Google Found Guilty of Libel For Search Results In Australia 223
Meshach writes "Google has been found guilty for refusing to take down a libelous search result in an Australian court (ruling). Music promoter Milorad Trkulja sued Google for refusing to take down links to website articles promoting libelous claims that Trkulja was connected to organized crime in Melbourne. Google told Trkulja to contact the sites on which the offensive materials were posted, as those webmasters controlled the content. But the Supreme Court of Victoria decided Google was responsible for removing the damaging links the moment Trkulja asked them to remove the content. As a result of the jury's decision in the case, Google will have to pay $200,000 in damages to Trkulja."
Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Insightful)
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Undoing an errant moderating not-click.
Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Funny)
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Unless they see they can make more gaming the system than facilitating it
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And who exactly writes the new laws? And all the news laws are written in the 'usual' way, meaning that 99% of the population can't understand them (but are, of course, still supposed to follow them). And that does not even make the laws that are easy for lawyers to interpret - you still need judgements to establish what a law really means.
The whole system is designed to give jobs to lawyers. If engineers worked the same way you'd need expert help each time you wanted to start your car or turn on your TV.
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Seriously, when are US-based companies going to stop making themselves liable by having employees in foriegn countries? Just base everyone in the USA and employ local resellers for the ads. Problem solved.
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The US free speech rules also don't allow you to say whatever the heck you want either. Libel is a civil case brought about between two parties and exists as much in the USA (more so given the amount of lawyers) as it does in Australia. Free Speech is a constitutional right that protects you from prosecution by the government.
The two are independent and you can bet your arse that if Google decided to run on the front page "Larry Page is a homosexual" on the front page the courts would not like it either.
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First, I don't think that the courts would really care if Google said their founder was gay or not. Page might, especially if he wasn't and/or was in the closet about it. And it would be a case between Page and his company.
Regardless though, Google isn't saying "Larry Page is a homosexual". Google is more like saying "The website http://www.example.com/in [example.com]
Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Insightful)
Google isn't the perpetrator.
They are just making it easier to find the perpetrator.
THAT is who you should sue or prosecute.
Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Insightful)
Google isn't the perpetrator.
They are just making it easier to find the perpetrator.
THAT is who you should sue or prosecute.
And, does anyone else see the (huge) potential problem with the perception that "if Google doesn't list it, it does not exist"? They don't need to be even further entrenched.
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I do and I don't.
Google is where it is and is what it is because it's really good at its core business.
If the data exists on the internet and it is accessible to Google, then Google should capture the data. It is what they do and what we depend on them to do.
On the other hand, if the data is not relevant or currently accurate, then Google should have no problem purging cached results. So for example, a libelous comment or news article was made available online and then was retracted or removed by request
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Yes, exactly this. Step back a moment and think about this in the context of big data and the rise of government and corporate surveillance.
We all know the stories of people being placed on TSA watchlists, arrested, interrogated, and even tortured for having a similar name to a bad guy [wikipedia.org] or being the second cousin of a bad guy [wikipedia.org].
People's actions can be chilled or even lives ruined by very tenuous associations in databases. And whether through the Paul Erds/Kevin Bacon game, the assumption that correlation is th
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On the other hand, if the data is not relevant or currently accurate, then Google should have no problem purging cached results. So for example, a libelous comment or news article was made available online and then was retracted or removed by request and yet still appears in Google's searches, then Google should be obliged to remove it by request as it no longer reflects what is available.
Yes but only by the publisher and Google has put systems in place to ensure happens (see webmaster tools). What you're insinuating is that anyone can do anything they like provided they pay a lawyer to draft up a letter to do so.
Google is not a resource, it's a tool, the websites containing the information are the resources. So lets consider Google's role for just one second in the use of key phrases.
Search "Milorad Trkulja" or "Milorad Trkulja mob ties" or "Milorad Trkulja" just within Google news.
What Goo
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And, does anyone else see the (huge) potential problem with the perception that "if Google doesn't list it, it does not exist"? They don't need to be even further entrenched.
This is why Free Speech is important. Australia doesn't have it. Nor does the UK. Nor does Germany. This last example is particularly troubling because they have demonstrated an inability to handle the responsibility of telling people what they are permitted to think, let alone say. The Italians, similarly. The Spanish also have such a legacy, but they seem to have pretty free speech now. (They also seem to have a similarly corrupt media to the USA, but maybe that's just perception.)
This is a simple free sp
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Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Interesting)
THAT is who you should sue or prosecute.
