Alias or Real People ?

would you like a forum using real names,alias nicknames, or both

  • real names

    Votes: 36 26.5%
  • alias nicknames

    Votes: 29 21.3%
  • both

    Votes: 71 52.2%

  • Total voters
    136
Some one here posted.

Don't worry about the dog, be concerned about the man with a gun.

Moderation in all things, including moderation, which means you gotta get wild once in awhile.

Avatar1.jpg
 
Last edited:
Saying people should put up their real names (or as stated in another thread, real names be required on this forum) is silly, unless everyone personally knows everyone else. What's to stop someone from making up some fake but real looking name. I could say my name is Chris (my real name is David), this whole real name vs alias topic would no longer be discussed when in actuality nothing would be different.

Unless someone can come up with a way to ensure that people are using their real name, there is no reason to even discuss this.
 
Saying people should put up their real names (or as stated in another thread, real names be required on this forum) is silly, unless everyone personally knows everyone else. What's to stop someone from making up some fake but real looking name. I could say my name is Chris (my real name is David), this whole real name vs alias topic would no longer be discussed when in actuality nothing would be different.

Unless someone can come up with a way to ensure that people are using their real name, there is no reason to even discuss this.

When you sign on to the forum your credit card will be charged $1.00 to support the forum and to verify your name and address.

How is that?

No tickee, no washee and if you can't afford $1.00 or a credit card maybe you (the general you, not you specifically) should be someplace else.

Oh and before you say it, sure some people will take out phonny credit cards. There are frauds in all areas of life, we do what we can (all of us not you and I). :-)
 
Last edited:
Obviously, I prefer real names. I have never understood the need for screen names. But I also firmly believe in personal freedom and so would hope that everyone just put their real name underneath their nickname. I would like to avoid as many rules as possible but if we ever did have to verify names we would do it by sending Jay Helfert to every house. You would have to show Jay your ID and feed him brownies and ice cream or he would sit and tell you pool stories for two days. :)
 
You may not remember this, but long ago on AZB a guy lost his job because someone didn’t like what he had to say- on AZB.

Old timers help me out on the specifics, here: The guy posted his opinion, and someone (adversary or bystander, I don't know) figured out his IP address, researched his location, and then complained anonymously to his boss that the guy was posting during work hours from a work address. The dude was fired.

Now THAT'S standing up for your opinions.
 
When you sign on to the forum your credit card will be charged $1.00 to support the forum and to verify your name and address.

How is that?

No tickee, no washee and if you can't afford $1.00 or a credit card maybe you (the general you, not you specifically) should be someplace else.

Oh and before you say it, sure some people will take out phonny credit cards. There are frauds in all areas of life, we do what we can (all of us not you and I). :-)

I have a better idea: Anyone who wants to know my real name send me a dollar and I will tell you.

Geeezh! :eek:
 
You walk in a store and give them your credit card. The cop stops and you give him your driver’s license. You probably also give your driver’s license to just about anyone else who wants two pieces of ID. Your employer probably knows more about you than your mother. You register for classes and give your ID, credit card and where you can be reached through your best friend. You also give all this info, including your nearest relative’s phone number to just about anyone from whom you want credit. All of your current and past love relationships know even more about you (including your sexual preferences) and can divulge it if they are ticked at you. Have you ever stopped to think how many times you give someone your social security number (though it is illegal for them to even ask) and on top of that the damn thing is right there on your driver’s license.

In a restaurant you give the waiter (who just got paroled) your credit card and he walks into the back room to swipe it once (or twice). You place all your bills with account information in your trash and place it on the curb where it is now “public.”

On top of all that you passwords are probably a variant of your birthday, your dog’s name, or your girl friend’s middle name – did you think we did not know that you are too lazy to try for better encryption?

Did you really think that your teachers, coaches, buddies at the hall and all of your other “friends” and acquaintances won’t tell me all that I want to know about you?

And most telling of all, some guy in a bar asks your name and address and you give it to him, your business card too if you have one. So what is the big deal?

