|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
British Internet libel case threatens free speech internationally
By Mike Ingram
4 April 2000
Use
this version to print
In an out-of-court libel settlement, Demon Internet, one of
Britain's oldest independent Internet service providers, has effectively
accepted responsibility for all material hosted on their servers.
The case has major implications for free speech on the Internet
in Britain and beyond.
The libel case was brought by physicist Laurence Godfrey, who
claimed he had been defamed in two anonymous postings in discussion
forums hosted by Demon. The libel case began in January 1998,
when Godfrey served a writ on Demon demanding the removal of a
message posted in the newsgroup soc.culture.thai a year
earlier.
Four days before the case was due to come to court, Demon agreed
to pay Godfrey £15,000 damages and his legal costs, estimated
at £230,000. Demon will face similar costs itself, bringing
the total to nearly half a million pounds.
In earlier hearings Demon argued that they were not the publishers
of the material, and were not responsible for the posting in the
same way a newspaper would be responsible for an article. The
court ruled out this defence in March last year. Justice Moreland
said the company had no protection under section 1 of the 1996
Defamation Act, which enables a provider to avoid liability if
it can prove innocent dissemination. The judge ruled
that because Demon had refused to remove the postings, it was,
in effect, the publisher.
After initially stating that they would fight the ruling, Demon's
owners Thus plc. opted to settle out of court. In front of Justice
Eady, the company apologised for failing to remove the postings
at the time Godfrey had protested.
Godfrey has also sued several other Internet service providers
and online publications. His previous cases include settlements
against New Zealand TeleCom, the Melbourne PC users group, and
the online edition of Canada's Toronto Star. In October
1998 he filed suit against the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
ISP StarNet, and Kritchai Quanchairut, a former University of
Minnesota student.
Demon argued that since they did not create the postings, the
items were not theirs to remove. As they were not the originators
of the content, they could neither verify nor refute its accuracy.
The company said it would press the government for recognition
that Internet service providers should not be liable for
the millions of items carried on the Internet every day.
But that is precisely what has been established in this case.
Nick Braithwaite, Godfrey's lawyer, said the case had established
a firm precedent that Internet service providers can be publishers
in English libel law.
It has also established that under UK law an Internet service
provider is responsible for the material carried on its sites,
regardless of the country of origin. In the United States, ISPs
are considered to be no more liable for the messages posted on
them than the post office would be for the contents of letters
it delivers.
But US-based ISPs are still threatened by this decision, according
to London media lawyer Mark Stephens. He told the New York
Times that service providers everywhere would be vulnerable
to threats from the rich and litigious. ISPs, wherever they're
located in the world and whether or not they're protected by the
free speech guarantees of the Bill of Rights in America
could be dealt with harshly, robustly and expensively in
the British courts, he said.
He described the situation created by the settlement as open
season on ISPs: This exposes Internet companies to
the ability on the part of the rich and powerful to censor them.
If you're rich and powerful, you could sue the Internet company
to take something off the Internet edition of an American newspaper,
because you know they're going to censor the newspaper even if
the newspaper doesn't censor itself.
If ISPs are held liable for the content they carry on their
servers, they will be under tremendous pressure to become the
censors of public opinion. As a result of the Godfrey case, Demon
Internet now routinely removes material that it considers unsuitable
or defamatory, according to a company spokeswoman.
See Also:
Britain: libel verdict vs.
exposé of Bosnia War propaganda bankrupts independent journal
[25 March 2000]
British Labour government to
enforce police access to email encryption
[31 March 2000]
UK Internet libel case
could set dangerous precedent
[16 April 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |