Want Sympathy For Surfing Porn At Work?

from the nice-try dept

Okay, we’ve seen all sorts of bizarre legal excuses to get people off from charges of computer related crimes, but now people are combining that with psychologists’ tendency to call everything an addiction. A guy in Germany who was fired from his job for (a) running up a huge internet bill charged to his office while (b) surfing porn at work has the guts to claim he’s an online porn addict, and as such deserves “understanding”, and not a pink slip. Now, certainly, there are people with problems who need to understanding and therapy, but this seems to be going too far. Why is it that no one can ever take responsibility for their own actions any more?


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Comments on “Want Sympathy For Surfing Porn At Work?”

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10 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Real problem, but I'd still fire him

Pornography (on or off-line) is a serious addiction. Often people who want to quit have a very difficult time doing so, even at the risk of losing their marriages or careers.

That said, no addiction is overcome through putting the blame on something else. This man needs to accept responsibility for his problem and tackle it (with therapy if need be).

Steve Sanderson says:

RICHLY ironic

“Why is it that no one can ever take responsibility for their own actions any more?”

I am laughing my butt off right now!

The irony of Mike making that statement is PRICELESS. Here’s a guy who constantly rants and raves about how stealing copyrighted mp3s and movies shouldn’t be illegal, and he’s casting aspersions about responsibility and accountability?

Thanks for the best laugh I’ve had in a while!

Mike (profile) says:

Re: RICHLY ironic

What that has to do with the story being posted is beyond me, but a quick response on the facts you got wrong (or purposely choose to misunderstand).

(a) Copyright infringement is against the law. Period.

(b) Copyright infringement and stealing are two different things. Don’t believe me? Ask the Supreme Court.

(c) I do no advocate copyright infringement. I do not download music or movies without permission. I’ve never used Kazaa or whatever other popular file sharing applications are out there these days. I understand the law and I abide by it.

(d) All I’ve ever been saying is that it’s actually in the content producers’ best interests to embrace these distribution tools. I do not say that stealing should be legal. I say that the content producers will be better off in the long run by noticing where the market is heading, and moving there before the competition beats them.

d0rfussy says:

market opportunity

i think steve suxor bigtime. him & the riaaa. where is the xbox/ps2 game where i can punch the sh*t out of these guys (repeatedly) in my lounge room at my convenience ? its either that or download some more mp3’s (f*ck listening to sponsor dictated fm radio programming). gpl programmers, stop that gnomey/kde sh*t & do this now !
a billg version on xbox would also be rather acceptable 🙂

Frank says:

extra one

should have added this one Mike:
(e)The record companies have already broken the law in practices that gouge consumers. I feel like automatically cutting and pasting this to any argument that paints the record companies as the good guys as opposed to the ‘pirates’:
From http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2000/05/cdpres.htm
“The proposed agreements would settle FTC charges that all five companies illegally modified their existing cooperative advertising programs to induce retailers into charging consumers higher prices for CDs, allowing the distributors to raise their own prices. The complaints are the culmination of an extensive industry-wide investigation by the FTC of these practices.”

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