Court Rules Parents May Be Liable For What Their Kids Post On Facebook 323
schwit1 writes Parents can be held liable for what their kids post on Facebook, a Georgia appellate court ruled in a decision that lawyers said marked a legal precedent on the issue of parental responsibility over their children's online activity. The Georgia Court of Appeals ruled that the parents of a seventh-grade student may be negligent for failing to get their son to delete a fake Facebook profile that allegedly defamed a female classmate.
Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:5, Insightful)
You have it wrong. (Score:3)
If your kids happen to make money, parents control that money until they are 18. They should also suffer the liability as well.
You can't have one without the other. Either children are responsible or they are not.
You have it wrong.
The page was created on a school computer while the school was acting in loco parentis for the child. If anyone should be held responsible *instead of the child, whose fault it is*, it would be the school, with "contribution to the delinquency of a minor" by the "friend" who helped them create the page.
At worst, the parents are guilty of "contributory negligence" for not being software engineers.
Re:You have it wrong. (Score:5, Informative)
Nonsense.
If your kid is in a park, grabs a rock, throws it at someone and causes harm, then you are responsible. Not the parks office, not the city, not the state, and not in the case of this incident, the school.
As a parent you are responsible for the actions of your kids in place of themselves since they are children. If you want to understand if the school should be blamed, ask yourself, would the school be blamed if the person was an adult? No. Of course not, that would be silly. The School had as much to do with the activity as the ISP serving the school. It isn't accepting full liability because you chose to exercise their facilities to perform your actions. Just like an ISP isn't responsible if you use their network to organize a murder (see Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act [wikipedia.org]). The school is not liable, the person is. But, because the person is underage, the person's parents are responsible. Its as simple as that. You are responsible for your kids actions, you in place of them. Don't like it? Don't have kids. Having kids involves accepting responsibility for them. Its that simple.
So, no sir, you have it wrong.
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If you want to understand if the school should be blamed, ask yourself, would the school be blamed if the person was an adult? No. Of course not, that would be silly. The School had as much to do with the activity as the ISP serving the school.
They didn't control access to the computers in such a way as to prevent this kind of usage by students. In the case of an adult in the same situation, the school is guilty of, at a bare minimum, presenting an attractive nuisance in the form of a computer that could be used for this.
But this is all hemming and hawing about "how can we blame someone other than the kid for the actions of the kid?", which is pretty stupid on the face of it. In any other bullying situation, such as assault and battery, you don
Re:You have it wrong. (Score:4, Insightful)
In any other bullying situation, such as assault and battery, you don't blame the parents; you send the kid to juvie, and they get to go to school there, with all of the other genetic sociopaths.
For any other bullying situation, such as assault and battery, the perpetrators are jocks and they don't get punished at all, but the kid who got beat on gets told that he shouldn't do whatever he did to make them angry.
You're acting like schools do something about bullying, but that's complete bullshit. Only when there is a lawsuit do they give a fat flying fuck. And that's why we're hearing about this now. I was bullied from sixth grade on and literally nothing was ever done about it. I was consistently blamed for the bullying. Mental health is the last illness we consistently blame on the victim.
Re:You have it wrong. (Score:5, Interesting)
You are advocating that one person should be liable for the actions of another person.
This is sloppy without clarifying how the different categories of criminal vs. civil liability should be handled.
Holding parents criminally liable is intractable because there is no certain way to control a child or any other person. I'm talking absolute control. Any law that holds you responsible for forces that you cannot control must be invalidated, or else societal disintegration will eventually result. Such inherent contradictions predictably lead to disaster.
Furthermore, there are also laws making it felony child abuse to employ nearly any sort of corporal punishment (not that I advocate that) and laws are interpreted so liberally that nearly any attempt to employ physical force to restrain, control, or restrict the behavior of a child may be interpreted as felony child abuse. So our society wants a person to be liable for the actions of a child, and also makes them criminally liable if they try to use force to discipline a child.
Also, as has been mentioned by others, children are legally mandated by the state to attend school. Parents cannot possibly control a child while they are at school. Yet they should be prosecuted if the child commits a crime while under state mandated separation from the parents?
This is all complete insanity. Of course, I only expect matters to get much, much worse...