Sometimes that is quite difficult, for example, they might be in Pakistan or Nairobi or Russia. But without Google, pretty much nobody would find their page. Google does play a role here, they aren't the innocent bystanders they are making themselves out to be.
I don't think they should pay damages for the libel. I do think it should be possible to force them to remove search results, via the proper legal channels, i.e. a court order. Google is not above the law.
Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Insightful)
I take issue with the fact that you put the blame on Google* for not taking it down. The decision eludes to Google as a newspaper, and certainly if we were talking about Google's cache of the page then I'd be singing a different story. But even a newspaper (at least, from my understanding, IANAL although I have taken some law courses covering libel and slander) cannot be held responsible for putting a direct quote in. If I were to be interviewed and say, "Donald Trump is a mafia boss," and a newspaper had that line in there, they're not committing libel, I am. If they use my statement as their basis for their story, than that's a different scenario, but by quoting one phrase, or one paragraph and a headline, there is no indication of malicious intent or guilt.
*Google involved (from my cursory glance through the article and the actual decision) did not receive any court order, merely a letter from the plaintiff, or possibly an attorney thereof. I don't get to file charges against Rand McNally because someone bought a map, found my house, and stole my things, or is that a good idea too?
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Which are all the reasons why I say the damages are off, the verdict should have been "yes, you do have to take it down, now that a proper court has decided that it indeed is libel".
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Google is a private company with no obligation to list anything. It would serve these people right if they were totally black holed on Google after a ruling like this. Both the things they want listed as well as the things they don't. A search of this individual returning zero results would be just great and would fit the ruling to the max.
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Because knee-jerk reactions are so very professional?
Doing that would not only be on the level of kindergarden, it would also hurt people looking for information, you know, people who search.
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Google is neutral. They aren't making the allegedly false statements. They aren't committing libel. They are not (or should not be) responsible for the *content* of links their spiders find, ever. They simply provide a neutral tool. So, I don't see why they should have to even remove the links. The plaintiff's beef is with those actually making
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So, I don't see why they should have to even remove the links.
Here's the legal reasoning as to why, from someone who actually is a lawyer:
http://www.dba-oracle.com/internet_linking_libel_lawsuit.htm [dba-oracle.com]
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So, Google's supposed to disappear anything whose poster gets called any of an approved list of bad names?
Because that's what this amounts to: say the magic words and Google is supposed to presume what you say is true and what they say is false and you have the power to silence and they have no right to speak. Exactly who gave you or them the right to judge and have that judgement enforced by law?
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Exactly. Stupid judges in Australia obviously understand nothing about the internet, and have no common sense.
(So they're pretty much like NZ judges.)
How is Google going to investigate whether all these libel claims are true? I guess Santorum can get the Aussie Google fixed up pretty quickly now.
The court case could have made Google remove it (as at that stage has been proven libel), but to make them pay such an exorbitant fine (way more than damages) to this guy (who be all accounts is a scumbag) is disgus
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So, Google's supposed to disappear anything whose poster gets called any of an approved list of bad names?
No, that would be an automatism and I specifically said proper legal procedure, which includes evaluating the specific case and its conditions, including an opportunity for the defendant to present his position.
Do you have a specific reason for thinking that the system that - while it has shortcomings - has served us better than any alternative for at least 2000 years magically fails when the word "Internet" is involved?
Exactly who gave you or them the right to judge and have that judgement enforced by law?
http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Rule+of+law [thefreedictionary.com]
Or I could play Jesus and repl
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This case has established "proper legal procedure" in Australia. That "proper legal procedure", under discussion here, is exactly what I described. You're defending some fantasy that has exactly nothing to do with the concrete facts.
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Ah, you are misunderstanding that I defend this particular case and its result. I am not. On the contrary, I posted in my very first post that I disagree with the particular judgement, but agree with the principle concept that Google can be forced to remove certain content from its index.
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So, Google's supposed to disappear anything whose poster gets called any of an approved list of bad names?
No, that would be an automatism and I specifically said proper legal procedure, which includes evaluating the specific case and its conditions, including an opportunity for the defendant to present his position.
Do you have a specific reason for thinking that the system that - while it has shortcomings - has served us better than any alternative for at least 2000 years magically fails when the word "Internet" is involved?
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What you in essence are saying is that GOOGLE should police the internet because it does the data search work.
