Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

July 26th, 2010 | argument, Free Speech, good lawyering, lawyers, legal writing, rhetoric

Anonymous online writing: bad writing that wouldn’t see the light of day if the writer knew readers could match the words to the person.

Wow. I apparently touched a nerve the other day when I blogged on this post and the thread of comments following it and expressed my preference for Dan Hull’s view that anonymous blogging is cowardly.

At the risk of offending one anonymous commenter who desperately wants me to condemn Dan’s insistence on insulting him and forget what I care about — writing words that one is willing to stand behind and justify — I will try to clarify and expand upon what I wrote:

I never said one cannot write anonymously. Quite plainly I don’t ban anonymous comments on my blog. Quite plainly I’ll never be Lord of the Internet with the power to ban anonymous writers. Nor, if I were Lord of the Internet, would I ban anonymous writing. I believe in the freedom of speech, even speech that expresses views I despise. Views I think are stupid are another tolerable phenomenon.

But I do care deeply about the quality of writing. I teach law students how to write as lawyers, and the vast majority of my professional life as a law professor and a lawyer depends on the effectiveness of what I write. One thing I am convinced of and try passionately to convince my students of is that that you cannot be an effective writer if you do not have the courage to own your words. By that I mean, among other things, that you must believe in your words, believe those are the  best words you could come up with under the circumstances to express your point of  view. If you don’t do so, you’re just parroting things you haven’t truly thought through. Your failure to think them through typically means you haven’t entirely grasped what it is you’re trying to say (and what the writer of what you’re parroting meant to say). It also means your words will not convince the intelligent reader who isn’t already convinced that you’re right.

One necessary implication of my belief in the necessity of owning your words is that anonymous online writing loses a lot of its credibility by the very fact that it is anonymous.

My view does not mean that anonymous writing entirely lacks credibility.The anonymous author’s character (and an anonymous author has a character, one that makes an alert reader wonder why he isn’t willing to claim his words as his own) detracts from the reader’s valuation of that anonymous author’s writing. But a myriad of factors go into influencing a given text’s persuasive force. The author’s character is only one, albeit an important one.

The point that really seems to have hit a nerve is that it seems plain to me that choosing to write anonymously is for all relevant purposes grounded in fear. Sometimes that fear justifies the anonymity because (a) the author’s fear is of sufficient immediate and substantial harm and (b) the message is so important that even if it is compromised by anonymity it is worth getting out. Where those so offended by my views and I differ is in the amount of courage we think is appropriate. They have fears of the consequences of identifying themselves online when they write and they’re deeply offended that I don’t believe those fears justify their ways of using anonymity.

Thinking he had caught me questioning the courage of one of my colleagues (whose views, not courage, I question) one anonymous commenter pointed out that Jonathan Adler blogged anonymously on the Volokh Conspiracy as “Juan non-Volokh” prior to being granted tenure. At the time, Jonathan had a legitimate fear that the mere act of blogging would jeopardize his shot at tenure. As a general matter at that time, blogging was not only considered beneath legal scholars, but also to be an actual drain on time better devoted to “real” scholarship. (While blogging is no longer a negative in the eyes of most professors, it still is considered by most entirely irrelevant to scholarly achievement). I have absolutely no reason to believe Jonathan chose anonymity to hide the substance of the views he expressed on the Volokh Conspiracy. Those views were quite well known among his colleagues (and to the public) and in substance were entirely of a piece with the public writing he did under his own name. Nonetheless, I do believe that Jonathan’s writing under his own name has more force than his writing did under his chosen pseudonym. Nor do I have any reason to believe he would disagree.

To take one of Dan Hull’s more obvious examples of non-cowardly fear justifying anonymity, an Iranian dissident has good reasons for writing under a pseudonym. But one question his anonymous identity might raise, among others is this: is he really a dissident or is he in fact a CIA or Saudi plant? All sorts of credibility problems arise when one chooses to separate one’s writing from one’s identity.

Ken, who chooses anonymity, has written that he prefers to remain anonymous because his favorite styles are, as he describes them, “satire, sarcasm, and ridicule.” Ken also believes that “these are potent weapons in the fight over ideas.” But, unfortunately, poor Ken is too subtle for most people and he therefore fears their reactions:

People don’t like being made fun of. Moreover, some people are functionally incapable of understanding irony, sarcasm, and satire. Other people are offended easily, and particularly by pop culture, sexual references, and the various forms of juvenile self-indulgence occasionally featured here to the extent it amuses us.

