Mar. 12th, 2009

jason: jason (Default)

Slashdot | Suspect Freed After Exposing Cop’s Facebook Status

“A man on trial in New York for possession of a weapon has been acquitted after subpoenaing his arresting officer’s Facebook and MySpace accounts. His defense: Officer Vaughan Ettienne’s MySpace “mood” was set to “devious” on the day of the arrest, and one day a few weeks before the trial, his Facebook status read “Vaughan is watching ‘Training Day’ to brush up on proper police procedure. From the article,’You have your Internet persona, and you have what you actually do on the street,” Officer Ettienne said on Tuesday. “What you say on the Internet is all bravado talk, like what you say in a locker room.” Except that trash talk in locker rooms almost never winds up preserved on a digital server somewhere, available for subpoena.’”

The whole NYT article is even more fun: About New York - A New York Police Officer Who Put Too Much on MySpace - NYTimes.com

I wonder if the cop can be fired for just being thick? I assume that police try and fight the ‘thug with a badge’ stereotype? I cannot imagine they still nurture it. I’m dedicating this post to all my students past, present and future who will have their personal information found, pulled out and presented in public to support or contradict their actions or statements made in a professional forum. It is ok to do and say crazy things… but know it is out there. Everything you do on the net can come back to haunt you. I shudder at the thought of someone putting comments about the children and families and colleagues they work with on their FB or MS accounts.

What brings it all home is: Pope: We should have Googled Holocaust bishop. SEE? Even the pope is saying that your past will be googled.

jason: jason (Default)

Legally Deafblind

Legally Deafblind

March 15, 2009 - May 3, 2009

The Varley Art Gallery
216 Main Street Unionville  map

Organized by Natalie Schonfeld Howard

Legally Deafblind is a photography-based multimedia body of work about individuals who are deafblind by photographer and artist, Natalie Schonfeld Howard.

The exhibition addresses the importance of language and communication as a window to independence and is an intimate journey of discovery about our dependencies on the senses. 

It consists of 40 international photo-documentary images, works on canvas, and an immersive environment of multimedia installations exploring the sensorial experiences of a place when being deafblind.

For additional information, please contact the gallery at (905) 477-9511 or visit www.varleygallery.ca.

October 2013

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