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UK Facebook User's Name Appropriation Draws Huge Libel Suit
Posted by
timothy
on Thu Jul 24, 2008 06:32 PM
from the had-my-fingers-crossed-the-whole-time dept.
from the had-my-fingers-crossed-the-whole-time dept.
Slatterz links to a story which shows that nowadays, it's sometimes possible to find out whether someone is a dog on the Internet, excerpting: "A freelance photographer is facing a £22,000 bill after setting up a fake Facebook page that libelled a former classmate. Grant Raphael, a freelance photographer, set up a Facebook page in the name of former school friend Mathew Firsht and posted false information about his sexual and political preferences. He also set up another page for Firsht's television company, the latter entitled 'Has Mathew Firsht lied to you?' ... 'The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences,' media lawyer, Jo Sanders, of Harbottle & Lewis, told the BBC."
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Submission: Facebook user cops huge libel suit by Anonymous Coward
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Profound news (Score:5, Insightful)
Libel is libel, even on the Internet.
Re:Profound news (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:2)
Are you referencing a bash.org quote?
This must be what happens when we don't develop a new /. meme once in a while.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
No, libel is hugely different on the internet. Want to draw attention to opposing opinions, launch a libel suit, want to create the impression that you have a hugely inflated opinion of your self worth - launch a libel suit, perversely enough, want the convince people that you have something to hide launch a libel suit and, finally want to convince people that you have more money than sense, launch a libel suit.
So there is a huge difference between 20th century print libel and 21st century internet libel
Re:Profound news (Score:5, Insightful)
If some dickhead with zero reputation is saying bad things about you on the Internet, sure, it's pointless to sue them for libel; in the US you might even have trouble proving damages. But if some dickhead is credibly impersonating you, using your own name and reputation to say false and derogatory things about you, that's a different matter. It would be worth suing to get an injunction if nothing else.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
But if some dickhead is credibly impersonating you, using your own name and reputation to say false and derogatory things about you, that's a different matter. It would be worth suing to get an injunction if nothing else.
The problem with that approach is the same problem that the MAFIAA are having - enforcement is nearly impossible. Sure *THIS* case was enforceable, but its like taking down an ftp site of mp3s, pre napster. Anyone who wanted to do it "right" can do so today using tools like Tor, its just a matter of escalation.
A problem that the MAFIAA has, that impersonation cases don't, is the general desire of people to commit the 'crime' - people inherently like to share, but far, far fewer are into malicious imperson
And if your livelihood depends on your reputation? (Score:5, Insightful)
The days of the Internet as some kind of Wild West where you can do and say whatever the fuck you want without having to take the consequences for it are coming to an end. If somebody want to be an asshole, he'd better be one anonymously from an Internet café... which shows just what a cowardly little shit he is.
A good many people depend on their good name for their living. Jerks who try to damage someone's ability to feed his children deserve to be punished.
Parent
Re:Profound news (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
What, even the Catholics?
Re: (Score:2)
You do know that twitter is Erris, and just tried to make one of the people who say "hey, he's sockpuppeting" look bad, right?
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
No it isn't! Everything on the internet is different, and needs a special set of laws!
Re: (Score:2)
England is entirely different from the US in regard to libel. And at the other end of the stick L22,000 may not be much more than a slap on the wrist depending upon the guys ability to pay.
Frankly I think that England is a bit off the mark with their libel laws. Usually a sharp counter attack is enough to blow most would be bullies into the weeds.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
In the US, it means making derogatory statements (in written form) that are not factually true. Whereas in England it means walking on the cracks in the pavement (which is what they call a sidewalk) during the hours of darkness.
So yeah, entirely different is a perfect summary of the situation.
"Firsht" post! (Score:3, Funny)
Cue the "'Firsht' Post" jokes.
I enjoy the anonimity of the Internet. (Score:5, Interesting)
But not as a specific 50-year-old man who actually exists. While I think we should all have the right to conceal our identity, we certainly shouldn't have the right to assume someone else's.
This is the least controversial thing I have ever written.
Re:I enjoy the anonimity of the Internet. (Score:5, Funny)
I think it's a good thing that a 14-year-old girl can pose as a 50-year-old man and see if her ideas will be taken seriously on their own merits.
Funny, that usually goes in reverse.
Parent
Re:I enjoy the anonimity of the Internet. (Score:5, Funny)
"Merits own their on seriously taken be will ideas her if see and man 50-year-old a as pose can girl 14-year-old a that thing good a it's think I"?
