Company Continues To Insist That Google Is Responsible For Libel On Any Site It Links To

from the sorry,-but,-no dept

Can a day go by without a story about a ridiculous lawsuit against Google? The latest is really more of an update of a case we wrote about a few years ago, where the company Dotworlds sent us their own press release, claiming that they were suing Google for linking to sites that contained libel (according to Dotworlds) against it. That, of course, was ridiculous, since Google is not the responsible party at all, and simply provides a search engine. We pointed that out in our post about it, and the folks from Dotworlds responded using an emotional, rather than legal, argument basically saying that it's too much work to figure out who was actually responsible, so why shouldn't they take the easy path and sue Google? The company is apparently now suing Google in the UK, since the UK's libel laws are a lot stricter. So it's entirely possible that a judge will find that Google somehow is liable for the content on others' pages. The head of Dotworlds claims that Google is liable here because he's informed it of the libelous statements -- but that doesn't change the simple fact that Google is not the one publishing those statements. Blaming Google for finding libelous statements is blaming the tool, not whoever is actually responsible. It may be easier, but that doesn't mean it's right.
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  1. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jul 2007 @ 2:19pm

    Just wow

    And to think they probably would never have found the sites that were in the wrong without Google in the first place . . .

    Good thinking, sue the tool that makes it easier for you to find other people to sue.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    sonofdot, 3 Jul 2007 @ 2:41pm

    What losers

    These losers are just begging for someone to really screw with them. Read their 7/3/2007 whine -- oops, I mean post -- on the Register:

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/07/02/google_dotworlds_libel_claim/

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    Mark Francis, 3 Jul 2007 @ 2:57pm

    Same in Canada

    So far that's the common law standard in Canada as well. As soon as you are made aware of a claim of libel, you are supposed to unlink from it. Otherwise, you are in a position of liability.

    If you think this through, though, Google is in a tough spot: If the material is not libelous, then they've injured the other party. This, of course, also means that the powerful get to dictate what's on the web.

    For an interesting example of suing over linking, see: http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/1987/125/

    I myself am being sued for having a link in a wiki, which led to another website which had a link on it which was objected to. When I received the objection, the link had been removed from the other website for months. I am, nevertheless, being sued for it. Even worse, this was all in the context of a Green Party of Canada internal elections. I was running a wiki promoting certain candidates. Even in the UK, this would be protected speech.

    And, oh yes, the person who actually had the link? He's not being sued.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jul 2007 @ 3:00pm

    Publicity

    Really, this is a win-win for the plaintiff.

    They talk about the so-called Streisand Effect on this site a lot, but in this case I think the phenomena is being exploited. Bringing the suit and publicizing it draws attention to his service. Issuing his own press releases when he sued the big G previously just points to this. If you don't want people to know of the alleged libel, you don't issue press releases about it. And if he should happen to actually win the suit, he gets the publicity and a settlement to boot.

    Pure publicity stunts.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. identicon
    GoblinJuice, 3 Jul 2007 @ 3:04pm

    Who?

    Dot... Words? Never heard of 'em.

    Instead of going after people who bitch and moan about your product(s) (actually, going after an innocent third party that is just INDEXING the shit), how about improving? =) I know, it's a crazy friggin' idea.

    Jeesh. Just imagine the shape Microsoft would be in right now if Gates went batshit everytime someone said something negative about him.

    If DotWords (god that's a lame name for a company) is successful, I plan to sue Google, too. Every time one of my ex's says ANYTHING negative about me, that gets indexed by Google.... bwahaha. =) I'll be RICH!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. identicon
    Rich C, 3 Jul 2007 @ 3:09pm

    Dotworld registers domain names...

    So are they liable for the content on the sites that they registered the name for?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. icon
    Anonymous Poster (profile), 3 Jul 2007 @ 3:15pm

    And the legal system gets knocked down another notch.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jul 2007 @ 4:33pm

    this is so stupid, if they don't want their content indexed how about putting up robots.txt that tells the search bot not to index the damn thing!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 3 Jul 2007 @ 6:34pm

    You may want to try reading the article more carefully.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 Jul 2007 @ 4:35am

    "... The company is apparently now suing Google in the UK, since the UK's libel laws are a lot stricter. So it's entirely possible that a judge will find that Google somehow is liable ..."
    Are you confusing the words "stricter" with "stupider" or are you assuming that everything outside of the US is even stupider that stuff inside ?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. identicon
    Joe, 4 Jul 2007 @ 8:31am

    Obviously it is Google's fault for not taking action to include in their search code a way to not return illegal things.

