MySpace has lots of rules for its members. There's no nudity allowed. Nor does the site tolerate copyright and trademark infringement or deceptive advertising. And for a minute there, it appeared MySpace members were also not allowed to make fun of Senator Ted Stevens. Recent law school graduate MySpace.com reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to reject, refuse to post or remove any posting (including private messages) by you, or to restrict, suspend, or terminate your access to all or any part of the MySpace Services at any time, for any or no reason, with or without prior notice, and without liability. That's only part right. MySpace was held liable, at least in the court of public opinion. A little press from Boing Boing, He also mentions how once accounts are deleted they cannot be reinstated. So one complaint from a "credible" source, seemingly offline, got the song booted from MySpace. But why? Bodsky goes on to detail a bit of MySpace parent company News Corp.'s relationship with Sen. Stevens and the stake the Rupert Murdoch-owned company has not only in Net Neutrality legislation but also in another Stevens-backed broadcasting legislation. Of course we already knew that News Corp. was Stevens' here.") Drag this to your Bookmarks. Add to document.write("Del.icio.us") Yahoo My Web
MySpace Undeletes Ted Stevens Spoof
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