I might just be thinking out loud here, but I do wonder how they plan to enforce it, and if there's a statute of limitations. I mean, assuming we don't make it easy for them and use real world information on our screen names. Like, years ago, I had an eccie account that tied to an alternate email account that could very easily be linked to me. It would have only taken a leak or hack to reveal that info to the public, or a subpoena to bring it to law enforcement. I wised up, ditched that account entirely and started over- this time with an anonymous email that doesn't link to a phone number or any personal info.
So it makes me think, realistically, how much hassle would it be for them to try and pin a review to me? I don't think they could unless they had reason to search my phone, and even then, I don't save any passwords and always use incognito mode. I know incognito isn't foolproof at all, but even if they had my phone, it wouldn't tell them anything unless they got my ISP to turn over records. It really doesn't sound like something Oklahoma has the resources to investigate. I know they could technically do it, but that's the sort of resources they only devote to terrorism or things involving minors. I'm reasonably comfortable that Gholst1874 will never link back to [redacted].
I think it's more likely these are the sorts of charges they'd tack on after busting you for being a John after they confiscated your phone.
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