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Attorney
General Gansler Notifies Advertisers of
Presence on Peoplesdirt.com
Asks Webhost to Enforce Terms of Service Agreement
BALTIMORE,
MD (May 22, 2009) - Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler today sent letters
to companies that advertise on Peoplesdirt.com
and to the site’s webhost, informing them that the Internet
site may have made deceptive statements to obtain advertisers and
that the site is subject to termination under its contract with
the webhost. In letters sent to advertisers, Attorney General Gansler
informed them that Peoplesdirt.com represents itself to potential
advertisers as a website that is “suitable for persons ages
6 and older” and does not contain teen or adult content,
including explicit sexual content or suggestive themes. Peoplesdirt.com
is an Internet forum that solicits and publishes anonymous, malicious,
personal attacks on teenaged children.
In addition to the
letters sent to advertisers, Attorney General Gansler sent a
letter to the Go Daddy Group, the company that hosts
the Peoplesdirt.com website. Attorney General Gansler informed
the company that Peoplesdirt.com appears to violate the company’s “Morally
Objectionable Activities” clause of its Terms of Service
Agreement. The clause states that Go Daddy reserves the right to
terminate service for sites whose content contains morally objectionable
activities which “defame, embarrass, harm, abuse, threaten,
slander or harass third parties.”
“Peoplesdirt.com has chosen to misrepresent itself to both
advertisers and to GoDaddy.com,” said Attorney General Gansler. “The
site is home almost exclusively to abusive, harmful and embarrassing
personal attacks on high school aged children - content that is
certainly not suitable for children. We hope that as responsible
corporate citizens, all advertisers will reconsider whether they
want to use their advertising dollars to support such a vicious
website.”
Peoplesdirt.com has been shut down twice in the last five months
as authorities investigated for possible criminal activity. The
website, populated with expletives, drug and sexual references,
and racial and ethnic epithets, has also been the subject of recent
news accounts detailing the use of the site to make death threats
against fellow students and teachers. While the site is broken
down geographically with categories for all 50 states, the overwhelming
majority of posts were in the Maryland category, with Montgomery
County topping the list with the most postings.
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