If crimes are committed on 4chan, that is a problem for law enforcement to deal with. AT&T is not a law enforcement agency.
Crime prevention and lawful behavior are both civic obligations. All citizens and companies are responsible. The better we live up to that, the less intrusive our government will have to be in regulating our lives--which is why I was surprised that you made such a comment.
This really has nothing to do with law enforcement. The key here is that /b/ is a hotbed for the coordination of activities that are illegal or will become illegal once the legal system finally figures out this whole "Internet" thing. Refusing to serve up a
malicious website is very different than refusing to serve up a website that is merely ugly or offensive.
I see the term "domestic terrorism" being thrown around here and there, but I'd like to understand the logic in calling Anonymous domestic terrorists. From what I understand most of their crime involves harassment and nothing violent.
Admittedly, "terrorism" is a very charged word in the aftermath of the Bush administration, since they used it to describe pretty much everything they didn't like. In that regard they did an even greater disservice to the American public by making us skeptical of the whole concept of terrorism, when in fact terrorism really is one of the greatest threats to social stability in this century. That's hard to miss in other countries, from Thailand to Sudan, but even in the United States there are the ingredients for terrorism. Don't be misled by the word "domestic." Domestic terrorism is simply terrorism perpetrated here in the United States, by American citizens. The classic modern U.S. example is the Oklahoma City bombings of 1995. It's terrorism like any other sort; the only difference is that it directly infers a tension point in the government's social policy or a failure in its intelligence apparatus.
I don't think there is a single legal definition for terrorism, which exposes the question of what is and isn't terrorism to additional ambiguity, especially among those of us who don't have legal expertise in the subject. When I said that /b/ is a place for domestic terrorists in the making, I based that assessment upon these criteria:
1) The community has become a safe haven for the coordination of illegal or unlawful activity. The lack of moderation or other content controls effectively means that the owner, moot, condones this. (And, if you ask me, he will eventually be confronted with the ultimatum to either censor the board or face charges.)
2) The community has become large enough to present a real hazard to public safety in ways that individuals or smaller groups cannot. /b/ is essentially a movement, with all the power to effect change that comes with it.
3) The community's large numbers and anti-authority attitude has led its members to feel they would be safe acting outside the law. Indeed, they style themselves "Anonymous," a clear indication that they think they are free to commit actions that they would not commit as individuals.
4) The community has demonstrated strong tendencies toward harassment, retribution, and coercion.
5) The community has actually committed numerous numerous cyber attacks on other websites and individuals, and individuals have expanded their criminal behavior on a smaller basis to real-world activities.
None of these alone, in my mind, constitutes "terrorism," but all of them put together makes it irrefutable in my mind: The large numbers of people involved, the coordinating ability, the extralegal mentality, and the willingness to harass and abuse others. That's terrorism. At least, to me. More specifically, I see /b/ as a breeding ground for terrorism, which is different than describing it as a community of terrorists. Much of the community is just regular folks; but there are enough bad eggs around, whose terroristic impulses are awakened or activated by participation in /b/, that I see /b/ itself as the greater problem and not its malicious members.