No, I didn't and I don't. I am saying that once a court has found something to be illegal, Google, too, should remove it. Just because they are a republisher and not the original creator does not absolve them of the responsibility to stop distributing it.
"policing" implies that they cast their own judgement on content, and I am firmly against that.
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Google is, literally, a list of websites.
No, it isn't. Here's what a list of websites looks like:
You might notice some differences between that and a Google search result. And let's not even get started about the Google cache, shall we?
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Which is why I said that damages is wrong.
However, the realities of the imperfect world we live in also mean that when your offending site is unreachable (Pakistan, etc.) then removing it from Google (and some other big search engines) index is pretty much making it vanish.
Sometimes, the law can only give you an imperfect solution. Like when it throws the guy who raped and killed your wife into jail, even though you'd rather cut his nuts off and force him to eat them. But it's better than nothing, you know?
Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Informative)
This is actually a 8 year long story.
Trkulja was sitting at a restaurant in 2004 when he got shot in the back by a gang member. He survived and didn't know why the shooting had occurred as it appeared to not be random. So he searches online and finds himself listed as an associate and possible hit man for a Melbourne drug gang based off of a single picture.
Yes he sues the site and wins, he then finds that he is listed as a hitman in a yahoo group and sues and wins after Yahoo does nothing. He then finds that he comes up in google searches consistently as a hitman and in image searches, many returning images for the site/s that no longer present the images.
In 2008 he requests Google stop returning said image. They knock him back, there is a lot of back and forth and he has several previous court cases stating the exact image and associated text is libelous and Google is still presenting it in some cases independent of the now corrected originating sites. So he eventually sues Google and wins. I'm not a lawyer but it doesn't appear completely bad that Google should react to take down notices for images that are not even being shown by the original site anymore.
If I was a news service and declared an parliamentarian to be a pedo and didn't do enough to check, I lose a bunch of executives and suffer financial penalties. If the original he's a pedo story constantly gets presented by search engines even though it is wrong then what is the solution. I would think some form of correction aimed at search engines is not out of the question.
The interesting thing here is Googles' profit model is based on screwing with search results for money. So I see no problem with them being required to screw with search results for legal reasons. Of course Google could also pay some tax in Australia but that's another issue.
Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:4, Insightful)
So far, yours is the only comment that I think actually makes a good case in favor of the plaintiff. Google caches thumbnails of images that are no longer hosted on the original site. Their servers have a lot of such broken links. I wonder if they use spiders to occasionally go back and validate these links. Such a check could only help Google: 1) their search results become more accurate and 2) they free up space that was used to store thumbnails that no longer go anywhere.
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Well, sort of. When I search for information on this it seems that he was listed on websites as a hitman as a result of being shot rather than the listing as a hitman being the cause of him being shot. Still not good, but not as bad as implied by the other way around.
Also, ironically, we recently had a Slashdot story about Google's unseen human raters. If Google actually does have human beings deciding what to show, it's a lot harder to justify not using those human beings to remove obviously defamatory
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The interesting thing here is Googles' profit model is based on screwing with search results for money.
I'm surprised no one responded to this. Google explicitly does not "screw with" search results for money. Google's search results attempt to be the best they can based on what Google knows/guesses you're looking for, and based on what appears to be the best source of the relevant information. Google's business profit model is based on also showing you ads which it knows/guesses may be of interest to you, in the hope that you'll click on them (Google doesn't get paid unless you click on them). But the ac
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Re:Austrailia != Free Country (Score:5, Insightful)
Google should not be responsible for censoring any content any more than the government should be responsible for criminals using roads to haul stolen goods away.
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If a troll decides to libel you all over the internet, the first thing you'll do will likely be to go to Google and kindly request that they strip out the results because, duh, it's libel.
Google has a form for this. You fill out the form, they remove the content. Easy. The guy in Oz filled out the form wrong and then sued when Google didnt magically do what he meant, instead of what he said.
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This additionally has nothing to do with free speech, either. Libel is libel -- free speech doesn't allow you to spread outright lies about someone or some entity. You can argue whether it's libel or not in court; but once it's established it's libel, Google should be just as liable as the source for merely linking to it.
Actually it's not libel. Trkulja and his expensive buddies just leveraged their mafia protection money out of Google.
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"If all of your contacts, entertainment services, and backups are chained into Apple - well, then you're just shit out of luck if you want to move.
I want to see a complete separation of church and state here. Hardware should be separate from software. Software should be separate from services.
I want to watch Nokia movies on my Samsung hardware running Google's Android, and then back them up to DropBox.
