• California Supreme Court,  Law,  Media

    California Supreme Court Watch: Websites NOT Liable for Libel in Third-Party Postings

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    Carol A. Corrigan, left, smiles while being sworn in by Supreme Court of California Chief Justice Ronald M. George, right, as an associate justice to the Supreme Court of California in San Francisco, Wednesday Jan. 4, 2006. Corrigan was selected by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to succeed Janice Rogers Brown, the seven-member court’s most conservative judge, and only black member. Brown resigned June 30 after the U.S. Senate confirmed her to a federal appeals court in the District of Columbia.

    CNET News: Calif. court ruling seeks to protect bloggers, Web publishers

    In a victory for bloggers, newsgroup participants and other Web publishers, the California Supreme Court ruled Monday that individual Internet users cannot be held liable for republishing defamatory statements written by others.

    The unanimous ruling appears to be the first to make clear that a 1996 law called the Communications Decency Act protects not only providers, but also users of online services who redistribute content. Earlier court rulings had established that Section 230 of that statute shields companies such as AOL and eBay from such liability, provided that they make good faith efforts to restrict access to material that could be considered “obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable.”

    By passing that law, Congress “has comprehensively immunized republication by individual Internet users,” intending “to protect online freedom of expression and to encourage self-regulation,” the justices concluded in their majority opinion (click for PDF) penned by Associate Justice Carol Corrigan.

    Another victory for freedom of expression and open access to information in the internet age..

    Flap is glad he made the RIGHT choice and voted earlier this month to confirm Justice Corrigan (heh, it was a unanimous opinion).

    The justices acknowledged that “recognizing broad immunity for defamatory republications on the Internet has some troubling consequences.” But unless Congress revises the law, anyone who claims to be defamed by an Internet posting may seek damages only from the “original source of the statement,” they wrote.

    Indeed and as it should be unless publishers conspire with the originators of libelous content.

    Volokh has more here.

    A long line of cases had already held that when a user posts material on a site, the operator of the site (or of the computer), can’t be held liable, even when it’s notified of the potentially tortious nature of the activity. Thus, for instance, we wouldn’t be liable for libels posted in our comments. But this case, as well as Batzel and some others, apply this principle even to immunize those who actively repost material, rather than just serve as passive conduits for what others post. This means that if a commenter posts excerpts from others’ work, even the commentator himself would be categorically immune from liability for the contents of those excerpts, at least unless he’s “active[ly] involve[d] in the creation of [the] posting,” or unless he’s conspiring with the original author.

    Note that when I say “immune from liability” or “can’t be held liable,” this is shorthand for “immune from liability except under intellectual property law, communications privacy law, or federal criminal law,” see 47 U.S.C. § 230(e)(1).

    Update:

    Justin Levine has more here.

    Wizbang does as well.

    But, Michelle Malkin dissents:

    But aren’t bloggers the ones arguing that we should be treated like MSM journalists? Isn’t that what the Apple vs. bloggers case was all about? Remember? Seems to me that some bloggers want to enjoy the benefits of MSM status (fighting for the same coverage as traditional journalists under shield laws, as in the Apple case), but avoid the consequences (getting sued if they re-publish defamatory material online).

    Strictly speaking, Barrett v. Rosenthal applies only to those who re-publish defamatory statements. It does not apply to the author of the original defamatory post. Anyone who wants to immunize himself from liability, however, can easily bypass that limitation by posting the original defamatory statement anonymously (for example, from a public library or Kinko’s or by using an anonymizer such as Torpark) then re-publishing it under his or her own name. Those savvy enough to game the system in this way will be able to libel their enemies with impunity.

    As one commenter at Volokh points out, “This [ruling] is not a victory for free speech, which was already protected; it is a victory for the perpetrators of libel and slander.”

    Stay tuned ……


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  • Criminals,  Media,  Television

    O.J. Simpson Watch: Book and TV Special “If I Did It” Canceled by News Corp.

    simpsonnovember20aweb

    Media tycoon Rupert Murdoch announced the cancellation of a controversial book and television interview involving OJ Simpson, seen here in 2001, being planned by his News Corp company.

    AP: O.J. Simpson Book, TV Special Canceled

    After a firestorm of criticism, News. Corp. said Monday that it has canceled the O.J. Simpson book and TV special “If I Did It.”

    “I and senior management agree with the American public that this was an ill-considered project,” said Rupert Murdoch, News Corp. chairman. “We are sorry for any pain that this has caused the families of Ron Goldman and Nicole Brown Simpson.”

    A dozen Fox affiliates had already said they would not air the two- part sweeps month special, planned for next week before the Nov. 30 publication of the book by ReganBooks. The publishing house is a HarperCollins imprint owned _ like the Fox network _ by News Corp.

    In both the book and show, Simpson speaks in hypothetical terms about how he would have committed the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife Nicole and her friend Goldman.

    Flap bets another publisher will pick up this book. Will it sell?

    Probably

    Flap is not so sure about television. But, perhaps pay per view?

    Murdoch wimped out…….


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  • George W. Bush,  Iraq War

    Iraq War Watch: Go Big, Go Long Or Go Home?

    iraqnovember20aweb

    A Marine from 3rd Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment on patrol in Husaybah, Iraq, November 3, 2006.

    AP: Pentagon outlines 3 options in Iraq

    A Pentagon review of Iraq has come up with three options — injecting more troops into Iraq, shrinking the force but staying longer or pulling out. The Washington Post quoted senior defense officials as dubbing the three alternatives “Go big, go long and go home.”

    The secret military study was commissioned by Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and comes as political and military leaders struggle with how to conduct a war that is increasingly unpopular, both in the United States and in occupied Iraq.

    Pace has said that all options for the Iraq war are on the table. Those would range from significantly boosting the number of troops to withdrawing a substantial portion of those now there.

    John Hinderaker has a good analysis here.

    But, Flap thought the Democrats had a plan for the Iraq War? Is this it?

    A hybrid consensus will result but with Iran hegemony looming in the background will there be a solution without taking care of Iran first?

    Doubtful……

    Stay tuned……


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  • Cindy Sheehan,  Dumbass,  Liberal Morons

    Cindy Sheehan Watch: Sheehan in South Korea – To Protest Expansion of U.S. Military Base in Pyongtaek

    sheehannovember20bweb

    Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan (front, 2nd R), whose son Casey was killed during combat in Iraq in April 2004, speaks at a candlelight vigil in the village of Daechoori in Pyongtaek, where South Korea’s defence ministry had fenced and demolished houses to make way for the expansion of a U.S. base, about 80 km (50 miles) south of Seoul, November 20, 2006. A delegation of U.S. peace and social justice activists led by Sheehan arrived in Seoul on Sunday for a six-day visit to object to the expansion of Camp Humphrey, the U.S. military base in Pyongtaek and to protest against a plan for a free trade agreement (FTA) between South Korea and the U.S.

    Cindy is still stalking Bush.

    Earth to Sheehan – Bush returns to the United States today.

    Freepers ask who is paying the tab?

    Good question……..

    sheehannovember20aweb

    Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan (L), whose son Casey was killed during combat in Iraq in April 2004, hugs Hwang Pil-soon, the mother of village headman Kim Ji-tae, during a news conference in Seoul November 20, 2006. Kim is in jail for protesting against the expansion of a U.S. military base in Pyongtaek. The words on the signs read, ‘Renegotiate for expansion of U.S. military base!’ (L) and ‘Release village headman Kim Ji-tae!’


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