    While this is a bit extreme; I'd rather see the rulings apply to all things instead of 100 sites are forced shut because they link to other pages with copyrighted stuff than to see all those sites shut down but the big happy corporations are left out of any penalty like normally.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 Jul 2007 @ 2:56pm

    They should add the PC/MAC manufacturers for providing the systems that allow a person to use the browser programs, the monitor companies for displaying the urls, the nic and router companies for transmitting the signals and the OS companies for developing software GUIs that allow the browsers to run, thus allowing Google to search the sites that have the libelous information on them.

    Hmmm, wonder if they should toss in the office furniture that "hosts" the offending hardware.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. identicon
    mike allen, 4 Jul 2007 @ 11:20pm

    critics

    Having seen the so called libal which i wont reproduce here but will say that it is basically a genuine criticism of the companies product. posted by people who perhaps are not used to writing a few four letter words are the only real complaint against them.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. identicon
    mike allen, 4 Jul 2007 @ 11:25pm

    UK judges

    the reason they want it here is perhaps our judges are so out of touch i expect them to have to ask what the internet is. I also doudt if any of them know what google is.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. identicon
    JustMatt, 5 Jul 2007 @ 5:51am

    Google should stop indexing anything about this co

    Because that worked *so* well for the newspapers in Belgium!

    And the great thing is that Google is a private company, they can choose to index or not index someone at will.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. identicon
    Ben, 5 Jul 2007 @ 12:31pm

    Google doesn't libel...

    Google doesn't libel people....People libel people.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. identicon
    Barbara Elizabeth, 5 Jul 2007 @ 12:34pm

    Suing Google

    Why not sue the public library? They carry newspapers and magazines that might, conceivably, contain libelous information. They even have computers where patrons can browse google.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  18. identicon
    Surool, 5 Jul 2007 @ 12:45pm

    To make the arguement is to loose it

    To proove that they've been liabled, they need Google to find the offending comments. They prove that Google brings up a link to the offending site... but also prove that using Google gives them the website that actually published the liablous statement in the first place. So, I guess it wasn't really THAT hard to find out who was really responsible, but Google has deeper pockets.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  19. identicon
    Bob, 5 Jul 2007 @ 12:46pm

    Suing Google

    It's like putitng the gun to death, instead of the killer.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  20. identicon
    Chip Ramsey, 5 Jul 2007 @ 12:50pm

    Don't shoot the messenger

    isn't that like suing the credit reporting services because you didn't pay your bills and you have bad credit?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  21. identicon
    Scott, 5 Jul 2007 @ 1:11pm

    The precedent has already been set...

    A few years ago I purchased a house, my first foray into being a homeowner. As it turns out, a man that had owned the house about ten years prior had robbed a bank and fled the country.

    One day I had a knock at the door, when I answered it I found the local sheriff at my door waiting to handcuff me. Turns out that they didn't think they would ever actually catch the man, but they did know that he had once lived at my address. They got to punish someone I guess. I should be out of jail by the time I'm 75, but I guess that's just how this stuff works.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  22. identicon
    Matt, 5 Jul 2007 @ 1:35pm

    What about the other search engines?

    Google may be the most popular but there are a lot of engines out there, why aren't they just as responsible if they most likely provide the same results.

    This is more like killing one gun in a firing squad.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  23. identicon
    anuviel, 5 Jul 2007 @ 2:08pm

    middleman

    Google might be responsible. The way to go about it is this:

    Sue the site that posted libel. When you win demand of google that they stop linking to any site that has said libel on it. If they do not then they are responsible and held liable much like a middleman that connects assassins with clients.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  24. identicon
    dave, 5 Jul 2007 @ 2:25pm

    this google suit

    if it weren't for the greed of certain lawyers and lawmakers, we would never have all this controversy.

    get off my lawn.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  25. identicon
    Bigdog, 5 Jul 2007 @ 2:42pm

    Your argument makes no sense as it too is "emotionally" based. You say that google is not responsible for the content it links because it is the tool, not the user? Well how about when a website links to a pirated movie file or software? Or how about the DVD-Squeeze dvd copying software that people use to copy copywritten DVD's? That's a tool.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  26. identicon
    lyndon hood, 5 Jul 2007 @ 3:04pm

    Defamation, UK style

    This is stupid and sucks but, as you say, it's possible the judge may find them liable.

    It's like this - if it's defamatory to say "blah", then it's also defamatory to say "so-and-so says blah". In practical terms it's like repeating the assertion. That's effectively what google does with its index (provided the index results contain some of the claims), and having been informed of it - or at least of some particular instance of it - they're responsible for its continued presence.

