Jump to content

Recommended Posts

It's pretty cheap to send out a whole load of letters before action, and the settlement money from BBC and ITV means he's already ahead on the deal. Plus, if he takes a scorched earth approach, he's bound to sweep up a reasonable number of people who haven't yet been identified, but who he'd be quite happy to have a go at - lefty types crowing over a Tory paedophile story. Plus he is getting lots of encouragement from folks who think this is a good test of the ability of private civil law to control the excesses of social media. If I was at risk I wouldn't feel confident that he is bluffing.

Well if you used one supplier, you could review around 10,000 sites for about ?100.


If he used six or seven he could probably expand that to around 20,000 sites for ?1000 - certainly all the popular ones including this one.


Suppliers he could use would be Radian6, Meltwater Buzz, Brandtology...


I use them for clients everyday.


He'd then have to fight a pretty aggressive battle to get the correspondent details out of the sites - could take years.


Then the question would be whether anyone had said anything that could be considered to be beyond fair comment.


I wouldn't go fessing up anything just yet ;-)

"He'd then have to fight a pretty aggressive battle to get the correspondent details out of the sites - could take years."


Actually, this would probably be quite straightforward in this case, particularly where he is not going after the sites themselves. He'd have to get a court order, but the courts have been handing them out pretty freely in P2P copyright infringement cases. Plus, economies of scale - you only ned one order per site.

Huguenot Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Well if you used one supplier, you could review

> around 10,000 sites for about ?100.

>

> If he used six or seven he could probably expand

> that to around 20,000 sites for ?1000 - certainly

> all the popular ones including this one.

>

> Suppliers he could use would be Radian6, Meltwater

> Buzz, Brandtology...

>

> I use them for clients everyday.

>

> He'd then have to fight a pretty aggressive battle

> to get the correspondent details out of the sites

> - could take years.

>

> Then the question would be whether anyone had said

> anything that could be considered to be beyond

> fair comment.

>

> I wouldn't go fessing up anything just yet ;-)


And if the poster has any sense, they'll have used a dummy, non-traceble email account. The chances of getting an IP address would be fairly remote for most sites, and even then you could have a hard time trying to nail the case on a unique owner.


In many cases I'd wager it would be nigh on impossible. Unless you're the intelligence arm of a Government of course.

Correct t-e-d, reputation management tools can only search for words and context. Common synonyms and euphemisms will be added by operators.


Each occurrence would then be graded, and any borderline ones would be flagged for human review.


Lots will slip through the net, but lots won't.


I think it's largely redundant, an all out attack on society is not an ideal strategy for a democratic party, so it's more likely he'll cherry pick extreme offenders.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I just wanted to post for all my neighbours a recommendation of Niko, the wonderful plumber who works locally. Niko has done work for me over the years, including large and small jobs. He recently replaced four radiators in my house which have helped us really be warm for the first time! I recommend Niko so whole heartedly because (1) he is completely straight forward and will advise you not to do something / a cheaper solution, if that is what is best for you; and (2) he is one of the kindest and most honest people I have ever known. He goes the extra mile to sort out problems, particularly urgent ones.   
    • Scaremongering - there is very little vacant land in East Dulwich available as sites for building 9 storey buildings so this is rather hypothetical. It could even be said the occasional taller, modern building breaks up the monotony of Victorian terraced housing.
    • This is simply untrue. The area is not 2/3 storeys maximum. Hambledon Court is on the other side of tracks from the Jewson site on Burrow Rd, is 8 storeys, and is barely known (let alone bothersome) to most people in East Dulwich. Felbridge House, Petworth House etc on the opposite side of the station from the new development are all 5 storeys tall. East Dulwich Charter (which neighbours the new development) is itself 4-5 storeys (depending on which block you're talking about). What's more, Hambledon Court was finished in about 1978 iirc and no-one has built anything similar around here since then - so the "slippery slope" "genie in the bottle" argument doesn't work either. You can't simultaneously argue that Southwark is too slow in approving new construction but also suggest this will lead to a flood of new high-rise housing! At current rates of approval, we can expect our next 8 storey building to arrive in...2072!
    • I checked - the Hanway Street place was Mandeer - it moved to New Oxford Street I think and was replaced by Hakkasan - very different prices. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...