That's how it works - more or less - in the PC space. I don't understand why it doesn't in the tablet and s
Hmm if I lived in Australia (Score:5, Funny)
can I sue Slashdot for libel? The bastards incorrectly put "Troll" and "Flamebait" next to my posts.
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If being a troll or flamer was actually a serious crime, of which you were being falsely accused, and the Slashdot page concerned came up as a top link when searching for your name, then maybe... :)
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You can sue anyone you like, but they'll only remove a comment if it's about Scientology.
Fuck Scientology. Clambake frauds...
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I'd have thought it would be really, really uncomfortable to go dowsing in gasoline. And will a dowsing rod even work in gasoline?
And what, pray tell, are you dowsing yourself for? Cooties? Wouldn't the gasoline have already killed them?
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I'm going to assume you misunderstood what was meant by the word "dowsing". While technically it means what you're getting to, it's also a colloquialism used to mean "to drench" or just put alot of it on the object.
i.e. "I've been dowsed in water by my brother, who is in the pool!"
On to our regularly scheduled programs, now.
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The word you're looking for is: "doused"
Dowse, Dowsing, Dowsed: superstitious practice, performed by the clueless
Douse, Dousing, Doused: get a lotta wet stuff on ya.
Daos: really bad romanization of the Chinese wu "Tao", trying to make it mean multiple ways (no plurals to be had.)
Daws: Typically heard in multiple-cat households
Bit slow eh? (Score:3)
Re:Bit slow eh? (Score:5, Informative)
It's OK... Slashdot covered it two weeks ago too... [slashdot.org] So it's not really slow, just the standard dupe.
Chilling (Score:5, Insightful)
So, if you file a claim with Google -- probably not even under oath -- stating that certain content is libel, Google would then have to take down their links to the content, lest the Australian courts find that content to be libel and hold Google liable.
Which means that if you have access to the Australian courts, you can effectively cause Google to take down any website* without a trial, at little risk to yourself.
Good to know.
* Note: Anonymous Coward is not liable for damages incurred in the event that you attempt to take down a website owned by people with more money than you.
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No. Australian courts, state or federal, do not claim jurisdiction outside Australia. Only web pages that affect Australians in Australia have the potential for defamation (local term - includes libel and slander by any media) and only Australian citizens or permanent residents may apply to the courts. The initial application would be for an injunction against the publisher (a take-down notice). It is not easy to get an injunction. A refusal to obey the injunction would lead to a civil case for defamat
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Defamation is not a local term, it's a normal English word.
A jury who doesn't understand the subject matter.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Clearly this isn't a case of Google doing anything wrong. It's a case of a judge or jury not understanding how the internet works.
Google doesn't own the content. Unless the individual wants to sue every search provider on the planet to get the results removed, he needs to go after the publisher/owner of the content, and not the search engine.
There are days that I hope the evil corporations are all destroyed in a revolution. There are other days that I think we are getting exactly what we deserve. Especially when 'educated' folks make decisions like this.
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Re:A jury who doesn't understand the subject matte (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a very good reason. Google is an index, not a publisher.
Little details matter both in computing and in law.
You can't just ignore them.
Perhaps the geezer on the bench would understand this if put in terms of an antique card catalog.
Re:A jury who doesn't understand the subject matte (Score:5, Informative)
If you read the judgement (radical idea, I know), you'll see that a big part of the reason that Google was found liable here was the cached version of the article, as well as the Google Image Search results (which are a "page of Google's own making" not merely a link or reference to another source).
Indeed the judgement makes it quite clear that merely linking or indexing is not considered publication under Australian common law. Google themselves have been found not guilty in similar cases in Australia before, by relying on this defence. But this case was a bit different. There was the image search results, which Google must be assumed under the law to be the original publisher of (who else could be, given that the page is generated by Google and not exist anywhere else on the web?).
18 The question of whether or not Google Inc was a publisher is a matter of mixed fact and law. In my view, it was open to the jury to find the facts in this proceeding in such a way as to entitle the jury to conclude that Google Inc was a publisher even before it had any notice from anybody acting on behalf of the plaintiff. The jury were entitled to conclude that Google Inc intended to publish the material that its automated systems produced, because that was what they were designed to do upon a search request being typed into one of Google Inc’s search products. In that sense, Google Inc is like the newsagent that sells a newspaper containing a defamatory article. While there might be no specific intention to publish defamatory material, there is a relevant intention by the newsagent to publish the newspaper for the purposes of the law of defamation.
