If I wanted to write to AOL about Michael (which I do - I don't suppose it'll do much good, but it's worth a go), what info would they want apart from an account of his activities? I'm guessing they'd need IP numbers he's used in conjunction with edit times, is that right? I was half-way through writing a message to them before I realised all I had identity-wise was "it's some guy who calls himself 'Michael', or 'NOFX', or 'Weezer', or...".
Incidentally, I don't think that my writing to AOL (assuming that I do indeed write) should stop other people writing to them as well.
lp (camembert) WikiKarma: a tad more at [[Michael Nyman]]
On Thu, Jun 12, 2003 at 01:47:00AM +0100, Lee Pilich wrote:
If I wanted to write to AOL about Michael (which I do - I don't suppose it'll do much good, but it's worth a go), what info would they want apart from an account of his activities? I'm guessing they'd need IP numbers he's used in conjunction with edit times, is that right? I was half-way through writing a message to them before I realised all I had identity-wise was "it's some guy who calls himself 'Michael', or 'NOFX', or 'Weezer', or...".
Incidentally, I don't think that my writing to AOL (assuming that I do indeed write) should stop other people writing to them as well.
Sometimes he is working without being logged in. We have some IPs that belonged to Michael at certain times. The problem: Those are IPs of proxy servers, not the IPs of his dial up connection. Tracking those IPs down to a user could prove to be a difficult task.
JeLuF