I would suggest to Ken words he so proudly identifies as satire, sarcasm, and ridicule are not really the “potent weapons” he believes they are. It is well known that online writing in particular is a very poor medium for the effective use sarcasm. Effective satire that actually persuades someone previously unconvinced of the writer’s point of view is a very rare thing. Far more often, satire is just the words of someone seeking affirmation from others who share the writer’s contempt for the object of the satire. And ridicule? Ridicule amuses your toadies. To everyone else, it’s just name-calling.

But Ken is no Jonathan Swift, and I think he knows it. In fact, Ken’s “satire, sarcasm, and ridicule” are, to my mind (and to the mind of those who are convinced by me, but plainly not to Ken and his anonymous colleagues), merely the lazy expression of hostility and disagreement.

But, regardless of how we characterize the writing that Ken believes to be a “potent weapon in the war of ideas,” what he fears is the risk those “functionally incapable” of understanding his meaning would pose to him. Who are these people? Well, he once worked for big firms that would so dislike what he wrote he feared his employment would be threatened. He has clients he fears he’d lose if they knew the truth of his views on social issues. He fears needing to justify his writing to opposing lawyers or judges who might use those words against him. He fears he or his family will be stalked or threatened like other bloggers have been. And he bravely wrote critically once about a white supremacist who lived just one town over from him.

Are these fears the legitimate fears of a brilliant writer wielding potent tools in the war of ideas? You can judge for yourself. The fear of the law firms, the clients, and opposing counsel and judges seems to me more likely fears of being busted for using stupid words by people to whom one has the responsibility to express oneself intelligently. The fear of being stalked seems to me the fear of something so unlikely (even though it does happen, of course) that it’s really nothing but an empty rationalization. The fear of the white supremacist? I might grant Ken that one, but then why does all of his writing need to be anonymous?

To address the question more generally: are your political views so inconsistent with your employment that your job would be threatened if you really expressed them? Are you so desperate for a job you need to keep that one despite the fact it is inconsistent with true expression of what you believe? Are you writing online about your employer despite an employment policy that forbids you to do so? Is that a legitimate exercise of anonymity? If you’re Karen Silkwood or Daniel Ellsberg, it would be, but I have grave doubts that the people complaining to me are in that league.

And if it’s your clients’ reactions you fear, why would they not like what you write? Would they like it if they knew you were hiding your real thoughts from them? Why do you represent them if legitimate expression of what you really believe would offend them? Are you really capable of representing them zealously if you harbor secret thoughts that, if known, would cause them to retain different lawyers? Is a blog really an appropriate place for telling stories about how dumb your clients are? You enjoy doing it. You want to do it. But does being able to do that justify anonymous blogging?

I AM NOT suggesting that  fears are always illegitimate. What I am suggesting is that a free-floating fear of being stalked as a result of online writing is pretty far off the wall. And I’ve worked for big law firms and clients of all sorts. It’s not the everyday law firm or client who would fire you for thoughtful writing online. There would have to be something really atrocious about the employer. And clients care far more about courage, skill, and passion than they do about disagreements on social issues that are irrelevant to their representation, especially if those views are expressed cogently and the lawyer is willing to stand behind those views. The last thing clients want is a lawyer who’s afraid to let the world know that he believes in and will stand behind his words.

And are these fears so real that they justify anonymity on everything a blogger writes? Selective, tactical anonymity is an option, guys. And choosing to remain silent on matters that you can’t write about in ways that won’t endanger you with people who matter to you is an option too. That of course, is a whole other topic: a good lawyer takes a lot of really interesting stuff to his grave with him.

And, honestly, I don’t see substance on Popehat (the site I originally linked to and from which the hostile commenters came) that would usually be the sort of thing that would threaten the livelihood of its authors or commenters. They’re a bunch of guys who might like to romanticize the subversiveness of what they write, but, really, they’re not exactly a threat to anyone or anything.

Nor am I.

Then again, while the content at Popehat is pretty run of the mill, the words themselves do not really do that substance a lot of justice. And that indeed is a major part of the problem. As Charles wrote, anonymity allows you to write that a cop was a “fascist” without people who know you and would be offended by those words know that you wrote them. But merely writing that a cop is a “fascist” is just nasty name-calling, not credible writing. And Patrick, in the very first comment responding to my blog post – writing anonymously, of course — explained that he’s never heard about me but that if he really cared he could “write a blogpost mocking [me], that would stick to the front page of a Google search for [my] name forever.”

A put down and a threat as an opening move? That’s a perfect example of why I called anonymous writing online cowardly. If one is going to insult and threaten, one ought to have the courage to let one’s employers, clients, loved ones, and targets know that being a bully is what one is in the business of doing.

Or one could claim to use insults rhetorically, to highlight a point, but that’s a dangerous game, and it takes a special person to get away with it, and Dan Hull happens to be a special person.