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That you don't think they do a good job of it doesn't mean it doesn't apply.
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:4, Insightful)
There is a principle in most states that place limits and in some cases indemnify parents from some acts committed by children due to the fact that children are thinking creature capable of acting on their own will. It's sort of like school, you can teach them all day long but will they learn and will they put what they learned to use or will they attempt something they have not even learned yet.
In some cases, your kid may be the only one liable for the broken window.
But this case isn't exactly like that. It was a defamation case over a fake facebook profile and it wasn't the fact that it existed that made the parents liable. It was that it remained up for 11 months and viewable after the parents were contacted and the two students behind it was suspended from school as well as disciplined by their own parents.
This is more sort of more like if your kid kept swinging balls into the neighbors window for 11 months after being told he broke it the first time.
Responsibility yes, automatic liability no (Score:2)
Parents have to be responsible
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If you are going to make me liable for something then I has to be something under my control. Short of tying my kids up in chains and never letting them do anything there is no way for me do absolutely guarantee that they will never do anything which causes liability. Not only would I refuse to do that it would be illegal and society does not want parents to do that: kids have to learn to control their own behaviour and that means giving them the freedom to do things wrong.
If you read at least the summary, the parents weren't liable for their kids making a post (which kids can do since you can't control them permanently). The parents were liable for their kids not removing a post, which is something the parents should have been able to control.
Re:Responsibility yes, automatic liability no (Score:4, Interesting)
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If you are going to make me liable for something then I has to be something under my control. Short of tying my kids up in chains and never letting them do anything there is no way for me do absolutely guarantee that they will never do anything which causes liability. Not only would I refuse to do that it would be illegal and society does not want parents to do that: kids have to learn to control their own behaviour and that means giving them the freedom to do things wrong. Parents have to be responsible but not necessarily liable. If we are taking reasonable measures to supervise our kids online including giving them guidance on how to behave as well as punishing them when they do not then I believe we have fulfilled our responsibility as parents and should not be held liable if one of them disobeys us and libels someone while we are not watching. On the other hand if parents completely ignores their kids, provide no guidance or consequences then by all means find them negligent and hence liable through their act of negligence...but making parents automatically liable for their kids actions under all circumstances is unfair and encourages poor parenting since if means that you can't risk letting them fail. Indeed the only way to be sure would be to ban them from access the net: does society really want that?
Responsibility must mean liability. You can't claim to be responsible for something and then when it goes all wrong, stick your hands up in the air and say "not my fault!". If you are not liable and responsible, then you shouldn't have kids. They are under your control, thats what society has determined over generations to be the appropriate path to raising human beings.
Now, I do agree with you that they are not totally under your control. For example: you can not beat your kids, even if you believe that i
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Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:5, Interesting)
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I would rather have a functioning 1st amendment than slander and libel laws. I think having slander and libel laws, especially in the 21st century, attempts and fails miserably to create a environment where public information can/should be trusted by virtue of the fact that it is published.
I would much rather have a society where every piece of published information is treated with healthy skepticism, and freedom of speech is more than just some lofty ideal.
If no one expects information found on the intern
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I think having slander and libel laws, especially in the 21st century, attempts and fails miserably to create a environment where public information can/should be trusted by virtue of the fact that it is published.
Too bad that is not the objective of libel and slander laws. The objective is to create a deterrence for posting those lies.
If no one expects information found on the internet to be true, then people will be far less likely to be harmed when it turns out to be false.
Notice that you said "far less likely to be harmed" which means that some people will be harmed by these lies. How do those people get compensation for that harm?
Also we can save our society a lot of waste by avoiding all the unnecessary slander and libel litigation and instead have all these would-be lawyers doing something more productive with their lives.
Without libel and slander laws such lies will become much more commonplace. There will be much more time wasted trying to counter the lies than is ever taken up in libel/slander suites.
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Too bad that is not the objective of libel and slander laws. The objective is to create a deterrence for posting those lies.
Too bad that is not the actual/only effect of libel and slander laws. The actual effect is more time and effort wasted on litigation and a chilling effect on freedom of speech because even if you are right, there is a chance the judge/jury may not reach that same conclusion, and it's safer to just keep your mouth shut. Especially when the person you are accused of slandering or libeling is providing the judge's livelihood.