I have helped put more people in prison than most people on this forum have had birthdays and I am easy to contact or find. The “I must remain anonymous” is nothing more than a way to hide and snipe. Personally, I discount by at least 75% anything said by anyone who hides his ID. I bet I am not the only one who sees it this way.

All the comments in the world won’t change that. If someone needs to hide behind a pseudonym my first reaction is, “Why is he doing that?” There must be some reason. The internet is like a huge telephone book. If you want to find someone, look them up. What you get you may or may not like. You probably use the same handle here that you use other places and you have said more here and other places that would all lead to you.

So if anyone needs to remain anonymous, for whatever reason, I think you should know that the rest of us assign zero or less credibility to what you say. I may read your comments and even go see the web site you recommend but I do not believe much of anything you say.

More damage has been done to the use of internet forums through the use of pseudonyms than any other single action, excepting of course identity theft. In more than 10 years on the net I have had two attempts at identity theft both were stopped within a week and one person is probably serving time. Nobody has ever come looking for me and that includes well over 1,000 people I have helped place in prison (not jail but prison).
I know that my comments will not change anyone’s mind but it is something to think about. Why do you need to hide? You can run but you can’t hide in the rest of your life.

you sir are well above the normal philosophical l level of 95% of these trolls on this board.

Rep to you for making common sense seem not so common any more...
 
You got me with your common sense. And on further reflection, it is crucial to my sense of well- being that you believe everything I say on AZB, and that you take my opinions with the highest respect.

I am not Blah Blah. Don't call me Mike Hunt. I live in Utah, not California.

I am the real John Fiedelschnitzer.
 
What if you're in the WITSEC program and your real name actually is an alias?

Aaron (AKA "smartass" :smile:)
 
Obviously, I prefer real names. I have never understood the need for screen names. But I also firmly believe in personal freedom and so would hope that everyone just put their real name underneath their nickname. I would like to avoid as many rules as possible but if we ever did have to verify names we would do it by sending Jay Helfert to every house. You would have to show Jay your ID and feed him brownies and ice cream or he would sit and tell you pool stories for two days. :)

Hold the cookies -- I'll take the pool stories :grin-square:
 
you sir are well above the normal philosophical l level of 95% of these trolls on this board.

Rep to you for making common sense seem not so common any more...
What he said (for JoeW)-----By the way my real name if anyone is interested is Lou Austin--- Port Isabel, Tx. go by the screen name phishman which is a play on what I do for a living.
 
i don't think i could give people anymore info and feel comfortable. i've put pictures of myself on here. i have proclaimed multiple times that i am in the atlanta area and what rooms i frequent. my first name and nickname are in my sig line and there's a pic of the butt of my custom cue for my avatar. if you need me you can find me. i am not giving last name and address, too many f*cktards on the internet. i've never had the kind of problem with another member that would warrant us needing to meet in person, but if i did all they have to do is say the word and we can find each other.
 
I participate in a golf discussion group that requires real names. It is certainly less hostile than some of the stuff here, but you still have internet tough guys trying to stir things up. With that said, it is way more civil and I have met a lot of good people from that site. I have also met a lot of good people on this site as well though.
 
this is my first ever poll and i think it has been interesting so far. early lead was for real names but then posters came with some valid points and it has turned into a neck and neck battle. i have to go to work soon. bbl
tyvm for your input.:cool:
 
You got me with your common sense. And on further reflection, it is crucial to my sense of well- being that you believe everything I say on AZB, and that you take my opinions with the highest respect.

I am not Blah Blah. Don't call me Mike Hunt. I live in Utah, not California.

I am the real John Fiedelschnitzer.

I do not think it is so much that you or I want to be believed or trusted here or anywhere else in life. My primary way of being is to help others find the truth, not my truth but their truth, whatever that may be. I am very much an empiricist and think that we should have ways to help others find whatever truths we may think there are in life.

The real problem is the idea that people who hide behind a pseudonymn find themselves like members of other groups such as the Klan. I am not saying they are no different than Klan members, I am saying that the problems are similar.