But the most important thing about Dan Hull for purposes of this discussion (though quite plainly Patrick and his Popehat People want to make anyone who happens upon this post or the last one on this point think otherwise) is that Dan Hull wrote those insults under his own name! He’s willing to own and justify those insults. And doing so has benefited him immensely. Clients love lawyers who make the work their own. And it sure doesn’t seem that the Popehat guys are big believers in political correctness, so I can’t believe they were genuinely hurt by his words except to the extent the substance behind his insults hit home.

My point is that if you don’t own your writing you cannot truly be persuasive. That’s why I emphasized that my students, as lawyers in training, must learn to own their words, to be ready to justify the choices they made in writing the words they wrote.

And Charles happens to be right about one thing — outside the law (and too much within it, truth be told) the courage to own one’s words is sorely lacking. I think that’s a real shame and a major loss for the quality of any discourse, be it about politics, literature, science, religion, etc. Charles, I guess, expects less of people than I do. I also think that people would be surprised how much they’d benefit from saying what they mean in ways they’d be proud to claim as their own to anyone.

Finally, I am making no demands. I am stating my point of view. Yes, I am an Associate Professor of Legal Writing, but that’s just a title. And I hardly use it to put on airs. Anyone who knows anything of the status wars within academia or has read much into my archives knows I write quite openly, under my own name, about (1) the fact my title is reflective of a remarkably low status and an absence of job security and (2) my opinion that (contra Patrick) law professors are NOT an elevated class.

Am I a nobody? Well, Mike (whoever he might be) certainly things so. One thing I do know — anyone with access to an internet connection has about as good an opportunity to determine that for themselves as they would for anyone who writes openly under his own name.

And they can take that information and factor it into their judgment whether and the extent to which they agree with me.

Here’s my suggestion to everyone, including the Popehat guys: try writing under your own names. You might find your words and views become far more compelling not only to your readers but also, far more importantly, to yourselves. But be careful: being thoughtful and precise — writing things that you’re willing to justify to those who challenge them — might make you rethink some of the stuff you hold to so passionately.

Or you can ignore me entirely. That’s entirely your prerogative. You can even, if you wish, go on thinking of me as a narcissistic nobody who doesn’t matter, and I’ll go on thinking of of most anonymous bloggers as a bunch of cowards who write to please themselves and don’t persuade anyone who hasn’t already bought into their point of view.

And when it gets down to it, tthe vast majority of anonymous online writing is simply bad writing that wouldn’t see the light of day if the writer knew everyone he knows could match the words to the person.

This article has 15 comments

  1. Ken Says:

    I’m quite satisfied to let readers or your prior thread, and this one, assess who touched whose nerve.

    I’m also quite satisfied to let a careful reader determine whether you ever grasped, or whether you will ever be willing honestly to portray, what happened in the thread which Mr. Hull visited, and what he was actually doing.

    Similarly, I’m happy to let a careful reader examine both of your posts–and the posts they link–and assess whether your use of your own name has promoted credibility or quality of expression.

    As I said before, I am at peace with someone on the Internet calling me a coward for blogging anonymously. Your posts, despite your intentions, are a rather good exposition of why.

  2. pfriedman Says:

    Ken — the fact I called you a coward explains why you blog anonymously?

    That’s a perfect example of terrible writing.

    I cannot believe that my calling you a coward is that hurtful, and if it is you have no business writing about things that matter in a public forum. You, after all, have written: “There is no right to be free of offense. At least not in America. (In Canada, who knows.) Certainly there are people who think they ought to have a right not to be offended. Such people are morally cowardly ninnies worthy of scorn.”

    And if my calling you a coward is something that you’re at peace with because you’re convinced of the soundness of your views, why aren’t you willing to put your name to those views?

  3. strech Says:

    You seem fixated on the idea that fear and cowardice are the only reasons people might write under a pseudonym, or anonymously.

    And you seem to be intent on, by default, discounting what is written by the anonymous:

    One necessary implication of my belief in the necessity of owning your words is that anonymous online writing loses a lot of its credibility by the very fact that it is anonymous.

    To propose an alternate thought on anonymous writing:

    My identity is simply none of your damn business. This has nothing to do with my inability to own my words; nor has it to do with any supposed cowardice; nor does it have to do with quality of writing. I simply have no intention of telling random people on the internet who I am so they can regally deign to take my words seriously.

    And I will judge people on what they write rather than who they are. Perhaps you feel that writing under real names causes people to write better; there is little reason to believe this other than some internet trolls. (And, given the example of Richard Kyanka, clearly not all).