19 By parity of reasoning, those who operate libraries have sometimes been held to be publishers for the purposes of defamation law. That said, newsagents, librarians and the like usually avoid liability for defamation because of their ability to avail themselves of the defence of innocent dissemination (a defence which Google Inc was able to avail itself of for publications of the images matter prior to 11 October 2009, and all of the publications of the web matter that were the subject of this proceeding).
20 As was pointed out by counsel for the plaintiff in his address to the jury, the first page of the images matter (containing the photographs I have referred to and each named “Michael Trkulja” and each with a caption “melbournecrime”) was a page not published by any person other than Google Inc. It was a page of Google Inc’s creation – put together as a result of the Google Inc search engine working as it was intended to work by those who wrote the relevant computer programs. It was a cut and paste creation (if somewhat more sophisticated than one involving cutting word or phrases from a newspaper and gluing them onto a piece of paper). If Google Inc’s submission was to be accepted then, while this page might on one view be the natural and probable consequence of the material published on the source page from which it is derived, there would be no actual original publisher of this page.
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How is Google Image Search results a "page of Google's own making" any more than any text+url index search result is?
Yes, they cache the images so that you can actually search them but none of the images are first published by Google or originate from Google.
Unless they mean "technically" the thumbnails which is complete bullshit and bogus (the thumbnails are completely analogous to the small context text blurb on text search).
Or maybe they mean the time it takes for Google's spider to find out that that th
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Oh I agree, it's stupid. An effect of old law being applied to a new medium that it's not suited for.
The court's argument is simply that:
- A page of content has an 'original' publisher.
- The Google Image Search results page is generated by Google, and that page does not exist anywhere else on the web.
- Therefore, Google must be the publisher, simply because no-one else can be.
The issue as far as I can tell is that the concept of 'original publisher' doesn't work well in a world where 'publications' can be ~
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Good catch, and yeah, that is a pretty solid argument. Mod parent up :)
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If caching is the same as publishing, proxy providers (some of which are ISP-provided) are in for some trouble.
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A caching proxy merely serves content that was specifically requested. Google's 'cache' is serving images that Google themselves are associating with a word or phrase. Thus Google is making some sort of editorial decisions in regards to the content that a simple proxy is not. Now that "editorial decision" may be being made by an algorithm and that algorithm may make it's decisions based on other peoples content but at the end of the day Google is in a very real sense
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There's a very good reason. Google is an index, not a publisher.
Not entirely. Google does re-publish excerpts of the sites it lists. If Google were a 100% pure index, your search results would look like this:
But Google does include parts of the result pages, and thus does re-publish content from elsewhere. They didn't create it, true. But neither does your radio station create most of the content it is publishing.
Province is Provincial (Score:5, Insightful)
Google probably has the ability to deal with the problem, if it spent money to write some custom code or pattern matching rule. But it sounds like the judges don't understand the Internet or imagine Google could conceivably do the same thing times the number of people in the world who imagine something is libelous at some time in their lives. I don't get what was wrong with what Google told him to do. Is there no higher court in Australia? Or does Google maybe want to wait a while for the society to change in its favor before testing it.
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Good post, and I agree, though should point out that this was a jury trial and so the jurors bear some of the responsibility as well here. I think it's a case of old law being applied to the letter, to a new medium to which it is unsuited. Not so much the judge not understanding the net - but at the end of the day they have to apply the law as it exists.
The Supreme Court is the highest court in Victoria, but if they can find a point of law to appeal on, Google could appeal to a Federal court (I.e. the High
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I don't get what was wrong with what Google told him to do.
They are supplying the information on their site, under their domain name. Sure, they are only re-publishing it from some other source, but they actually do publish it (and not just link to it - summaries and previews come to mind).
That's roughly comparable to a newspaper posting a letter-to-the-editors that is libel. They can be told to refrain from publishing it, even though they didn't write it themselves.
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What isn't clear from the articles what is the sequence here. And sequence matters, a lot.
If a court ruled that the content was libelous and needs to be taken down *then* the person contacted google and asked them to remove the offending links, and they said no, then I see the sense in the ruling.
If the person requested they remove allegedly libelous content and they said no, talk to the content providers that's a different problem.
Google should be (isn't, but should be) and honest broker of information. T
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The easy answer is to just refuse to answer any queries that include his name or e-mail address...or can otherwise be linked to him in any way, such as being posted from a computer which he is using.
