"Thomas Dalton" wrote
If it were to be brought to trial, the victim's identity becomes part of the trial record. You can't have an anonymous victim.
Sure, you can. They are referred to as "Witness A", or whatever. I'm not sure what the requirements are to be allowed to remain anonymous, but it certainly happens.
That's pretty much theoretical. The "stalker" here is a gmail address sending via Tor (apparently). The victim is anonymous and intends to remain so.
Charles
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Charles Matthews wrote:
That's pretty much theoretical. The "stalker" here is a gmail address sending via Tor (apparently). The victim is anonymous and intends to remain so.
One anonymous person is sending private threats to another anonymous person, both of whom intend to stay anonymous and both of whom could be located anywhere on Earth?
I'm not really sure there's anything that anyone other than the two anonymous individuals themselves can do here.
On 26/02/2008, Bryan Derksen bryan.derksen@shaw.ca wrote:
One anonymous person is sending private threats to another anonymous person, both of whom intend to stay anonymous and both of whom could be located anywhere on Earth?
Yes, that's the point at which it stopped making sense for me, too.