Notice that you said "far less likely to be harmed" which means that some people will be harmed by these lies. How do those people get compensation for that harm?
Of course I noticed it. I said it intentionally. You are making an assumption that
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Sorry but the world is not as black and whit as you seem to want it to be. I said nothing about harm caused by a breakup. What about losing a job or an election? What about creating a target for ridicule by other children at school? Some harm does not merit compensation. Some does. The difference is determined by legal precident and the courts.
We have decided collectively that we are better off with anarchy in this specific area.
We have also decided collectivly through Common Law precidents, that we are not better off with anarchy on the areas of libel and slander.
By the way your "create a so
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You are, in fact, saying libel and slander laws (which specifically sanction the person who speaks or writes them) are bullshit.
Which is to say, you're go stupid you have no idea what you're saying.
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fustakrakich is a convicted repeated child rapist who has never expressed remorse or guilt for his crimes. This is fact.
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That's OK, as long as you don't post his credit card information.
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So you don't believe that speech is an action? It's somehow divorced from human behavior to such an extent that it has no effect on other people?
If your rights extend only to the nose of the other person, don't they also extend only to the ears and the eyes?
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Not all bad words can be ignored.
Let's say a young women is raped and killed. I bear false witness and tell the police that I saw you rape and kill her. Even without going to court, I've gotten you arrested. I convince thirty friends to also say they saw you rape and kill her. We all tell our stories repeatedly to the grief-stricken father who then beats you half to death.
None of us did anything but use speech. Of course, it's the father who would be liable for your injuries, but would you really say that we weren't complicit by taking advantage of a man's grief in order to see you injured?
Remember, libel laws are civil laws, not criminal. They indicate culpability in damages, not the commission of a crime.
Not all bad words can be ignored. And bad words, on their own can do real damage.
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Did Twitter kick you out again?
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So, when I start publishing about how you're a pedo, and now you can't get a job because of it, you're cool with it, right?
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Quite simply, my beef is with the morons who would believe you. To you yourself, the only proper response would be crafty verbal one. I might need to hire a writer for such a purpose...
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So, your system would have people able to say anything, and then you read someone's mind to figure out he didn't hire you, or didn't invite you to his party, or stopped being your friend because he thought you're a pedo, and then you sue all those people. Meaning you're making EVERYTHING a protected class for the purposes of hiring and killing freedom of association while you're at it. That sounds like a much more restrictive world to me than the current one, which just has, "don't spread nasty lies about
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According to him, it's the fault of the believer for being so stupid as to trust a random web site claiming he's a pedo. But given how many people believe "it must be true, I read it on the Internet, and they can't publish anything on the Internet that isn't true", I don't think arguing with a potential employer is a winning strategy for a job seeker.
While I haven't really considered where I'd fall on the line of how much the slander and libel laws abridge the right to free speech, the case law itself is w
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What I don't get is why was defendant not asked to take down the site and instead just gets huge charges without a chance to "take back". Or at least this is what I'm getting the feeling happened. I'm not really sure if the child or parents
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:4, Insightful)
I am just glad that most countries disagree with you. Libel and slander has been in Common Law for centuries and I doubt it will ever change.
Sanction the believers who act, not the preacher who speaks.
How do you sanction someone who decides not to vote for a candidate due to the lies posted about the candidate? How about the people who shun the citizen due to the lies making him out to be a pedophile? Most time the actions of the believers are not sanctionable but they still harm the person libeled.
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Well, now that's just not true. None of the amendments in the Bill of Rights are absolute. Not one. They were not intended to be absolute, either, according to the Founders. Every single one has exceptions.
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Well, now that's just not true. None of the amendments in the Bill of Rights are absolute. Not one. They were not intended to be absolute, either, according to the Founders. Every single one has exceptions.
The constitution, as written, is a whitelist of things the government is allowed to do. The bill of rights is a list of examples of things it is not allowed to do. This suggestion that there are exceptions has no basis in the text of either one. I'll never understand how some people can read, "congress shall make no law," "shall not be infringed," "no person shall be deprived of life liberty or property without due process of law," and other similar statements and come up with "this isn't absolute."
