After I refused a bribe to remove a @web3isgreat
-
@molly0xfff How does that even work? Isn't the guy worried that some day he might hit a lawyer who will take him up on his offer of "penalty of perjury"?
-
@henryk my suspicion is that it’s not worth anyone’s time to track down whoever’s behind this email address (likely outside of the US)
-
Wholly crap, do not mess with Molly. She got this lawyer removed from the CA bar association, nuked his address from earth orbit, and deleted all public records he or that office ever existed.
-
@molly0xfff I learned about this scam from Cory Doctorow--as he described it, they copy your content but with an earlier (false) date, demand you take yours down, then edit or delete their version if you do.
-
@molly0xfff so they are pathetic and cheapskates?
-
@RupertReynolds precisely
-
@molly0xfff It's an obvious ploy, now I know about it, but it never occurred to me before.
It'd be a shame if something like waybackmachine caught them lying about the content... -
Can you give me permission to rehost this content?
I would love a bribe of $100 to take it down. Maybe we can all get a bribe of $100 to take it down. Websites are cheap, so we can make a lot of them.
-
@INIT6 it’s all already CC licensed haha
-
@molly0xfff
Presumably there is still someone upstream of you though (e.g. an ISP or VPS host)? What happens if they get the fraudulent legal threats instead? -
Molly Whitereplied to Deadly Headshot last edited by [email protected]
@dheadshot there is pretty much always someone upstream regardless of your setup, yes. but generally the hosting providers are the easiest targets.
if they send a takedown to my VPS provider, i can make a counterclaim, and at that point they have to try to sue me.