Parent
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I enjoy the anonimity of the Internet. (Score:4, Insightful)
"I think it's a good thing that a 14-year-old girl can pose as a 50-year-old man and see if her ideas will be taken seriously on their own merits.
No.
I think it's a good thing that a 14-year-old girl can pose her ideas and will be taken seriously on their own merits.
Yes.
If she's posing as a 50 year old man, then whatever she is saying isn't being taken on its own merits but under the assumption that she may be more qualified simply because she appears to be older and/or male.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That's the fault of the person she is conversing with, and basically the point I was making.
I'll take a 14 year old girls, and a 50 year old mans opinion/statement with an equal amount of salt. the 14 year old may have spent 4 years learning a subject, the 50 year old may have spent 30 years on the same subject, however the 14 year old doesn't really have much else to think about but that subject, whereas the 50 year old has well established political and ideological standards, its all intertwined with his
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That is a rather disingenuous statement because we all make assumptions about speakers and very rarely can set aside natural bias. We are bombarded by too much information to process without some
Re: (Score:2)
For some perhaps, the only time I have preconceived bias, is if I have read or heard something they stated prior to the conversation at hand.
However, the first statement(s) made by each, has an influence on everything they say on the topic hence forth, with the exception of if they entered the conversation disgruntled from a prior event, or have a disposition to push buttons on first contact, and later described respectively so, that can change my opinion about their motives/etc.
But I have no reason to form
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
You just said that you will take the seriously because you can guide them. If you're listening to someone to determine the direction in which they are misguided, you're not listenting to them.
Re: (Score:2)
Seems about right (Score:4)
While the UK libel laws are still in need of serious fixing, it looks like they got this one right.
Libel in Britain (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Libel in Britain (Score:5, Informative)
Libel in Britain tends to be taken more seriously than in the US. There is no automatic right to free speech (except on Speaker's Corner, where even the slander laws can't touch you) and the penalties aren't gentle - the satirical magazine Private Eye found that one out.
Okay. Let's clear this sucker up. For the last damn time (in my dreams, eh?), your right to free speech in the US is your right to free speech AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT. You do not have the right to libel anyone or anything you want. The Constitution protects your right to make comments about the government, to agitate peacefully for government change, to seek redress, to petition the government, etc.
When people say "I can say whatever I want! I'm entitled to my free speech!"? They're usually freaking morons. Unless they were talking to or about the government, it just ain't so. There are ramifications for what you say about other people or institutions.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
You do not have the right to libel anyone or anything you want
But in the US, to show slander or libel, you have to show that you had a reputation to reduce, that your reputation was reduced, that this reduction in reputation caused you monetary damage, and that whatever was said about you was false. The standards are different in Britain.
not really true (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Re:not really true (Score:4, Insightful)
I think what you and the parent poster are missing is who has the burden of proof. In the US, the accuser has to prove that whatever was said was a lie (said knowingly and with malicious intent). In Britain, the default assumption is that the accused is guilty unless she can present the facts proving what she said was true.
The result is that in Britain, very rich (and very bad) people like Khalid bin Mahfouz (funds suicide bombers) and Roman Polanski (molests little girls) are able to shut up anyone trying to expose them.
Parent
Re: (Score:2)
Actually the government isn't doing much restricting at all since libel is a civil action rather than a criminal one.
You can say pretty much whatever you want about someone and never see the inside of a jail cell.
you're wrong (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
"your right to free speech in the US is your right to free speech AGAINST THE GOVERNMENT."
Since you are wrong, you aren't really clearing anything up.
Even a cursory reading of the founding fathers papers would tell you that.
You probably think only a government can censor;which is wrong and would make you the freaking moron.
Of curse, libel is a crime.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Larry Flynt [wikipedia.org] would like a word with you.
Re: (Score:2)
Robert Bork, is that you?
No, free speech is free speech. It is true that there are exceptions like libel law,
Re:Libel in Britain (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think there's an exemption in slander laws for a particular corner of Hyde Park. Indeed, Wikipedia says:
"A Speakers' Corner is an area where public speaking is allowed. The original and most noted is in the north-east corner of Hyde Park in London, England. Speakers there are allowed to speak as long as the police consider their speeches lawful. Contrary to mythology there is no immunity from the law, nor are any subjects proscribed. In practice the police tend to be tolerant and intervene when they receive a complaint or when they hear bad language."
Parent
True but (Score:2)
Re:Libel in Britain (Score:5, Interesting)
I dunno. There is a certain fairly popular blog in the U.K. that I read daily. (The blog has a basically religious content. Please read past that if it might bother you.) A couple of years ago, it seems that a pair of American lawyers, brothers from Texas, decided to launch a campaign to convert England to (Russian) Orthodoxy. To that end, they formed a "Charitable Trust," presumably under the laws of the UK.
