My Sunday column described the frustration of the owner of the iconic Grain Belt Beer sign, where graffiti taggers have taken over the back of the giant bottle-cap. Winthrop Eastman doesn't want to keep paying for city-ordered graffiti removal when that money could go to restore the sign and illuminate it once again. Also Sunday, Hard Data columnist Jane Friedmann reported the latest roster of sales tax scofflaws who have had their licenses revoked by the state Department of Revenue. The On Your Side column described the fight over the new product recall database, www.saferproducts.gov. It appears some in Congress object to the public getting access to unconfirmed reports of product defects. That's a dynamic that's quite familiar to us where at Whistleblower, where we frequently use this blog to air consumer complaints that we haven't verified. Unlike saferproducts.gov, we typically remove identifying information about the company and people involved, and we offer a disclaimer. But the debate over the Consumer Product Safety Commission certainly makes me wonder whether our policy should change.