slander, rap city, auctions, stupid games, tupac, put downs, christin hinojosa, whitehouse.org, jarhead(widescreen edition), company names, zoe records, mandana beigi, luana anders, tupac music video,
|
It’s clear that online rap lyric behavior often mimics private behavior, despite the fact that the internet (including Facebook) is actually quite a public forum. Online statements are published statements, even when participants feel as though they are acting in a private realm. The result is rap lyric widespread discomfort (and even outrage) at what feels like increased “monitoring” from the university, as well as widespread discomfort (and even outrage) at people’s seeming inability to understand civil and responsible public online behavior. And none of these larger concerns, of course, diminish the utter ugliness of the rap lyric present situation. Mark, at 8:20 pm EST on February 14, 2006 Nothing illegal happened, Mark Mark, First of all, Syracuse is a private university and is not directly bound by the constitution itself. Second of all, assuming that it was a public university, just because someone (or some body) decides that some behavior isn’t acceptable wouldn’t mean that the regulation itself is either facially valid, or applied in a valid manner.
|