Most modern newspapers and magazines attribute their articles to individual editors, or to
news agencies. An exception is the British weekly
The Economist. All
British newspapers run their leaders, or
editorials, anonymously.
The Economist fully adopts this policy, saying "Many hands write
The Economist, but it speaks with a collective voice". Guardian considers that
"people will often speak more honestly if they are allowed to speak anonymously". According to Ross Eaman, in his book
The A to Z of Journalism, until the mid-19th century, most writers in Great Britain, especially the less well known, did not sign their names to their work in newspapers, magazines and reviews. ==Anonymity on the Internet== Most commentary on the Internet is essentially done anonymously, using unidentifiable pseudonyms. However, this has been widely discredited in a study by the University of Birmingham, which found that the number of people who use the internet anonymously is statistically the same as the number of people who use the internet to interact with friends or known contacts. While these usernames can take on an identity of their own, they are sometimes separated and anonymous from the actual author. According to the University of Stockholm this is creating more freedom of expression, and less accountability.
Wikipedia is collaboratively written mostly by authors using either unidentifiable pseudonyms or temporary account identifiers, although many Wikipedia editors use their real names instead of pseudonyms. However, the Internet was not designed for anonymity:
IP addresses serve as virtual mailing addresses, which means that any time any resource on the Internet is accessed, it is accessed from a particular IP address, and the data traffic patterns to and from IP addresses can be intercepted, monitored, and analysed, even if the content of that traffic is encrypted. This address can be mapped to a particular
Internet service provider (ISP), and this ISP can then provide information about what customer that IP address was leased to. This does not necessarily implicate a specific individual (because other people could be using that customer's connection, especially if the customer is a public resource, such as a library), but it provides regional information and serves as powerful
circumstantial evidence. Anonymizing services such as
I2P and
Tor address the issue of IP tracking. In short, they work by encrypting packets within multiple layers of encryption. The packet follows a predetermined route through the anonymizing network. Each router sees the immediate previous router as the origin and the immediate next router as the destination. Thus, no router ever knows both the true origin and destination of the packet. This makes these services more secure than centralized anonymizing services (where a central point of knowledge exists). Sites such as
Chatroulette,
Omegle, and
Tinder (which pair up random users for a conversation) capitalized on a fascination with anonymity. Apps like
Yik Yak,
Secret and
Whisper let people share things anonymously or quasi-anonymously whereas
Random let the user to explore the web anonymously. Some email providers, like
Tuta also offer the ability to create anonymous email accounts which do not require any personal information from the account holder. Other sites, however, including
Facebook and
Google+, ask users to sign in with their legal names. In the case of Google+, this requirement led to a controversy known as the
nymwars. The prevalence of
cyberbullying is often attributed to relative Internet anonymity, due to the fact that potential offenders are able to mask their identities and prevent themselves from being caught. A principal in a high school stated that comments made on these anonymous sites are "especially vicious and hurtful since there is no way to trace their source and it can be disseminated widely. "Cyberbullying, as opposed to general bullying, is still a widely-debated area of
Internet freedom in several states. Though Internet anonymity can provide a harmful environment through which people can hurt others, anonymity can allow for a much safer and relaxed internet experience. In a study conducted at Carnegie Mellon University, 15 out of 44 participants stated that they choose to be anonymous online because of a prior negative experience during which they did not maintain an anonymous presence. Such experiences include stalking, releasing private information by an opposing school political group, or tricking an individual into traveling to another country for a job that did not exist. Participants in this study stated that they were able to avoid their previous problems by using false identification online.
David Chaum is considered "the father of online anonymity". In the early 1980s, while a computer scientist at Berkeley, Chaum predicted the world in which computer networks would make
mass surveillance a possibility. As Dr. Joss Wright explains: "David Chaum was very ahead of his time. He predicted in the early 1980s concerns that would arise on the internet 15 or 20 years later." However, there are some who consider anonymity on the Internet as a danger for our society as a whole. David Davenport, an assistant professor in the Computer Engineering Department of Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey, considers that when anonymous online communication is allowed, the fabric of our society is at risk. "Accountability requires those responsible for any misconduct be identified and brought to justice. However, if people remain anonymous, by definition, they cannot be identified, making it impossible to hold them accountable." he says.
Arguments for and against anonymity As
A. Michael Froomkin says: "The regulation of anonymous and pseudonymous communications promises to be one of the most important and contentious Internet-related issues of the next decade". Anonymity and pseudonymity can be used for good and bad purposes. And anonymity can in many cases be desirable for one person and not desirable for another person. A company may, for example, not like an employee to divulge information about improper practices within the company, but society as a whole may find it important that such improper practices are publicly exposed. Good purposes of anonymity and pseudonymity: • People dependent on an organization, or afraid of revenge, may divulge serious misuse, which should be revealed. Anonymous tips can be used as an information source by newspapers, as well as by police departments, soliciting tips aimed at catching criminals. Not everyone will regard such anonymous communication as good. For example, message boards established outside companies, but for employees of such companies to vent their opinions on their employer, have sometimes been used in ways that at least the companies themselves were not happy about [Abelson 2001]. Police use of anonymity is a complex issue, since the police often will want to know the identity of the tipper in order to get more information, evaluate the reliability or get the tipper as a witness. Is it ethical for police to identify the tipper if it has opened up an anonymous tipping hotline? • People in a country with a repressive political regime may use anonymity (for example Internet-based anonymity servers in other countries) to avoid persecution for their political opinions. Note that even in democratic countries, some people claim, rightly or wrongly, that certain political opinions are persecuted. [Wallace 1999] gives an overview of uses of anonymity to protect political speech. Every country has a limit on which political opinions are allowed, and there are always people who want to express forbidden opinions, like racial agitation in most democratic countries. • People may openly discuss personal subjects that they consider too embarrassing to share with their friends, such as sexual problems. Research shows that anonymous participants disclose significantly more information about themselves. People might also feel more open to sharing their personal work anonymously if they feel that their friends and family would harass them or disapprove of their work. Examples of such work could include
fan fiction or vocal performances. • Anonymity can be used to seek contacts for performing illegal acts, like a
child groomer searching for children to abuse or a swindler searching for people to rip off. • Even when the act is not illegal, anonymity can be used for offensive or disruptive communication. For example, some people use anonymity in order to say harmful things about other people, known as
cyberbullying. •
Internet trolls use anonymity to harm discussions in online social platforms. The border between illegal and legal but offensive use is not very sharp, and varies depending on the law in each country.
Anonymous (group) Anonymous (used as a mass noun) is a loosely associated international network of activist and
hacktivist entities. A website nominally associated with the group describes it as "an internet gathering" with "a very loose and decentralized command structure that operates on ideas rather than directives". The group became known for a series of well-publicized publicity stunts and distributed
denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks on government, religious, and corporate websites. An image commonly associated with Anonymous is the "man without a head" represents leaderless organization and anonymity. ==Legal protection of anonymity==