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wa, violence, jobs, trance, cameras, confession, evocative names, sell, headlines, cdu4mkey, offensive, fujifilm, r&b, university, | Sometimes private universities attempt to place notes vague caveats on expression, but most of the time these are too vague to allow schools to expel people for what some administrator thinks is violates their sense of decency. Secondly, and more notes importantly, there is absolutely nothing wrong with hurting notes someone’s feelings. Hurting peoples’ feelings is a natural part of life and rational discourse. Alternatively, if there is something wrong with hurting feelings, I hereby give notice that everyone that disagrees with me is hurting my feelings and should stop disagreeing. Larry, at 1:35 pm EST on February 15, 2006 What a load of self-entitlement It is important to see the trees AND the forest. First, Syracuse is an expensive, private college between NYC and Buffalo, NY (e.g., nowhere). Second, the students cited strike me as with a gross sense of entitlement ("Daddy’s paying big bucks, so I should get the best, and if I don’t, I’m going to bitch like hell") that appears epidemic on campuses today, IMHO. |
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Not in New York. Not in any state. Moreover, assuming that it did, any issue of whether a contract between facebook and the cameras students had been breached would be between Facebook and the cameras students. Not the school. (The tort of false light in New York requires that someone actually portray the plaintiff in a “highly offensive” manner. cameras However, even these torts, in which the professor, not the school would be the plaintiff must withstand first amendment scrutiny, otherwise they are not actionable. So, the school can’t hide behind potential tort liability.) Gabriel, I don’t want to break it to you, but assuming that this is a First Amendment issue (which it might not be), the First Amendment protects a lot of cowardice. Indeed, the Supremes have pretty squarely held that in most cases anonymous speech and leaflets are protected. Talley V. California, 362 U.S. 60 (1960). Heather, I have not researched Syr’s policies, but most schools state that they do not restrict expression. |
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