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Reputation Managers Applauds New Law That Makes Online Impersonation Now Illegal in The Golden State Thanks to California SB-1411
Del Mar, CA (PRWEB) January 15, 2011
Reputation Managers is beyond pleased with the groundbreaking victory for business and online protection advocates in the state of California, where SB-1411 became law on Saturday, January 1, 2011. This new law takes bold steps to prevent people from impersonating others on the Internet by making it a misdemeanor to fraudulently state your identity online. SB-1411 will allow for significant ramifications in the world of online reputation management.
The bill, which makes impersonation a misdemeanor crime punishable by a $1000 fine and up to a year in jail to "knowingly and without consent credibly [impersonate] another actual person through or on an Internet Web site or by other electronic means, as specified, for purposes of harming, intimidating, threatening, or defrauding another person," was introduced nearly one full year ago by State Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto).
Social media and blogging are both ubiquitous and painfully new, and this bill helps bring order to the typically lawless frontier of the Internet. One of the most difficult aspects of online reputation management (ORM) is the ease with which any individual with access to a computer can, with a single keystroke, destroy the reputations of individuals and businesses alike.
WinXP Newsletter commantary;
California was one of the most active states when it came to creating new laws. One of those that directly impacts Internet users is SB-1411, which makes it a misdemeanor to fraudulently identify yourself online.
Reputation Managers Applauds New Law That Makes Online Impersonation Now Illegal in The Golden State Thanks to California SB-1411
Such a law could have had nightmarish unintended consequences if not done properly. Think about the grandmotherly old lady who creates a Facebook page for her dog or cat, or the man or woman whose spouse calls and asks him/her to send an email from the spouse's account because said spouse doesn't have access to a computer. A badly written law could have inadvertently made those people criminals. Luckily, those who wrote the California law were very specific, and made the law applicable to those who impersonate someone else without consent. Does grandma have the dog's permission? It doesn't matter, because the statute goes further and specifies that to fall under the law, the impersonation must be "for purposes of harming, intimidating, threatening or defrauding another person." It also must be a "credible" impersonation. Whew! Grandma is probably safe, since no one really thought the Pomeranian was typing all those profound status updates.