Australian court holds Google is responsible for linking to defamatory website


Autoria(s): Suzor, Nicolas P.
Data(s)

29/10/2015

Resumo

The South Australian Supreme Court this week found that Google is legally responsible when its search results link to defamatory content on the web. In this long-running case, Dr Janice Duffy has been trying for more than six years to clear her name and remove links to defamatory material when people search for her using Google. The main culprit is the US based website Ripoff Reports, where people have posted negative reviews of Dr Duffy. Under United States law, defamation is very hard to prove, and US websites are not liable for comments made by their users. Since it was not possible to get harmful or abusive comments removed from the source, Dr Duffy instead asked Google to remove the links from its search results. Google removed some of these links, but only from its Australian domain (google.com.au), and it left many of them active. This latest court decision is a big win for Dr Duffy. The court found that once Google was alerted to the defamatory material, it was then under an obligation to act to censor its search results and prevent further harm to Dr Duffy’s reputation.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/90239/

Publicador

The Conversation Media Group Ltd

Relação

https://theconversation.com/australian-court-holds-google-is-responsible-for-linking-to-defamatory-websites-49883

Suzor, Nicolas P. (2015) Australian court holds Google is responsible for linking to defamatory website. The Conversation.

Fonte

Digital Media Research Centre; Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #defamation #intermediary liability
Tipo

Other