Research has been very consistent. When people are anonymous they are less empathic and tend to be more vicious. The use of a pseudonymn encourages the person to be less caring and to be less responsible. Therein lies the problem.

However, it is also true that if I take the time to write it is because I think I have something to say and I would like you to at least consider that it was written with some degree of integrity. So, in a sense, yes, I too seek respectability whether I admit it to myself or not. Else why even be here?
 
I have absolutely no problems with people using their real name or a nickname. At the poolhall, I can't tell you how many players I knew only by their nickname. I certainly didn't think they had less credibility just because they wouldn't give up their real name. I've met several AZers in person and I still don't know their real name (nor am I at all curious).

Just tell me what you want me to call you and I'll go with it. You say your name is Stinky, no problem, that's how I'll refer to you.

If you really want to know smeone's real name on here, why not PM them and if they feel comfortable with you, they may simply tell you. As for me, I'm not that concerned.
 
In the end I am suggesting that the person should consider the dangers (to themselves) of using a pseudonym. It is better to accept the responsibility for one’s actions by letting your name be known. I do not think that it needs to be a confessional with all secrets bared but simply a responsible adult where we are willing to accept responsibility for our statements. The alternative is fraught with problems.

I don’t know, but I would bet, that some people have been disappointed maybe even ashamed by their own comments. Some have burned bridges that they now regret. Being who you are makes you think before you hit that ENTER key.

Most of us had to get drunk a few times before we realized that it is not a good thing to do. We have drinking laws because young people have not had sufficient experience to realize the dangers of alcohol. There can be (not must be) a kind of drunkenness that can come with too much anonymity.
 
I never use my real name on the internet. Here's why:

About 10 years ago, I unwittingly helped a company fold and lose hundreds of millions. Without going into details, a bunch of computer enthusiasts and I wrote a piece of free software that helped destroy their entire business model. It was one of these companies without any viability that was created to cash in on the internet craze of the time. It collapsed when the internet bubble burst, but we accelerated their fate.

The affair made a quite a bit of noise at the time, and a crafty journalist from a rather well known rag called me over the phone, claiming to be a law student interested in the case, and managed to get a quote from me saying the company's execs have no case against us, that their company will fail anyway, and that they should shut up. The quote was printed in the rag, and also in the online version on their website.

Since then, when you look up my real name on the internet, the idea you get of me is that I'm a reckless computer hacker who made a lot of investors lose a lot of money. I since changed line of work, I no longer work in computing, but each and every time I go for a job interview, I always - and I mean ALWAYS - get that line: "sooo, you look like the ideal candidate, but... well... how to say this... there's a little thing I'd like to clear up, because frankly you worry me as a business owner. Could you tell me what happened in 2000 with this company?". So I have to explain, in detail, how things happened, why I am not the root cause of their failure, and it's always very embarrassing. It's been 10 years and it still comes up.

The moral of this story? the internet never forgets anything. EVER. What you say under your real name WILL come back to haunt you some day. IT WILL. What you say today that seems harmless may reveal things about you you'd rather not say years from now, and you can't know what circumstances will change in your life in advance. When you post anything on the internet, you should consider as private and discreet as shouting in a crowded restaurant.

Don't post on a forum that you slept in and told your boss you were sick. He'll know. If he doesn't, a potential employer will some day.

Don't post that you like bungee jumping, your medical insurance will know and refuse your claim because you didn't disclose dangerous activities to avoid paying premium.

Don't ask on a medical website how to cure gonorrhea, your future wife that you haven't even met yet, that you'll promise you never slept with anybody before her, will find out.

Don't post on AZBilliards that you have a collection of genuine Balabushka cues, someone is bound to figure out your address and break into your home.

Think I'm paranoid? well, take your chances. I know I won't do the same mistake twice.

!!! THE INTERNET NEVER FORGETS !!!
 
Fastolfe makes a good point that I will have to give serious consideration. That is indeed the best answer I have heard for why one should remain anonymous.

Hmmmmm:cool:

There is a real dilemma here.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top