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:4, Insightful)
The Founding Fathers loved exceptions. Remember,
...except you black guys over there, and you Native Americans over there, and you women over there, just shut up and get back in the kitchen. Oh, and only people with money get to vote. God bless America.
"Self-evident truths" my ass.
Seriously, you can find a lot of the ratification debates on the Internet if you care to ever learn a little bit about the founding of this great nation. It's pretty clear that the whole Bill of Rights thing was a stop-gap to get a handful of slave-owners to ratify the Constitution, or the whole thing would fall apart. They meant the entire damn Constitution to be a first draft, maybe to last a decade at most, and then get replaced by something that made sense and wasn't so full of holes. It wasn't supposed to become some kind of civic holy scripture.
The very first Supreme Court established exceptions to the Bill of Rights. Congress "shall make no law" infringing your rights, as long as you behave. And guess what happened. People didn't behave. Somebody started shooting up the town when they got drunk and all of a sudden laws to keep guns out of irresponsible hands were made. People libeled other people and instead of letting them go down to the river to shoot it out in a duel, libel laws were created to infringe on that First Amendment. And even the very first Supreme Court, guys who not only hung with the Founding Fathers, but who were Founding Fathers themselves said, "Well, of course. Because some people don't know how to fucking behave."
What part of "two hundred plus years of precedent" is so hard to understand?
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the Declaration of Independence you're quoting, which was not authored by precisely the same people, not subject to the approval of the same people, as those who wrote and ratified the Constitution, which was written 11 years later and wasn't even a document of the same type. Jefferson and those he presumed to speak for may well really have found it self-evident that all men were created equal, at least self-evident enough to pronounce the fact to the British while effectively declaring war against them. But that's a far cry from convincing a continental convention of representatives of legislatures of thirteen recently-sovereign states, legislatures elected by and representing, in part, wealthy land- and slave-owners, to enshrine such principle in the nigh-immutible supreme law of the lands in which said electorate lived.
In other words, it's one thing for a small handful of people to profess principles to their enemies; it's another thing entirely to get whole societies to agree to bind themselves to those principles. The fact that the professed principles of the founders were immediately ignored says nothing about the intent of those founders, and everything about our collective disrespect for principle in general when the rubber hits the road.
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I guess you have never been victim of libel on the internet. I see no difference between publishing false statement that are damaging to a person's reputation in a newspaper or on the internet; they are both libel. Why do you think posts on the internet should be exempt?
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It must be nice to never be effected by the statements of others. Libelous statements can effect carriers, political office, social interactions, etc. Why should someone be able to publish lies about someone else? Please note the difference between a negative opinion and a lie. For example, "I think he is an idiot" is an opinion while "He diddle small children" is a lie if he didn't actually do it.
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Is "He *is* an idiot" an opinion? Or is it a statement able to be factually verified and proven false and libelous?
is "I think he diddle's small children" just an opinion?
Is there anything truly gained by forcing people to premise every potentially libelous statement with an "I think" or an "I heard someone else say" in order to avoid litigation?
Is it worth giving up the right to freedom of speech for something so much worse?
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Is there anything truly gained by forcing people to premise every potentially libelous statement with an "I think" or an "I heard someone else say" in order to avoid litigation?
Such premises may not even protect the speaker. What is or is not a libelous statement is worked out in the courts. Whether someone wsays "I think he is an idiot" or "he is an idiot" both are generally accepted as opinion. On the other hand, if the statement was "he has an IQ of 50" would be libelous if it was not true.
Is it worth giving up the right to freedom of speech for something so much worse?
Again, that is a false dilemma [wikipedia.org]. Freedom of speech with reasonable limitations is very far from no freedom od speech. It is definitely worth giving up the right to publish lies so that there c
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Whether someone wsays "I think he is an idiot" or "he is an idiot" both are generally accepted as opinion.
Not only is it generally accepted as opinion, whether it *should be* accepted as an opinion is also an opinion.
On the other hand, if the statement was "he has an IQ of 50" would be libelous if it was not true.
Or maybe it's not libelous if it was a joke, or a quote of what someone else said, or a myriad of other subjectively assessed reasons.