    Moreover, a fixation on who wrote something strikes me as counterproductive – why do you care whether people post their names? What are you going to do with the information? I see nothing you can do with this information other than judge the person writing it, which does nothing but bring you further away from the entire point of the exercise.

  4. pfriedman Says:

    Stech: (1) What’s the problem with random people on the internet taking your words seriously? (2) It must be nice to live in a world in which all that goes into judging a given piece of writing is the text itself. I’ve never been in that world. (3) I care about the identity of the writer because, among other things, he might have a conflict of interest in connection with what he’s writing, he may have shown himself so untrustworthy that I shouldn’t believe what he says (Andrew Breitbart, anyone?), he might be so invested in certain aspects of his identity that his views on the matter he is writing about cannot be credited (the press spokesperson for BP, anyone?), if he is willing to let people who know him know what he’s writing I know he’s got some check outside his own brain on what he writes, I am considering him as my representative and I like people who have the courage to stand behind their convictions, I know that if he’s willing to write what he thinks under his own name and his employer is okay with it his employer must have a lot of respect for him . . .

    Your identity is indeed none of my business. But if you’re so concerned with remaining private, why do you also feel it necessary to write so publicly?

  5. strech Says:

    most anonymous bloggers as a bunch of cowards who write to please themselves and don’t persuade anyone who hasn’t already bought into their point of view.

    As a side note, I haven’t noticed any appreciable difference between anonymous and non-anonymous bloggers in terms of percentages fitting into the description above.

    I mean, just look at political bloggers.

  6. pfriedman Says:

    Strech: which political bloggers? I don’t know whether you consider any anonymous or non-anonymous ones credible, much less who they are. My worries about an anonymous political blogger would be first and foremost about who’s behind him or her. There are plenty of people out there with very prominent forums who are backed by money that is only interested in advancing its point of view and who therefore only advance that point of view. At least if the person is identified that bias or interest can go into the mix in judging the text. Would you trust an anonymous blog posting photos that make BP look good with respect to the oil spill, or might you wonder if it’s just one more outlet for BP to get its photoshopped frauds out into the public sphere?

  7. strech Says:

    What’s the problem with random people on the internet taking your words seriously?

    None whatsoever. I hope they do. I’m just not going to jump through irrelevant hoops they make up to make them do so.

    But if you’re so concerned with remaining private, why do you also feel it necessary to write so publicly?

    This sentence really makes no sense to me. I enjoy writing on the internet. Debate and discussion can be interesting. Like everyone else, I find irresistible the lure of people being wrong on the internet. I currently keep no blog, but I may at some point, to write about things I find interesting. I see no connection whatsoever between this and telling people my name and have no idea why you are connecting the two.

    From my perspective, it’s “if my identity is (as you admit) none of your business, why do you care so much that I’m not giving it to you?” (I understand your post and responses are your answer to this question).

    if he is willing to let people who know him know what he’s writing I know he’s got some check outside his own brain on what he writes,

    I don’t think this is actually true. What an employer does depends on the employer, not the employee or what he says. There are plenty of companies that simply don’t care what people do outside of work; there are others who will get rid of someone at the drop of a hat. And as for being checked by people who know you, well, one thing you notice about (for example) dicks is that they tend to be friends and acquaintances with people who are dicks.

    Plus, pseudonymous writers (which you merge together with anonymous) can be checked by others – look here at the Popehat gang, which seem to know each other enough to provide this “people who know him know what he’s writing” check.

    I care about the identity of the writer because, among other things, he might have a conflict of interest in connection with what he’s writing

    I’ll concede to a certain extent here. One danger of anonymous and pseudonymous writing is hiding conflicts of interest. But one can hide a conflict of interest while revealing your real name, though it’s harder (see BP example). And one can write under a pseudonym and consistently reveal them.

    As for Andrew Breitbart, he would be equally discredited if he posted as Fluffy McSparklePants. And I think if what you learned from the Sherrod incident was “don’t trust Andrew Brietbart” rather than “Don’t trust an edited 2-minute excerpt from a full speech” you missed the point.

    I think a big problem I have with your post is your conflation of pseudonymous and fully anonymous writing. Take, for example, the scienceblogger Orac (who posts at Respectful Insolence). His name has been revealed a couple times. I can’t remember what it is, and it doesn’t really matter. His credibility was built off of his years of writing; he still revealed conflicts of interest. He certainly owns his words and stands behind them. And Andrew Wakefield wrote his name on the scientific paper he got paid by trial lawyers to do and he didn’t reveal his conflicts of interest.

    So I don’t see (for example) what I’d gain from knowing Ken’s name. It wouldn’t teach me anything. Ultimately, I find someone’s body of work much more useful in assessing their credibility than their associations.

