Grenada, an online grenade-free zone. (Credit: Videobuster09/YouTube screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET) Honestly, that free speech thing can be tiresome. People end up endlessly expressing themselves and, every second of the day, someone's going to get hurt. Online, that is. It's too easy to take out your iPhone and type "you liberal pig Euro a***ole," or some other type of spontaneous flattery. The island of Grenada has decided that it has had enough. Its lawmakers wish to designate the country a decorous online enclave in the midst of the vile, open-mouthed free-for-all that is the Web. So they have passed a law that makes it a criminal offense to insult someone online. As the Associated Press reports, if you besmirch someone's character or name, you can be fined up to $37,000 or sent to jail for three years. Grenada's Legal Affairs Minister, Elvin Nimrod, told the AP: "We have problems when some use the technology to engage in mischief." In many countries, though, mischief makes the world go round. It is the chief angst-propulsion method open to those who otherwise sit at home and wonder why no one cares about them. It is the most modern way in which people can attempt to affect others, without leaving their office chairs and floral-patterned couches. Grenada is having none of it. It has decided to take a stand and allow anyone who feels slighted by a nasty tweeter to copy the insult and present | high technology high technology: Grenada, an online grenade-free zone. (Credit: Videobuster09/YouTube screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET) Honestly, that free speech thing can be tiresome. People end up endlessly expressing themselves and, every second of the day, someone's going to get hurt. Online, that is. It's too easy to take out your iPhone and type "you liberal pig Euro a***ole," or some other type of spontaneous flattery. The island of Grenada has decided that it has had enough. Its lawmakers wish to designate the country a decorous online enclave in the midst of the vile, open-mouthed free-for-all that is the Web. So they have passed a law that makes it a criminal offense to insult someone online. As the Associated Press reports, if you besmirch someone's character or name, you can be fined up to $37,000 or sent to jail for three years. Grenada's Legal Affairs Minister, Elvin Nimrod, told the AP: "We have problems when some use the technology to engage in mischief." In many countries, though, mischief makes the world go round. It is the chief angst-propulsion method open to those who otherwise sit at home and wonder why no one cares about them. It is the most modern way in which people can attempt to affect others, without leaving their office chairs and floral-patterned couches. Grenada is having none of it. It has decided to take a stand and allow anyone who feels slighted by a nasty tweeter to copy the insult and present
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Grenada, an online grenade-free zone. (Credit: Videobuster09/YouTube screenshot by Chris Matyszczyk/CNET) Honestly, that free speech thing can be tiresome. People end up endlessly expressing themselves and, every second of the day, someone's going to get hurt. Online, that is. It's too easy to take out your iPhone and type "you liberal pig Euro a***ole," or some other type of spontaneous flattery. The island of Grenada has decided that it has had enough. Its lawmakers wish to designate the country a decorous online enclave in the midst of the vile, open-mouthed free-for-all that is the Web. So they have passed a law that makes it a criminal offense to insult someone online. As the Associated Press reports, if you besmirch someone's character or name, you can be fined up to $37,000 or sent to jail for three years. Grenada's Legal Affairs Minister, Elvin Nimrod, told the AP: "We have problems when some use the technology to engage in mischief." In many countries, though, mischief makes the world go round. It is the chief angst-propulsion method open to those who otherwise sit at home and wonder why no one cares about them. It is the most modern way in which people can attempt to affect others, without leaving their office chairs and floral-patterned couches. Grenada is having none of it. It has decided to take a stand and allow anyone who feels slighted by a nasty tweeter to copy the insult and present

Social network's detractors say proposed class-action settlement over ad feature that displays images of users doesn't go far enough. Facebook argues otherwise; says if plaintiffs don't like it, they can opt out of deal.
A Sponsored Stories ad unit. In this image, the names of the Facebook users referenced in the ad have been grayed out (see upper left).
(Credit: Facebook)
Opponents of Facebook's settlement of a lawsuit involving "Sponsored Stories" -- an ad feature that displays images of users of the social network -- spent Friday morning in a San Francisco court trying to convince a federal judge that the settlement's terms fail to protect the privacy of minors.
Facebook, of course, believes otherwise and if users who are objecting to the settlement don't agree, they should just leave the class-action lawsuit, according to Michael Rhodes, the attorney hired by the social network to handle the case.
"If it's such a terrible action, opt out," he said during a hearing in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. If a plaintiff were to opt out of the class action, he or she could sue Facebook separately.
In December, U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg gave preliminary approval for the $20 million settlement. But some of the case's plaintiffs weren't happy, including six parents who each have children aged 13 to 16.
Sponsored Stories are the ads that feature a user's name and photo when he or she "likes" a page belonging to an advertiser. The original five plaintiffs claimed that the social network violated users' right to privacy by publicizing their "likes" in advertisements without asking for permission or offering compensation. After hearing arguments from both sides, Seeborg can issue his decision at any time. There are no other hearings scheduled at this point, but if Seeborg ends up rejecting the settlement, the case, of course, will continue.
During the hearing, Seeborg asked the objectors' attorneys to explain why they think the settlement is not fair, emphasizing that he was not there to draft a new policy for Facebook: his role is to reject or accept the settlement.
"Why is this more harmful to the 13- to 17-year-old than it is to an adult?" he asked.
The objectors argued that teenagers need more protection because they don't fully understand the consequences and post information without thinking. Seeborg commented, "the premise of posting without thought is certainly not confined to minors."
Scott Michelman, an attorney with Public Citizen, the nonprofit that's representing the parents with teens, said the bottom line is that the court can't approve a settlement that breaks other laws. In this case, state laws require parents to give permission for the use of a minor's likeness. Under the settlement, minors can opt out of participating in the ad unit only if they say specifically that their parents didn't give them permission to use Facebook, or if the parents are on Facebook as well and are linked to the minor's account. In the second scenario, the parents would opt out for the minor.

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