Again, that is a false dilemma [wikipedia.org]. Freedom of speech with reasonable limitations is very far from no freedom od speech. It is definitely worth giving up the right to publish lies so that there can be recourse for people harmed by them.
I know what a false dilemma is, and what I am doing is clearly not that. I am acknowledging the "third" option that you are proposing but I am arguing that it actually falls into one of the other 2 categories.
According to wikipedia a flase dilemma is
a type of informal fallacy that involves a situation in which only limited alternatives are considered, when in fact there is at least one additional option.
I have considere
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Or maybe it's not libelous if it was a joke, or a quote of what someone else said, or a myriad of other subjectively assessed reasons.
All of which would be worked out through precedents and the courts.
You presented two options; Complete free speech or something "so much worse" than free speech. I say that there is a third option; limited free speech which in my opinion is better than completely free speech as it limits the damage caused by lies. Since it does not fall in the category of "so much worse" and it is not completely free speech it does is not covered by your two choices therefore you presented a false dilemma.
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This isn't mere libel.
This is a case of one person impersonating another.
Not parodying, but with the intent of making the world believe he is that person.
This is a case of identity theft.
There are no freedom-of-speech conflicts here.
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To impose that whatever happens "on the internet" is not re
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why not? When you have kids.. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's right. Words != action... The word 'hate' has been appropriated way too much to justify witchhunts. If your safety is threatened, call the police. People need to stop equating every little bullshit insult as 'threatening hate speech'. They also need to learn the concept of hyperbole.
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You need to look up the difference between normative and descriptive claims.
There is also such a thing as the 1st amendment of the constitution.
It is our job as members of society to decide if it is more important to have the right of freedom of speech, or the right to never have anything false (as determined by someone) published about you.
Saying "it's illegal" is not an argument for whether it *should be* illegal. That is for us as members of society to decide through public discourse, social pressure, a
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I don't get it. (Score:4, Insightful)
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If you read either the article or the judgment, Facebook refused when the girl's parents contacted them. They said that only the original creator of the account could delete it.
Another reason for friends not to encourage friends to use facebook. Just like the banks were "too big to fail", facebook is "too big to act responsibly."
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If you read either the article or the judgment, Facebook refused when the girl's parents contacted them. They said that only the original creator of the account could delete it.
Then Facebook is lying, cause they delete fake profiles all the time. If Facebook knew they were hosting defamatory content and didn't subsequently take steps to delete it, then it is Facebook that should be sued here, not the parents of the kid who created the fake page. For all we know, the kid may have forgotten the password!
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Internet access isn't a basic right.
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Facebook does exactly what they should. They won't delete a damned thing based on your word. Serve them a court order and you'll get a lot further.
Try reading their terms of service [facebook.com]
section 3.6
You will not bully, intimidate, or harass any user.
and section 3.10
You will not use Facebook to do anything unlawful, misleading, malicious, or discriminatory.
and 4.1
You will not provide any false personal information on Facebook, or create an account for anyone other than yourself without permission.
and 4.7
You will keep your contact information accurate and up-to-date.
and 4.8 (the account was created by one student, then shared with another)
You will not share your password (or in the case of developers, your secret key), let anyone else access your account, or do anything else that might jeopardize the security of your account.
and 4.9 (see above)
You will not transfer your account (including any Page or application you administer) to anyone without first getting our written permission.
Facebook deletes accounts all the time without being required to be served a court order. Or did you forget [facebook.com] this [slashdot.org]?
Facebook just doesn't want to set a high-profile precedent that they have a duty to actually enforce some of their ToS when it's a child being victimized. But what can you expect from anti-social media?
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It doesn't say when they did, just that they did and that it was taken down.
" It wasn’t deleted until Facebook deactivated the account at the urging of the girl’s parents, "
I have a feeling the parents are rich lawyer types.
Disregard (Score:2)
In the link it says they only deleted it after they filed the lawsuit.
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From what we were told by the police, FB found the real account of the person who was creating fake accounts and warned them to stop or be banned. Problem solved, no judge involved
Why is the school involved? (Score:2)
That is all.
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Be...cause the kid's parents are negligent?
Are they always? Or now do we get another layer of lawyers involved?