    The other big problem I have is you seem to have the idea that posting with your name is the default, posting anonymously/with a pseudonym means you’re afraid. I see no reason why posting with your name is a default. It’s not. I just post.

    A name is just a pseudonym that’s been around longer. Makes it harder to hide conflicts of interest, sure, but this nonsense about cowardice is silly.

  8. pfriedman Says:

    Strech — if you want to do your writing an enormous benefit, you ought to try putting your name to it. As Samuel Johnson said, “The prospect of hanging concentrates the mind wonderfully.”

  9. Charles Says:

    the fact I called you a coward explains why you blog anonymously?
    This is poor reading comprehension from a writing prof. The fact that a non-anonymous dink on the internet feels emboldened to call Ken a coward is why he is at peace with his decision to follow a different path.

    You also, in the one thing you “credited” me for, misinterpreted what I wrote. I’ll let you reread and figure out how.

  10. ThomasS Says:

    You state “(2) It must be nice to live in a world in which all that goes into judging a given piece of writing is the text itself. I’ve never been in that world.” Then you proceed to demonstrate that you are a person who doesn’t judge writing in this way: “(3) I care about the identity of the writer because, among other things, he might have a conflict of interest…”.

    Yes, it is nice having enough confidence in your own analytic abilities to focus on the arguments, not the author’s authority. If I could give that confidence to everybody who seems to need it I would. Of course I wouldn’t want to give them false confidence. So in truth I’d have to teach them to actually judge and respond to arguments – to sort red herrings from actual trains of logical thought.

    Did you know that Lincoln kept a copy of Euclid’s Elements in his saddle bags? He believed that studying them made him a better lawyer. I always found that fact fascinating. More recently I’ve heard of people avoiding tax law classes because the math is too hard. I guess that you law professors might have your work cut out for you when you set out to train this type of analytic ability.

    In truth though, it is both a wonder and a terror of the internet that you do find a lot of people who try to think in this way. I am not going to try to estimate to what extent these people succeed, but people do try, and these people, by and large, couldn’t give a whit what your legal name is or what you do when you aren’t online.

  11. pfriedman Says:

    If you intends to get your point across, it is important to use every tool you can to get your point across. There’s no shame in that. It’s making your communication as effective as possible. In fact, to suggest that you would believe that reliance on the author’s willingness to own his words is an illegitimate basis on which to judge his persuasiveness and therefore something you would dispense with is to give up the intention to communicate as effectively as possible.

  12. Dan Hull Says:

    Honored to be mentioned. You are getting the message out. We have followers. Also check out Mark Bennett’s No-Wuss Commenters Policy. He’s a leader, too.

    But you can’t argue with people who are so sure they are right. They really do have a different set of values. You/we do not share any Old Verities with the pretend-intelligencia, faux-Libertatians, the Slackoisie, and other players in the Happysphere.

    Me? I just think they’re young and played a few too many video games as school kids. And got too many trophies for it. Importantly, they are overly-thin skinned. Not ready for work or the trenches. (Watch what happens after you get this comment.) All their lives, they may have been told that mediocre work, ideas and discourse was Excellent. If you are Pretend-Excellent, why sign your name to your work?

    Finally, you get the impression that they’ve Never Read Anything–and that it doesn’t matter.

    All life is simple; everything can be Googled. All have argued well. All must have trophies.

  13. Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity » Blog Archive » On the internet, they’ll find out you’re a dog if you bite. Says:

    [...] made clear I consider anonymity on the internet a stance often abused and almost always one that detracts from the speaker’s credibility, but it also can be a [...]

  14. Whys Says:

    Censorship is the belief that people make better decisions when ignorant of the truth. Censorship can manifest itself as both hostile oppression as well as the far more insidious, self-censorship. Without true anonymity, self-censorship is inescapable and abundant. Because censorship of any form prevents the free flow of knowledge and because the free flow of knowledge is crucial to our individual rights, power, evolution, and survival. Thus all ideas of every perspective must be freely exchanged so that we may all know the truth, no matter how unacceptable the truth may be to any one of us. Anything less keeps us ignorant, holds us back, leads us to incomplete conclusions, and inferior solutions. Only be detaching ideas from their egos can we ever hope to learn what is real. The truth is anonymous, and we must know the truth so that we may grow.

  15. Omar Says:

    i just wanted to comment randomly and say to each and everyone of you happy new year!! may this year be filled with happiness and joy and love in air.. we all got hurt from 2011 so 2012 please do not disappoint us we hope big we wish a better year the best year!! VERYYY NICEE!

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