RG - are you getting stalked??

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I really am interested to know what legal recourse he believes he is entitled to.

He was banned from a message board. It happens all the time, and I've never heard of anyone threatening legal action b/c of it. No one has a god given right to use this board.

It's RG's pool, he is entitled to through people out if they start pissing in it.

 
After we let him back on the last time, I told him that I would give him one more chance for him to not act like an *****, and in return I would "do my best" to keep eb.com posters from screwing with him. The last sentence from the email basically said "If you fail to comply you will be perma banned from here for a very long time"

I think that very night he started acting up, I wasnt around, but another mod didnt approve of what he was doing and banned him. He might have expected a little longer leash I suppose, but a quick survey of most of the "charter members" revealed that they were happy he was gone.

I also dont have any control over what anyone does at PPI and his website, but I think he expected me to somehow keep people from owning him on PPI when he was doing spamfest.

Apparantly it is somehow a divine right to post on every message board that exists. :reading: Maybe the registration rules are not clear enough?

 
I put his IP on the ban filter list, and to date it's still the only IP on the banned list. We haven't even had to do that with the spam bots.

Pathetic.

 
Oh, it's so much better here without him. :reading:

 
Maybe ******** has been reading this article...

States seek laws to curb online bullying
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Ryan Patrick Halligan was bullied for months online. Classmates sent the 13-year-old Essex Junction, Vt., boy instant messages calling him gay. He was threatened, taunted and insulted incessantly by so-called cyberbullies.

In 2003, Ryan killed himself.

"He just went into a deep spiral in eighth grade. He couldn't shake this rumor," said Ryan's father, John Halligan, who became a key proponent of a state law that forced Vermont schools to put anti-bullying rules in place. He's now pushing for a broader law to punish cyberbullying — often done at home after school — and wants every other state to enact laws expressly prohibiting it.

States from Oregon to Rhode Island are considering crackdowns to curb or outlaw the behavior in which kids taunt or insult peers on social Web sites like MySpace or via instant messages. Still, there is some disagreement over how effective crackdowns will be and how to do it.

"The kids are forcing our hands to do something legislatively," said Rhode Island state Sen. John Tassoni, who introduced a bill to study cyberbullying and hopes to pass a cyberbullying law by late 2007.

But others argue that legislation would be ineffective. George McDonough, an education coordinator with Rhode Island's Department of Education, concedes that the Internet has become an "instant slam book" but questions whether laws can stem bad behavior.

"You can't legislate norms, you can only teach norms," he said. "Just because it's a law they don't necessarily follow it. I mean, look at the speed limit."

The Internet allows students to insult others in relative anonymity, and experts who study cyberbullying say it can be more damaging to victims than traditional bullying like fist fights and classroom taunts.

Legislators and educators say there's a need for guidelines outlining how to punish cyberbullying. They say the behavior has gone unchecked for years, with few laws or policies on the books explaining how to treat it.

Cyberbullying is often limited to online insults about someone's physical appearance, friends, clothing or sexuality. But some cyberbullies are more creative. In Washington state, a bully stole a girl's instant message username and used it to send out insulting messages.

In New York, two high school boys were accused of operating an Internet site that listed girls' "sexual secrets." Prosecutors decided not to charge the boys because of free-speech concerns.

Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, said it will be difficult to draft a cyberbullying law that doesn't infringe on free-speech rights.

"The fact that two teenagers say nasty things about each other is a part of growing up," he said. "How much authority does a school have to monitor, regulate and punish activities occurring inside a student's home?"

In Arkansas, the state Senate this month passed a bill calling on school districts to set up policies to address cyberbullying only after it was amended to settle concerns about students' free-speech rights.

States are taking different approaches to the problem.

A South Carolina law that took effect this year requires school districts to define bullying and outline policies and repercussions for the behavior, including cyberbullying. One school district there has proposed punishments from warnings up to expulsion for both traditional bullying and cyberbullying.

Some of Oregon's most powerful lawmakers have lined up behind a proposed bill that would require all of the state's 198 school districts to adopt policies that prohibit cyberbullying.

Some local school districts aren't waiting for the state to take action: The Sisters school district in Central Oregon adopted rules that allow it to revoke cyberbullies' school Internet privileges, or even expel a student in egregious cases.

Ted Thonstad, superintendent of the rural school district of 1,475 students, said it was important to clarify by policy how to treat cyberbullying — now prohibited under strict school hazing rules. Previously, the district had guidelines for what types of Internet sites students could visit, he said, but no policy specifically dealt with cyberbullying.

