Re: a to g

Bobby G

New member
To all members who involved themselves in the public apology posting, please be advised that I removed your posts and locked the thread. The goal is to make the issue go away, not to stir it up.
 
Members not familiar with libel on the Internet may want to read this:





Libel & Defamation in the Information Age

By Eric Eden



On the Internet, where abnormal behavior is the status quo, tempers

can flare in the heat of debate and word wars can last for days or

even weeks. It's not uncommon for users to ridicule, harass or insult

those who disagree with them.



But if you damage someone's reputation by trying to embarrass them in

a public forum, you could be sued for libel or defamation. After all,

there's no reason to assume that the messages you send through

cyberspace are immune from lawsuits.



"The Internet culture right now is for users to refute speech with

speech," says Dave Marburger, the attorney who represented Brock Meeks

in one of the first defamation lawsuits in the United States involving

the Internet. "But as the Internet culture gets more diverse, users

will start refuting speech with lawsuits."



There have only been a handful of libel and defamation lawsuits filed

involving the Internet so far, but as the Net grows, the number of

lawsuits will probably increase. If the few court battles that have

been decided involving libel and defamation on the Net are any

indication of how the law will be applied to the Internet in the

future, it's worth your time to learn what's libelous or defamatory on

the Internet and what's not.



Other users have the right to sue you for defamation if they can prove

you damaged their reputation or good name with false information. You

can be sued for libel if another user can prove you have distributed

defamatory statements about them in a public area -- such as a news

group or mailing list.



In April of 1993 Gil Hardwick, an anthropologist in Australia, was

ordered by the Australian Supreme Court to pay David Rindos $40,000 in

damages because he defamed Rindos on an international mailing list.



After Rindos lost his job at the University of West Australia,

Hardwick posted a message on an international disscussion group that

suggested Rindos was fired because he was a bully and had sexually

molested a local boy.



Rindos filed a defamation lawsuit against Hardwick because he felt the

message had hurt his chances of finding a new job. In a letter to

Rindos's attorney, Hardwick wrote "Let this matter be expedited and

done with....I can do nothing to prevent it, lacking any resources

whatsoever to defend myself." Like most people, Hardwick didn't have

the money to hire a lawyer or finance an expensive legal battle.



"He (Rindos) suffered a great deal of personal hurt because of the

message," said Supreme Court Justice David Ipp in the West Australian.

"The damages award must compensate him and vindicate his reputation to

the public."



The Internet is an informal forum and people often write personal things

about other users, but you can be held accountable in court for making

libelous or defamatory remarks in public forums just like Hardwick was.



"We know that as the Internet grows, there will be more and more

lawsuits involving libel and defamation," says attorney David H.

Donaldson, editor of Legal Bytes, an electronic magazine that

discusses legal issues involving computers and networking. "The only

question is if the number of cases will grow steadily or if there will be

an explosion of lawsuits all at once."



Anybody can sue you for libel or defamation if they think you damaged

their reputation, but if you can prove what you say is true, chances are

that you won't end up in court.



"Make it clear when you are stating your opinion," says Donaldson,

"Always state the facts that your opinions are based on just to be safe.

You probably won't lose a libel or defamation lawsuit if you can back up

what you write with solid facts."



For example, Brock Meeks, a full-time journalist who also distributes his

own electronic magazine, avoided losing a defamation lawsuit largely

because he could prove an article that he sent over the Net was true.



Meeks was sued by Suarez Corporation Industries in April of 1994 for

writing an investigative story about the company and its services in his

electronic newsletter -- the CyberWire Dispatch. Meeks had no libel

insurance, no publishing company backing him up and a lot of legal

fees to cover. (His lawyer charged him $200 an hour.) The only thing

Meeks had was his house -- and he didn't want to sell it to pay off a

lawsuit.



Meeks defended his article in numerous posts on the Net, "All of my

facts were rock solid. Although the article was delivered with a fair

amount of attitude, I don't believe that I'm in dangerous waters," he

wrote.



Benjamin Suarez, owner of Suarez Corp., filed the suit because he felt

that Meeks had damaged his reputation and hurt his business by

saying he was "infamous for his questionable direct marketing scams,"

and saying "he (Suarez) has a mean streak." To back up his opinion,

Meeks cited accusations made by the Washington state attorney

general's office concerning Suarez's direct marketing practices.



In August of 1994 Suarez Corp. made Meeks an offer he couldn't

refuse. They agreed to settle the case for $64 -- to cover

administrative court costs. The company refused to comment on why

they agreed to settle the lawsuit.



If the case had gone to trial, Meeks's lawyer thinks Meeks would have

been able to win anyway. "The defendants in libel or defamation suits

involving the Internet have enhanced First Amendment rights," says

Marburger. "The plaintiff has to prove actual malice. In other words,

the plaintiff has to show that the defendant made false statements or

was negligent." Marburger's only regret is that they didn't get to set

that precedent in court.



Although the Meeks case doesn't really mean anything in the law

books, it does show that if you're responsible and can prove what you

write on the Net is true, people will be less likely to take you to court. If

you just make something up and your sources aren't reliable, you could

lose big like Hardwick did.



"You have to follow the same rules that journalists do if your going to

write and distribute controversial material about other people," says

Donaldson.



The increasingly common phenomenon of online forums creates the

possibility for you to reach large audiences, but it also creates the

ability for you to commit defamation or libel -- something that an

ordinary citizen didn't have to worry about in the past. Before the

growth of online communication, people who didn't work in the media

usually didn't have to worry about libel or defamation. "Libel laws apply

to the Internet the same way they do to newspapers and TV stations,"

explains former Federal Communications Commissioner Nicholas

Johnson, a professor at the Iowa University school of law. "The same

technology that gives you the power to share your opinion with

thousands of people also qualifies you to be a defendant in a lawsuit."



Like a newspaper or TV station, you are responsible for making sure

the material you distribute -- or broadcast -- over the Internet is not

libelous or defamatory. Lani Teshia-Miller never meant to defame

anyone, but when she took over the distribution of a tattoo FAQ she

almost ended up in court. The rec.arts.bodyart FAQ she inherited

contained a lot of generalizations based on contributions from

unattributed sources. Although she listed her name on the FAQ, she

didn't edit out several defamatory statements. One review of a San

Francisco tattoo artist in the FAQ said, "He's getting old and having

problems with his eyesight. His quality is really bad and he hurts

people."



After the artist hired a lawyer and threatened to sue, Teshia- Miller

changed the FAQ's wording to reflect a more factually-based and

less-hysterical view. The review now says, "His eyesight is not what it

used to be."



After the FAQ was changed and Teshia-Miller apologized, the artist

dropped the lawsuit. "It turned out to be a good experience for me,"

said Teshia- Miller. "I'm a lot more careful about what I allow on the

artist list, and I now have a very long disclaimer at the beginning of the

FAQ."



Every person you write something negative about won't sue you for

defamation or libel, they might flame you or just try to set the record

straight by replying to the message. But if you post false information

about another user and disgrace them in public, they have the right to

take you to court -- and they could win a big settlement if they can

prove you were negligent.



Medphone, a Fortune 500 company that manufactures medical

instruments, has filed a $200 million lawsuit against Prodigy user Peter

DeNigis. Medphone filed a "systematic program for defamation and

trade disparagement" lawsuit against DeNigis after a stockholder

reported that he was making several negative posts about Medphone a

day on Prodigy's Money Talk Forum. DeNigis, a former Medphone

stockholder, lost more than $9,000 last year by selling off his

investment in the company. In one post DeNigis wrote, "My research

indicated the company is really having a difficult time. No case, no

sales, no profits and terrible management. This company appears to be

a fraud. Probably will cease operations soon."



Although the accusation that Medphone is a "fraud" is very serious --

and potentially defamatory -- DeNigis might be able to win the lawsuit if

he can prove what he wrote is true in court.



"The Medphone case is a clear indication that libel and defamation is

something for Internet users to think about," says Johnson.



There are court cases in progress right now that will decide if access

providers such as Prodigy, America Online and Compuserve are

responsible for defamatory remarks broadcast over their services, but

there is no legal ambiguity about whether individual users can be sued

for making defamatory or libelous statements. Individual users are

responsible for making sure the information they distribute is not

libelous or defamatory.



The Internet has made world wide, instantaneous communication easy.

The average user now has the power to be heard by hundreds or even

thousands of other users, but in terms of libel and defamation, the Net

is not a new world of freedom. The reality is that libel and defamation

laws are enforceable in the virtual world just like they are in the real

world.



# # #





You may distribute this article freely for non-profit purposes. Otherwise

contact the author (Eric Eden -- R3eje@vm1.cc.uakron.edu) for reprint

permission.
 
I think the second advice is to have a personal liability policy in a very litigious time.
 
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