For the purpose of clarifying discussion I am pasting below a
definition of libel, just so we can all see it.....

Shiavo does not have a case against me. 

I would have a case against Jennifer if I were the type to pursue it
-- with reckless disregard for actual facts, she has falsely accused
me of improper behavior (emotionalism, bias, libel) that would bar me
from being considered for work of a type I have done in the past and
still occasionally do (non-fiction writing). She has done this in a
forum that includes people with whom I do business and and despite my
status as a private person.

That being said, I hope we can put an end to this nonsense. I am not
litigious and will accept an apology for her failure to so much as
read the archives.

Dana

http://www.wave.net/immigration/lawyer/libel.html

LIBEL ON THE INTERNET

Internet users have been "flaming" others on Internet e-mail, news
groups and in Chat lines for years. For those of you who are new to
the Internet, "flaming" [as defined in Eric Raymond's Hacker's
Dictionary] means posting messages "intended to insult and provoke".
In other words, someone posts a message for others to read which
insults and/or provokes readers against another person or company.

People and companies are now suing these "flame" posters and/or the
Internet site host for Libel. Before we look at some of these
lawsuits, let me explain what is legally defined as Libel.

DEFINITION: Libel is the publication of a false statement, (and is not
a privileged communication) which injures one's business or personal
reputation.

A plaintiff who sues for Libel must prove all of the above and be able
to demonstrate some type of resulting damage. This could include being
shunned by friends and associates, inability to obtain work because
potential employers believed the false accusations. Some states allow
for a jury to assess damages based generally on reputational harm.

Privileged communication means statements made during judicial
proceedings, legislative proceedings, and those made between spouses
(in most states). You can lie all you want under these circumstances
and not be able to be successfully sued for Libel.

The U.S. Supreme Court also created a defense based on the First
Amendment's Freedom of Speech to allow the media to freely report on
the affairs of "public" persons unless the statements are made with
"Malice". NY Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964). Malice means
either knowledge of the falsity or reckless disregard for the truth. A
"Public" person is one who has special prominence in the affairs of
society. Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. 323 (1974). A
politician, movie actor, and other "famous" people are "public
figures". Other limitations and/or defenses to being able to
successfully sue for Libel are:

1. It's the truth. If you have facts and evidence supporting your
statement as being true, the plaintiff will not be able to prove that
it is false.

2. The group being defamed is too large so as not to be defamatory to
any individual. Let's say you write "Lawyers are crooks". John Lawyer
will not be able to hold you liable for Libel because it does not
specifically say "John Lawyer is a crook".

3. Statements of Opinion and not fact are generally immune from Libel.
That's because an opinion can never be proven false. However, if your
opinion implies your knowledge of an underlying set of facts which
your opinion is based upon, Libel might exist. For instance, stating
that a certain business in your opinion "is a fraud" implies that you
know of some facts indicating the business has committed fraud. On the
other hand, stating "I don't like that business' product" is merely
expressing your individual tastes which is not Libel.

Now, let's look at some cases which have dealt with Libel on the Internet.

In 1991, CompuServe was sued in New York federal court for Libel
(Cubby, Inc. v. CompuServe, Inc., 776 F. Supp. 135 S.D.N.Y).
CompuServe was sued because it hosted a daily newsletter called
"Rumorville" (which was also a defendant) in its Journalism Forum.
Plaintiff published an electronic news and gossip column for the TV
news and radio industries called "Skuttlebut". Defendant "Rumorville"
published articles which claimed that Skuttlebut was a "new start-up
scam" and it's owner had been "bounced" by his previous employer. The
court dismissed CompuServe as a defendant by Summary Judgment because
CompuServe had no contractual, employment, or other relationship with
Rumorville which allowed them to edit or even read what was going to
be published in Rumorville. Ii other words, CompuServe was merely
acting like a newsstand which displayed other publications and cannot
be held responsible for their content.

In 1994, an Australian anthropologist named Gil Hardwick was ordered
by the Australian Supreme Court to pay David Rindos $40,000 because he
libeled Mr. Rindos on the Internet. Mr. Hardwick claimed that Rindos
had lost his job teaching at the University of Western Australia
because he was a bully and had sexually molested a boy. These were
false statements which hurt Rindo's chances at finding a job and
harmed his reputation to the public.

In 1994, Suarez Corporation sued Brock Meeks for publishing an article
in his electronic newsletter called the CyberWire Dispatch for Libel.
Suarez Corp. v. Meeks, Civil Action No. 267513 (Ct. of Common Pleas,
Cuyahoga County, Ohio). Meeks had written that Benjamin Suarez, the
owner of Suarez Corp., was "infamous for his questionable direct
marketing scams" and that "he (Suarez) has a mean streak". The lawsuit
was settled for only $64 in court costs, but Mr. Meeks spent a lot in
lawyer's fees defending himself.

In 1995, Prodigy was held potentially liable by the New York Supreme
Court for damaging statements made by an anonymous subscriber to
Prodigy's "Money Talk" board (Stratton Oakmont, Inc. v. Prodigy
Services Co.). Because Prodigy exercises some control over content, it
acts as a publisher rather than a mere newsstand like host (as
CompuServe had been). The court held that a jury could find Prodigy
liable for failing to exercise its control to weed out Libelous
statements by its subscribers.

Currently, there is a $200 Million Libel lawsuit pending (Medphone v.
DeNigis). Medphone is a Fortune 500 company which makes medical
instruments. Prodigy subscriber Peter DeNigis lost $9,000 when he sold
off his Medphone stocks and is alleged to have published negative
posts stating that the Medphone company "appears to be a fraud".

WHAT CAN YOU DO TO PROTECT YOURSELF FROM BEING ACCUSED OF LIBEL? 

Truth is always a defense. That's because one of the things a
plaintiff must prove is that it was a false statement. So, check the
veracity of any information you publish on the Internet which may be
damaging to the reputation of others.

Quote testimony from judicial or legislative proceedings.

Express your opinions pertaining to ongoing debates or public issues
without resorting to undisclosed defamatory facts. If you disagree
with someone, don't attack him/her personally. Simply disagree without
becoming personally vicious and avoid ridiculing one personally.

If you criticize or poke fun at a public figure make sure that it is
not done with Malice. That means you do not have knowledge of the
falsity of what you are writing and you didn't totally disregard the
truth.

Don't relay damaging information created by others without verifying
the facts supporting it. It's not a defense that you are simply
relaying someone else's Libelous statement because merely publishing a
third party's Libel will make you guilty of Libel too.

If you are in the business of relaying information from others which
could be Libelous, consider getting insurance coverage for Libel or
setting up an asset protection entity such as a corporation or Limited
Liability Company to publish your newsletter or bulletin board.




-- 
Nobody's laughing now
But you could always make me laugh out loud

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Discover CFTicket - The leading ColdFusion Help Desk and Trouble 
Ticket application

http://www.houseoffusion.com/banners/view.cfm?bannerid=48

Message: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=i:5:164161
Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/threads.cfm/5
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=s:5
Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.5
Donations & Support: http://www.houseoffusion.com/tiny.cfm/54

Reply via email to