At about the same time, the oldest chain of religious booksellers in England (the SPCK, which actually dates back to the 1600's) found itself in financial turmoil at a number of its stores. The Texas lawyers somehow winkled a large number of these stores away from the SPCK at fire-sale terms, in exchange for vague promises to keep things basically the way they were--in terms of the variety of stock, the employees, and other aspects of the stores. Apparently the SPCK shops were widely respected because they carried a broad spectrum of religious and philosophical tomes representing many viewpoints as opposed to confining themselves to Christian theology.
The story of what happened next was pretty tragic, and the blogger in question chronicled it faithfully. Books on philosophy and theologies other than Christian were swept away wholesale to be replaced by narrow, fundamentalist pop-tripe. Agreements with employees were terminated, often without notice. People had their vacation hours and sick/personal days taken away despite being represented by a union (or the British version of a union). Customers began staying away in droves. A rather pathetic Website was installed that was basically an amazon.uk storefront. A few days later, Google pronounced it unsafe and refused to allow people to visit it from search results without a strongly-worded warning not to do so.
Still the blogger continued to blog about it, though his regular focus is generally a lot more humourous. There were times when no one else was saying a word. Bookstores began to be closed. People continued to be fired without notice or arrived at work to find the shops shuttered.
The union representing a number of the employees signaled its intention to seek relief for them through the British courts. That, in turn, seemed to cause the Texas lawyers to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in their native Texas, far away from England. They then argued in the British courts that this should protect them from the action by the union.
Meanwhile, the blogger continued to blog. Newspapers ran an occasional article, but his blog had become the default gathering point for former employees, people who just plain missed the old bookstores, and people who were outraged at the heavy-handed behavior of the foreign lawyers- turned-missionaries.
Tragedy struck about a month ago in the form of a suicide by a longstanding and much-respected bookstore manager who became despondent after being let go along with his staff. That attracted the interest of several national papers, and his funeral was so large they had to hold it in a cathedral as opposed to his regular parish church. Naturally, messages of condolence and outrage piled up in the blogger's blog as well as in other blogs with similar interests.
This went on until about three days ago, when the blog contained a tersely worded message. The blogger had been the recipient of a cease-and-desist letter from one of the brothers. He did not have the funds to retain legal counsel or continue the fight. All references to the issue had been removed, together with their comments. Twenty-four hours later, even that post was removed.
As nearly as I can tell, after having followed this for over a year, no libel was committed, either in blog posts or in comments. People who wanted to attack the Texas lawyers personally were gently but firmly reminded that this wouldn't be tolerated, and their comments were removed.
I'd have to say that a voice in the UK has gone silent that should have been allowed to continue speaking. While this affects only a small section of the gen
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
IANAL, but IMHO, the blogger was probably protected under British law (what he was doing was reasonable, he was sticking to the truth, no reputations were harmed in the eyes of a reasonable person, etc) and he may have been eligible for legal aid. The Unions in Britain vary wildly, but have been known to go out on a limb to support those who were considered friendly and supportive. Those who were dismissed unfairly should have been eligible for protection and could probably have won compensation for violati
True!! (Score:2)
Significance? (Score:2)
'The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences,'
Then this case is insignificant. It has always been this way.
media lawyer, Jo Sanders, of Harbottle & Lewis, told the BBC.
Maybe the summary should link to the BBC article [bbc.co.uk].
Oh Noes! (Score:2)
People slandering each other on the internet! What is the world coming too!
Re: (Score:2)
It's libel. It's even in the summary. Pay attention.
Re: (Score:2)
Slander and libel are both forms of defamation, but they are very specific terms. Either the definition of slander that you quoted is incomplete, or you snipped the part that matters.
From Princeton's di
How did he get pinged ? (Score:2)
Oh dear (Score:2)
'The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences'
If people are only just realising that now, then the world is in more trouble than I thought.
Friends? (Score:2)
Guess Ross and Chandler should get a fine too.
Dumb (Score:3, Insightful)
Forgetting the ethics of what this guy did, when will people learn that there are limits to anonymity online? I'm surprised how this keeps happening. People should know by now that they can be tracked.
People who are more technically inclined should know to use proxies. Especially those based in countries that are unlikely to give the UK access to their logs - read: China/Russia. What about Tor? Honestly, posting stuff online that could get you in trouble directly from your home computer is on the same level of intelligence as robbing a bank with a big sign bearing your name, address and phone number.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)