08-16-2013, 04:58 AM
So during spring quarter I took a Cyberspace Law course and it was suggested that I open up a thread about it. The book we used in our course was "Cyberspace Law: Cases & Materials, Third Edition", by Raymond Ku and Jacqueline Lipton. I found it to a pretty fun course, and it brought up a lot of possible issues we could face as web developers and designers, as well as anyone else working through the internet.
The most regular course problems proposed were about message boards. *hint hint*
So, a big thing about running a message board is the issue of libel, which is written defamation (versus slander, which is spoken). In the case of libel, the person who is copying or transmitting the libel can be as liable (ha ha) as the person making the original statement in many cases. However, if the provider of the service (like a message board) is a distributor, rather than a publisher, this is circumvented. It is then on the person pursuing the issue to prove that the distributor had prior knowledge, and a hand in publishing (the ability to alter the piece or prevent it from being published entirely) in order to become a publisher, which would then be strictly liable. In the case of the internet, when message boards are often automatic and require little to no human attention for a message to replicate itself to everyone's computers (technically, you've created and downloaded a copy of this message if you're reading it), as long as you're not actively monitoring you are a distributor.
So... Say I create a message board application, which really isn't that hard if you're not looking for something heavy. Say users of the message board have an issue with each other. If I step in and remove one, that person could then turn around and sue me for anything the other person said that may not be true, because it's libel if it's not true, and I then became a publisher as I both clearly knew it was occurring, and had the ability to put a stop to it.
Thoughts?
The most regular course problems proposed were about message boards. *hint hint*
So, a big thing about running a message board is the issue of libel, which is written defamation (versus slander, which is spoken). In the case of libel, the person who is copying or transmitting the libel can be as liable (ha ha) as the person making the original statement in many cases. However, if the provider of the service (like a message board) is a distributor, rather than a publisher, this is circumvented. It is then on the person pursuing the issue to prove that the distributor had prior knowledge, and a hand in publishing (the ability to alter the piece or prevent it from being published entirely) in order to become a publisher, which would then be strictly liable. In the case of the internet, when message boards are often automatic and require little to no human attention for a message to replicate itself to everyone's computers (technically, you've created and downloaded a copy of this message if you're reading it), as long as you're not actively monitoring you are a distributor.
So... Say I create a message board application, which really isn't that hard if you're not looking for something heavy. Say users of the message board have an issue with each other. If I step in and remove one, that person could then turn around and sue me for anything the other person said that may not be true, because it's libel if it's not true, and I then became a publisher as I both clearly knew it was occurring, and had the ability to put a stop to it.
Thoughts?