I've known bad seed children who were raised by very good parents. Seems like you would have ot prove the parents are negligent.
Or in anther case, I worked with a guy who had raised several foster children, and adopted some special needs children. He's a great guy, and loves these kids as his own.
I know it isn't popular among the "punish as many people as possible" set, but most of those children turned out wonderfully - a couple are
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Was any of this done on school grounds or using school equipment? From what I read it was all done at their homes.
The school has absolutely no business mediating online shenanigans, or really anything at all that happens off school grounds that don't directly affect the school. That's a massive slippery slope and them compelling him to make a statement is now a legal problem for him and his parents.
We have courts and police for this stuff. Schools need to be focused on what happens on school grounds.
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The school has absolutely no business mediating online shenanigans, or really anything at all that happens off school grounds that don't directly affect the school.
It probably started on the school ground where the children met and will continue on the school grounds where the children will interact every day.
We have courts and police for this stuff. Schools need to be focused on what happens on school grounds.
Do you really want a 7th grader hauled off to juvenile court for posting a Facebook page when it can much more easily be solved within the school? A school's job is education and educating a student that online bullying is withing that purview. The schools are focusing on what happens on school grounds as Facebook bullying leads directly to school grounds bullyin
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The picture used was taken at school. This was how they were originally able to identify the perps.
This also ended up involving school staff not directly involved with the students in question, as the perps sent out invites to everyone they could.
We have courts and police for this stuff. Schools need to be focused on what happens on school grounds.
So the school should ignore that drug dealer hanging just outside the gates? Or students who complain about abuse in the home? Or kids who show up at school hungry or without winter clothing? Or kids who are being shaken down for their lunch money on the way
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I think by freaking out over this, it legitimizes the idea that people should be hurt by things posted on facebook. It's like when a baby trips and falls, but it doesn't start crying until the parents freak out and alert the baby that it should be scared and in pain.
I have been called worse things when I was in school. What difference does it make that it is on the internet? Why not just make more fake pages of every student to make everyone even? Or better yet we can work to teach kids that they live i
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I wouldn't say it's "far beyond namecalling". Getting beaten up in an alley is far beyond namecalling. Having a defamatory website made about you is just an extreme form of namecalling.
I don't doubt that people might face criminal charges for similar things. I am saying that nobody *should* face criminal charges for speech, whether it's protesting at military funerals, or wearing a Ku Klux Klan outfit, or burning a flag, or calling a high school girl a whore on the internet.
I am not condoning any of this
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I am not condoning any of this behavior. I am saying that the correct way to combat this kind of behavior is not to shutdown freedom of speech, but rather to use more speech to publicly shame people who deserve it. That's what free societies do.
That's what societies do with adults. Children are a whole different ballgame. First, because they are children, they do not have the same ability to stand up for their rights, second because they do not have the legal competence to make such decisions themselves.
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How about identity theft and impersonation? Your argument shields both those acts as "free speech", even though this is exactly what happened.
I think you actually need to be engaged in something like fraud in order to be in trouble for identity theft. If you are just "impersonating" someone to defame them, I don't think treating it as identity theft is in the spirit of what those laws were intended to stop.
I think the correct course of action was to lobby facebook to take down the page, and when they don't, then apply social pressure to try to force them to do it. It is in their interest to take down fake pages created by mean high school dick
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The short answer is that identity theft is a crime. Identity theft and identity fraud are terms used to refer to all types of crime in which someone wrongfully obtains and uses another person's personal data in some way that involves fraud or deception, typically for economic gain.
"fraud OR deception". There was definitely deception involved here. That it wasn't for economic gain is irrelevant. "typically" as opposed to a necessary ingredient of the crime.
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Having freedom of speech kind of sucks sometimes, but it's better than living in North Korea.
In terms of logic that statement is a false dilemma [wikipedia.org]. You propose that that are only two choices; complete lack of free speech or completely unfettered free speech. That is not true. There is a third option which is the one that is generally followed by most countries. That is where speech is free except in a few well defined categories. Libel and slander are two such categories.
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I am not presenting a false dilemma. I am presenting a true dilemma.
Either we have unfettered freedom of speech, or we do not. This is true.
There is a third option which is the one that is generally followed by most countries
This "third" option is really just the 2nd option. When you have the right to say things that the government has deemed acceptable, you really don't have freedom of speech. The right to popular speech doesn't need to be protected.
China has a democracy. Everyone can vote for any candidate they want except in a few well defined categories. The communist party does g
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The US does libel and slander pretty well. For instance, if you're slandering/libeling a public figure, the burden of proof the public figure bears is higher than if you're talking about some random dude. The libeled individual has to prove the statement is false. There are cases of abuse, such as where someone gets sued by a rich person just to harass. It's not perfect. But I think anti-SLAPP laws are a better fix for that than saying, "it's perfectly okay to spread vicious lies about anyone you want.
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Damnit Slashdot!
Corrected post is here.
The US does libel and slander pretty well. For instance, if you're slandering/libeling a public figure, the burden of proof the public figure bears is higher than if you're talking about some random dude. The libeled individual has to prove the statement is false. There are cases of abuse, such as where someone gets sued by a rich person just to harass. It's not perfect. But I think anti-SLAPP laws are a better fix for that than saying, "it's perfectly okay to spread v
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Either we have unfettered freedom of speech, or we do not. This is true.
You are correct but where does it say "unfettered freedom of speech" in the US Constitution? As far as I can tell it just says "free speech". It also says "freedom of association" when most conditions of parole state that the parolee can not associate with known criminals. All rights have limits. Also, since this is a civil suit not a criminal suit, where does it say one is free from liability for the damage caused by that speech.
The right to popular speech doesn't need to be protected.
That is correct but the right to lie and cause damage to someone else is not,
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Schools are involved because they are less intrusive than juvenile court. Mediation between families by a neutral school official can be very helpful. Many of these issues can be kept out of the courts unless the parents are negligent.
The Actual Issue (Score:5, Informative)
The parents were notified of the defamation and took no action to close the FB account, which remained available for another 11 months. The parents were held directly liable for failing to act once notified, not for what was posted on the fake FB account.
It's all in the PDF of the decision linked in the summary above, if you're not too lazy to read it.
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If they are a minor, are they not subject to legal proceedings?
It has been generally held that, in civil matters, the parents and/or guardians are financially liable for damaged caused by a minor dependent.
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I quoteth from the text:
"Parents may be held directly liable, however, for their own negligence in failing to supervise or control their child with regard to conduct which poses an unreasonable risk of harming others."
citation: Assurance Co. of America v. Bell, 108 Ga. App. at 766-767 (4) (“A
parent may be guilty of primary negligence in failing to exercise reasonable care to
prevent a child under his control from creating an unreasonable risk of harm to third
persons, where he has knowledge of facts fro
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this was a major issue in the Bulger case as well, the argument was that the two little bastards' parents should have stood trial for neglect, but because it was such a public murder (more to the fact that it was actually a murder, hence a capital crime, hence tripped the strict liability threshold), the two little bastards should be tried as adults. It ALMOST got scuppered as a murder trial because of some basic errors my the officer leading the investigation, in which case it would have ended up as a tria
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Parents are and have always been responsible for the behaviour and expenses incurred by their children. If they go on a rampage of vandalism, the parents are responsible for the damages. If they steal a car and wreck it, the parents are responsible for the damages.
This is no different. The parents are being held responsible for the damages done by their children.
To hell with absentee parenting that lets children do whatever the hell they want with no restrictions or monitoring.
You bred your rug ra
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The parents were notified of the defamation and took no action to close the FB account, which remained available for another 11 months. The parents were held directly liable for failing to act once notified, not for what was posted on the fake FB account.
And Facebook was notified of the defamation and took no action for 11 months. Why is Facebook not liable? After all, Facebook had the technical ability to delete the account; the parents did not. For all we know, the kid may have even forgotten the password.
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unlikely given that the account was still active and in use up to the day it was deleted.
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7th grade? (Score:2)
In the UK that equates to a 12 year old.
The minimum age for a Facebook account is 13. It's right there, in their terms and conditions.
Parental fail.
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In the UK that equates to a 12 year old.
The minimum age for a Facebook account is 13. It's right there, in their terms and conditions.