    For it to be defamatory, the assertions would have to be false, damaging and on matters of fact. At least that's the way it would work (here) in New Zealand, where they system is much the same. The damages in this instance might no be too much to worry about, though.

    Remember Google has been know to fear the lawyers in the past, at least as far as scientology is concerned.

    But yeah, thanks to this suit the only thing i know about dotworlds is that they're dicks.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  27. identicon
    SickNTwisted, 5 Jul 2007 @ 7:14pm

    I blame my parents for making me and thus making me go through this life where I can read these ridiculous things.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  28. identicon
    John, 5 Jul 2007 @ 7:25pm

    google's ass

    Unfortunately for Google's ass there is president against them in the form of Napster v. RIAA. In Nap v RIAA the RIAA lawyers successfully argued that while Napster itself wasn't braking any laws directly it was in fact being an enabler and in that breaking the law. Because they allowed this content to be spread from person to person. In that case Napster claimed to be only a search tool. As we all know, they lost. In this case it is possible to come after google and say that this is content that only a tool such as google would enable the person to find. And if the material is copy write, then google could potentially be found to be at fault. This is backed up by the recent, about a year ago, supreme court case that over turned Sony v Beta Max. The new high court ruling holds the enabling technology responsible for the use of that technology. But of course there is a catch.

    In both court cases the technology in question was primarily being used for the search and transfer of copy write material. Google in this case will, most likely successfully , argue that because the primary use of their service is not the distribution of copy write material that in fact they are exempt from these rulings. If the plaintiff cannot show a majority use of Google to transfer protected documents then the law suite will be dropped. The reason that this is the most likely outcome is because this one site, and thus copy write material from this plaintiff, only represent a tiny tiny fraction of Google's overall searches. In the other court cases the RIAA represented a majority of the material being transfered via those mediums. A united front and more expensive lawyers make all the difference.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  29. identicon
    Common Sense, 5 Jul 2007 @ 8:02pm

    What?! That makes as much a sense as me wanting to sue Dotworlds for being fucking dicks!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  30. identicon
    Anonymous Coward #2, 6 Jul 2007 @ 8:01am

    Spelling police eeplying to John

    You make good points but your arguments are terribly defeated by your orthography!

    ...there is president against them...

    -> You meant "precedent."

    ...wasn't braking any laws...

    -> arghh... breaking

    breaking the law.

    there you got it!

    And if the material is copy write...
    ...and thus copy write material ...

    -> copyrighted

    A united front and more expensive lawyers make all the difference.

    Is true!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  31. identicon
    ShadowEyes, 6 Jul 2007 @ 9:24am

    WTF?

    Wow...that's screwed up. Suing a search engine for doing it's job. Kind of like suing a mechanic for fixing your car. I look forward to the judge throwing this kind of waste of taxpayer money out the door.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  32. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 6 Jul 2007 @ 9:38am

    Hey, if a judge can sue for $60 million for a pair of pants, what's wrong with this?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  33. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 6 Jul 2007 @ 12:57pm

    oh dear

    "(random business) sucks" search controversy is a laugh and a half.

    There's a TechDirt repost on Addict3d (http://tinyurl.com/2qwtxh) with a single comment made by dotWORLDS. Some bizarre denigration of Google having no use, or whatever. Isn't that something that they themselves seem to be suiting up over?

    They also signed up in June on Google's own Blogger service, posting only two things and leaving it.
    http://dotworlds.blogspot.com/2007/06/why-does-google-publish-libel.html
    and
    http://dotworlds .blogspot.com/2007/06/to-google-verb-meaning-to-seach.html

    Same day, in that order. On Google's own blog service, they condemn Google (a matter of poor taste) and then announce their own private service using Google's name, apparently with the justification of Google being a genericized trademark (VERY poor taste, and with questionable legality).

    Were things this petty before the dotcom boom and bust, or was I not paying attention back then?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  34. identicon
    I heart dotworlds, 6 Jul 2007 @ 5:15pm

    10: dotworldssucks.com: sorry this domain name is unavailable, please try another.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  35. identicon
    Unbiased, 5 Jul 2008 @ 9:51am

    It's very reasonable. Google is responsible for the quality of its search results. If the search engine is incapable of filtering out spam websites and other defamatory content in its search results, it does not deserve to be in the search business.

    THEY SHOULD PAY UP FOR DEFAMATION OR LEAVE THE BUSINEESS.

    link to this | view in thread ]


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