Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Removal of Libelous Books from Customers' Kindles?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_07_19-2009_07_25.shtml#1248046786


   Say that someone alerts Amazon that a certain book that it is selling
   contains a libel -- or discloses information that invades someone's
   privacy, or some such. And say the matter is clear, and Amazon has no
   doubt that the book is indeed libelous. Under traditional American
   libel law (which is quite constitutional under the First Amendment),
   Amazon would at that point be legally actionable for Amazon to
   continue distributing the book.

   Bricks-and-mortar bookstores have in fact long been potentially liable
   for distributing libelous books once they learned that they were
   libelous, though in practice such lawsuits have been rare. It's also
   possible that they could even be enjoined from selling the book, once
   there's a final finding by a court that the book is libelous; they
   could certainly be sued for damages. It's possible that [1]47 U.S.C. �
   230 would shield online bookstores from this liability rule, though it
   has long been applied to bricks-and-mortar bookstores. But let's
   assume that Congress modifies � 230 to track traditional libel law
   rules. Or let's say that this arises in England, or some other country
   that doesn't have � 230.

   My question: Should it be proper for Amazon to at that point delete
   the libelous books from users' Kindles? Let's say that Amazon tried to
   add a provision to its user license agreement that would give it the
   contractual right to do so. Should consumers be very troubled by that?
   I would be, partly because I wouldn't be at all certain that the
   judgments about what is and is not a libel will be made accurately;
   that's always a risk with any libel law system, but I would think it's
   even more egregious if it can affect existing copies and not just the
   distribution of future copies. I also would worry that the same would
   end up applying to books that contain alleged "hate speech," or
   blasphemy, or insults to political officials, or whatever else some
   country that has jurisdiction over Amazon might insist on. But would I
   be correct?

   Incidentally, what if instead of deleting the material, Amazon changed
   the file to include an explanation that this and that passages are
   false, with details about why they are false? (Of course, that would
   not be helpful in invasion of privacy cases, and many people who are
   libeled would prefer that the libels of them be entirely deleted,
   rather than just supplemented with correcting information.) Should we
   also be troubled about that, either on its own terms or because of the
   possibility that it would lead to broader editing? Or should we
   welcome it as a means of providing more information to readers, as
   well as mitigating in some measure the harm to the wrongly defamed?

References

   1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Section_230_of_the_Communications_Decency_Act

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