all the ease there is in texting and emailing, there is an electronic trail that cannot be deleted.
It was not a childish prank. It was not an accident. It was a despicable invasion of privacy, one motivated by Clementi’s sexual orientation. To Ravi, his roommate’s private life was potential entertainment. There will no doubt be a legal appeal. We are confident justice will prevail.
http://www.northjersey.com/news/opinions/143030915_Justice_for_Clementi.html