I've never understood the "Haha, this is you" thing.
That's a factual statement that is just a definitive declaration. How is that supposed to be a win?
>It pulls off the mask of anonymity that people utilize for a sense of sacred identity.
Ah, so, you're just attempting to extort personal power by removing anonymity for the sake of online shame for whatever subjective reason.
Which again, I don't get the point; outside of the internet, we're all flesh and blood. We all have names, mothers, fathers, some fun quirks, hopes, fears; that is definitive reality, not really a point of weakness. To think that gives you power, is like trying to punch the man in the mirror saying "Haha, got you now you slippery bastard"
Now the subjective makes a little bit of sense, if you're trying to ruin an image, or "Make the God bleed" however, it requires a follow up other than "Behold, a mortal"
It's like telling a joke without context or punchline, just yelling "Tax exemption"
Cool; where's the actual oomph? Where's the meat in the move?
Imagine someone saying "This is you, this is where you live" without going into further detail.
How is that supposed to trouble me? My GPS and phone do that all the time. Hell, the DMV does that.
>But your privacy is no longer applicable and under my control now!
Again, how is that an issue? What makes you think this gives power over someone? My dude, if you haven't realized we live in a 1984 world of surveillance and the illusion of privacy that makes the actual novel of 1984 look like Mother Goose.
Perhaps if we were truly private citizens the subjective would hold water; however in this age of technological networking that is extremely transparent, such things is like pissing in an ocean of piss and thinking you are winning in that.
If you want to own someone, own their haircut, their life choices, their taste in media, or their hobbies, with the knowledge you can also be "owned" equally in that.