The author didn't make these generalizations. You are going out on a limb here. The point is that there is no real "go to" person/place/entity that enforces the law in cyberspace. Who do you call if you did have a domain stolen? This can happen to anyone.
Regardless of whether one police officer knew what a domain name was or not , it's clear in this story that there's no real easy way to get a domain name back once it is is stolen.
Hundreds of businesses and individuals have had domains stolen. Guess they're all sleaze too.
The author didn't make these generalizations. You are going out on a limb here. The point is that there is no real "go to" person/place/entity that enforces the law in cyberspace. Who do you call if you did have a domain stolen? This can happen to anyone. Regardless of whether one police officer knew what a domain name was or not , it's clear in this story that there's no real easy way to get a domain name back once it is is stolen.