Possibly they could return a page merely stating "Trkulja is under the ban".
I doubt that there would ever be any need to remove the ban. "We reserve the right to refuse service to anyone." is the way I normally see it phrased.
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What if that is a common name somewhere?
Rediculous. (Score:3)
Re:Rediculous. (Score:4, Insightful)
> How can Google be responsible for content that it's just indexing and not generating themselves?
Because they've shown that they will take links down.
First it was "malware" and/or "phising" sites...
Then Scientology.
Then DMCA requests for linking to pirated whatever.
Sorry, but Google didn't have a defense for why they shouldnt take the links down when they've proven that they are willing to take other links down. It basically came down to "we'll do it for others, but we dont want to do it for this guy."
Re:Rediculous. (Score:5, Informative)
Read the judgement. Of particular relevance, the paragraphs beginning with paragraph 18. If they WERE just linking, then it would not be publication and they would not have been found guilty. But in this case, they were generating content themselves (under the legal definition, at least...)
Trkulja in bed with kangaroo mob bosses (Score:2)
I am particularly amused by these types of decisions requiring a third party to correctly guess the outcome of legal matters they are not a party or face some form of liability either way for guessing wrongly.
Do they have book stores in Australia? Does this same abstraction of guilt work there too or just against huge companies with deep pockets?
What about networks thru which this data flows? Can network operators be found guilty for conspiracy to propogate libel? Where does it end and why?
I wish google
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Soviet Republic of Australia
One poor decision does not invalidate the entire system. Google will either get this decision overturned or the industry itself will get the law changed, it may take a few years but this decision won't stand the test of time.
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Do they have book stores in Australia? Does this same abstraction of guilt work there too or just against huge companies with deep pockets?
Australian law is sort of based on UK law.
If you not in jail, have been to jail or lost a company you have control of... you are safe from slander.
The proof is on the person making the claims and can be taken to court.
As for ' Does this same abstraction of guilt work there too or just against huge companies with deep pockets?"
Most Australian autho
Also Sue the Electric Company (Score:2)
Google Cache is why they were found guilty (Score:2, Informative)
It's not Google's link to the content but Google Cache repoducing and redistributing the 'libelous' content.
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Except hitting F5 would produce a 404 page not found as the original website took it down on request. So Google should respect 404s and remove the data.
absolving themselves of responsibility... (Score:2)
Google knows that its business is going to get a lot harder if they actually have to take some responsibility for the information they disseminate.
They can't just cache everyone's content, scan it, link it - make billions of dollars off of it - and then tell someone else to shove it when they are asked not to distribute illegal content.
Correct Decision (Score:2)
Once Google started manually fucking with the results and rankings, they became responsible for the content as they were no longer simply a passive repository.
Aussies (Score:2)
A business plan in Australia (Score:2)
1) Create a web presence.
2) Have a sock monkey libel you
2a) (Google indexes the libelous site, as they do everything.)
3) Sue Google
4) $$Profit!!
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I was going to post exactly this.
This seems like it would be incredibly easy to set up?
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I don't know what legal bills are in Australia, but I suspect that he isn't going to see much of that $200,000.
One word (Score:2)
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But not before putting all links to Milorad Trkulja and all of his assets and associates on the Google search blacklist. Forever.
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I would suggest you read the judgement, starting at paragraph 18. The judge specifically talks about the newsagent analogy, and why this is different.
Not that that makes the judgement sensible at all, but remember, the judge has to apply the law as it exists, not as he'd LIKE it to be.
Re:Milorad Trkulja is a criminal? (Score:5, Funny)
Fuck you Judge David Beach.
Now sue me, you wombat fucking pervert.
The International Collation of Wombats are suing you for libel for comparing them to the Judge David Beach.
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I'm with you. I think Australia's business community would come together after being removed from Google for any amount of time and the government will have to rethink who is responsible for what speech.
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Blocking Austrailia would be too expensive. However, blocking all services (as well as all references) to anyone who accused Google of libel would be relatively cheap. You would need to figure out how to identify which computers those individuals were using, but IIUC, governments are already requireing Google to collect that information. Certainly it would be trivial to refuse to allow them to use Google mail, etc., though I admit the search is a bit more difficult.
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Maybe they got them from Britain.
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Problem: Some jerk publishes a book that libels me.
Solution: Publisher retracts the book and destroys all copies
Problem: The library photocopies the book and puts it on the shelf saying it is too difficult to shred it.
Solution: Sue the library!
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