Parental fail.
Maybe the *kid* was failing. He could be 15 if he's been held back enough.
Summary is _grossly_ wrong. (Score:4, Insightful)
The unauthorized profile and page remained accessible to Facebook users until Facebook officials deactivated the account on April 21, 2012,, not long after the Bostons filed their lawsuit on April 3, 2012 [3]. During the 11 months the unauthorized profile and page could be viewed, the Athearns made no attempt to view the unauthorized page, and they took no action to determine the content of te false, profane, and ethnically offensive information that Dustin was charged with electronically distributing. They did not attempt to learn to whom Dustin had distributed the false and offensive information or whether the distribution was ongoing. They did not tell Dustin to delete the page. Furthermore, they made no attempt to determine whether the false and offensive information Dustin was charged with distributing could be corrected, deleted, or retracted.
[...]
[3] Indeed, Facebook's records showed that, months after Dustin's principal notified the Athearns that Dustin had been disciplined for creating the unauthorized account, the fake persona continued to extend or accept requests to become Facebook Friends with additional users and that other users viewed and posted on the unauthorized page until the day before Facebook deactivated the account.
From the court's discussion of the legality of the lower court's grant of summary judgement in favor of the Athearns:
Under Georgia law, liability for the tort of a minor child is not imputed to the child's parents merely on the basis of the parent-child relationship. Parents may be held directly liable, however, for their own negligence in failing to supervise or control their child with regard to conduct which poses an unreasonable risk of harming others.
Since the parents knew for almost a year that their child had posted (no kidding, chase the link) grossly offensive, defamatory, libelous information and admit they not only did nothing, at all, ever, to even so much as look at it, they didn't even tell the kid to take it down, the appeals court's reversed the summary judgement in their favor, because it seems apparent that a jury might find them negligent for that.
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Yawn (Score:3)
Haven't parents always been liable for the actions of their children? I've always figured I was. If my kids made some mess they couldn't clean up, I knew I was on the hook for it. I suppose I shouldn't speak in the past tense, because I still have two who aren't yet legal adults.
Gah! (Score:2)
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Facebook *does* retroactively censor, and not for maintaining moral standards. Most of the time it's politically motivated. Two examples: I am aware of a page, and I have not only made Facebook and CEOP aware, I have also made the police aware. Said page advertises children for sale in the UK. Said page is still up after four YEARS. I created a page to raise awareness of missing endangered children in the UK, my page was not only deleted after three weeks, it was expunged from the database (I have the notif
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You can't say anything on Slashdot without everyones approval. Mod away bitches.
What? I'm called an idiot, and other nasty names by a lot of people.
That just shows that I'm very often right.
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If my kid shatters my neighbors window with a bad swing I'm liable, why shouldn't I be liable for wrongdoing of my kid in cyberspace?
What's a baseball? What's a bat? OK, smartass, what's a window?
Or are you going to hold the parents responsible for not being Vint Cerf?
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If my kid shatters my neighbors window with a bad swing I'm liable, why shouldn't I be liable for wrongdoing of my kid in cyberspace?
Ar eyou willing to lose your job, your livlihood over something your underage child did? There are two major porponents of this sort of things:
Peopl ewho demand as much vendetta as possible.It's not enough to punish a child - let's throw th eparent's in jail too!. Might be cool to throw a few relatives in the hoosgow while we're at it. Thes bad parents are probably form bad extended families.
People without children
Because it is impossible to control what an underage child does at all times, and the be
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Nice rant, too bad it is off topic. The main point being that this is a civil suit and not a criminal case therefore the parents can not go to jail. Secondly the issue is not what the child did but what the parents failed to do.
In this instance the parents were told about the issue and did nothing about it. That is the negligence that they are responsible for. Notice that the judge specifically denied liability for the child creating the site as the parents had no control over that.
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physically harming someone puts the perpetrator squarely in the crosshairs of strict personal liability - which is a lot of cases ends up with the child being tried as an adult, particularly on capital offences. Vicarious liability is the usual result of neglectful parenting which results in claims for damages. You can have vicarious liability without strict personal liability, eg in the case of a broken window, or you can have strict personal liability on the part of the child without vicarious liability o
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