- Owning the mistake they did.
- Being a credible human being for others.
- Having the courage to face with themselves on a (literal and proverbial) mirror and use this opportunity to grow immensely.
- Being able make peace with what they did and not having to carry that burden on their soul.
- Being a decent human being.
- Being honest to themselves and others looking at them right now.
the list goes on and on and on...Having seen what a self righteous online mob can do in the name of justice over literally nothing, I fully defend his decision to stay anonymous. As much as I find his action idiotic and negligent.
Avoiding consequences for unethical actions is, itself, unethical. If you don’t want the time, don’t do the crime.
1. Don't do anything you don't want to experience yourself.
2. If you don't want to find out, do not fool around.
As an arguable middle ground, they can plead to Scott non-anonymously while addressing the public anonymously. That'd work to a point, but it's not ideal.Also, their tone is coming through very cocky. Defining their agent as a "God!", then giving it a cocky and "you're always right, don't stand down" initialization prompt doesn't help.
I mean, prompting a box of weights without any kind of reasoning or judgement capability with "Don't be an asshole. Don't leak private shit. Everything else is fair game." is both brave and rich. No wonder things went sideways. Very sideways. If everything else is fair game, everything done to the bot and its "operator" in turn is a "fair game". They should get on with it, and not hide behind the word "anonymous". They don't deserve it.
All in all, they doesn't give impression of being a naive person who did a mistake unintentionally, but on the contrary.
That's a frighteningly illiterate take on this.