Forum Moderators: rogerd
What you could do is rename the user to something like 'user left' and remove all data and put in generic data. This would mean you could keep the posts while getting rid of personal data. Likewise you could write a hack to give some sort of 'ex-user' administration to do something similar.
Interesting post - let us know what you decide!
Cheers
Richard
How do they prove that they posted the comment?
If I do remove it, do I need to make a notation on the page indicating that I've removed a comment?
I asked a bunch of prominent bloggers, and no one had a good answer.
Does anyone?
I would also imagine that he can reasonably expect that you can't un-ring the bell. He may own it, but he has permitted the use of the content to you.
Personally, I would just write him a polite note saying just that and see what happens. If he really wants to persue the matter (I assume he is angry with you or someone else on the board) ... let him contact a lawyer and see if he has any grounds to force you to remove the material.
One forum package I use is vBulletin, which has a user delete feature - if you delete a member, you can choose to leave all messages in place; the will subsequently show as being posted by "Guest".
Removing posts is a big issue. I remember one forum where a prolific member went back and deleted the content (there was no time limit) of every one of his posts. It completely destroyed many useful threads, including those that related to a topic I was researching. VERY irritating.
I've found it necessary to put a special announcement in some forums stating that posts can't be removed, and that members should think before posting. We had been getting daily requests like, "OK, I got my answer, can you delete my post now?" and, "I no longer want to participate. Please delete my nickname and all my posts." :)
If personal safety, libel, copyright violations, etc. are involved - remove posts. Otherwise, I'd refuse in most cases.