>>35He does. He works for one of those companies that demand your social network passwords. Also, there exists a way to make messages persistent such that they can be viewed by coworkers even when the message is made from a connection that did not originate at the workplace. For instance, I could call Obama a scheming kike in this very post, and he could still read it if he wanted, even though I was not in a US government building when I made it. Furthermore, in case you are interested, other people exist when you are not looking at them. This is called ``object permanence''. So even when
>>31's coworkers are not at the office, they still exist and can post messages on line, and
>>31 will still be able to read them. (This theory is a rather radical one, and if you want to deny the existence of an external reality outside of your perception, I can't really refute that in any way.)