Thonstad said no case prompted the policy, although there were some minor incidents of cyberbullying before it went into place at the beginning of the school year. Nothing has been reported since then.

"It's difficult to monitor if you don't have the right software," he said. "So you rely on students to let you know when it's going on."

Other schools are also being proactive. Rhode Island's McDonough sent both public and private school superintendents information and resources on cyberbullying. One school is designing lesson plans to help stop cyberbullying and protect children from Internet predators.

"I think it would be a good idea if there was a law, but I really believe it has to start at home," said Patricia McCormick, assistant principal of the private St. Philip School in Smithfield, R.I.

McCormick said all the teachers in the school have been trained on Internet safety, and students now receive at least 15 classes on the subject, which includes cyberbullying. But she said stopping the problem will require parental participation.

"Cyberbullying isn't going on in school," she said. "It is going on at home, and I think there needs to be more programs to educate parents about the dangers."

News Corp.'s social-networking site MySpace prohibits cyberbullying and tells users to report abuse — to the company as well as parents and law enforcement, according to a statement issued by Hemanshu Nigam, the company's chief security officer.

John Halligan, whose son's suicide has turned him into an advocate for broader cyberbullying laws that would allow victims and their families to pursue civil penalties against bullies, said something must be done to stop the problem.

"I didn't simply want it to be Ryan's school that agreed to do something," he said. "At the end of the day this wasn't just a problem in Ryan's school."
 
you know someone is crazy when they probably drive around to other peoples computers so they can post on a board they have been banned from.

he mentioned in a since been deleted post that he was temporarily using another internet connection.

I bet the guy gets a wireless router and hacks into his neighbors accounts..

 
IMHO,

When Tom was here, he wanted to be in the middle of everything. And he was. Unfortunately, he is still in the middle of everything, and he is not here.

So Tom is still winning.

I say we just forget the #$%^& and move on to more important things. Like helping people prepare for the exam.

ktulu

 
your right, but its hard to ignore the guy, if he was on a bridge about to jump I think I would yell JUMP!

I posted this in here so he couldnt see anyone talking about his sorry dumbshit ***

 
*I* want to be the center of attention and always in the middle of things. What do I have to do?

Okay, no, seriously. There was a good article floating around out there today about the psychology of flamers. No, not f'tard;... "Email-Flamers" and people who say things electronically that they wouldn't say in person. The principle concept was the inflated ego one gets when alone, self-absorbed on the computer, isolated from external cues to the contrary that might keep ego in check leading to an exaggerated sense of self importance. Sound like someone? No, NOT ME-RIGHT-NOW :reading: , that other guy.

:joke: G.F.R.(G for Good and R for Riddance)

 
You know it has to be absolutely KILLING that guy that he doesn't have an audience. :joke:

I find it intersting how he harped so much about ethics. Claimed that the 'people' from EB.com were unethical in their approach to advertising thier board, protesting lunch, blah, blah, blah.

How ethical is it to present yourself as a professional engineer (e.g. tmckeon_PE) and use EXTORTION of other engineers as a means to gain an audience to his demented rants and shamelessly promote his own 'board'. Let's be honest - what do you call it when you say ---> if you don't IP BAN me, I am going to report you to your state board??

The even bigger question - why would anyone in thier right mind LET him back on thier board after all the !@#$ he has pulled.

I haven't seen where anybody from EB.com has done anything except provide the details of thier lunch. I simply cannot understand why lunch is a censurable topic - but, well it has been taken that way. Nevertheless, that doesn't demonstrate a lack of ethics, only poor taste and I haven't seen where that is a crime.

:reading:

JR

 
fyi, anyone who doesnt have 1000 posts by March 1, is going to be banned

:reading:

 
Uhhh...3/1 is like a week away Jreg - I think you'll make it. :reading:

I couldn't see a state board wasting 5 minutes of their monthly meeting time on this guy. They only meet once a month and have all those applications and scores to go through.

 
Uhhh...3/1 is like a week away Jreg - I think you'll make it. :reading:
You stumbled across one of my dyslexic moments :joke: I read 989 as 899 ... and well .. you get the drift.

Yeah, yeah, I know I wrote it correctly but didn't 'see' it correctly.
1.gif


JR

 
Hey, I'm in Orlando this weekend.

Youz wants I should look up this McKeon guyz and takes care of him for youz?

 
man I need a vacation.
:(

Since you are posting in this thread, is it safe to assume that the spoiled child is acting up again?

As I drove around Orlando this weekend, I thought about how appropriate that Tom lives in a town totally dedicated to "make believe"..........

On another note, you would think that Orlando would have peaked by now; however, there is a ton of construction going on down there.......

 
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