What is defamation? One definition is character assassination:
the malicious and unjustified harming of a person's good reputation.
"all too often they discredit themselves by engaging in character assassination".
Currently, it looks to me like major social media service providers make statements that they "hope" will be taken as factual, but are not.
Facebook and Twitter should not be able to censor what people say because they - the people who have the power to click truth away at these media conglomerates - don't want anyone to read something that contradicts their beliefs. Their beliefs are their right to have, but not to force on others.
Betsy Combier, betsy.combier@gmail.com
Editor, ADVOCATZ.com
Editor, ADVOCATZ Blog
Editor, NYC Rubber Room Reporter
Editor, Parentadvocates.org
Editor, New York Court Corruption
Editor, National Public Voice
Editor, NYC Public Voice
Editor, Inside 3020-a Teacher Trials
How defamation law is supposed to work: Networks couldn’t
Edward Steinberg, NY DAILY NEWS, December 29, 2020 The late New York Sen.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan famously said that “Everyone is entitled to his own
opinion, but not his own facts.” Last week, right-wing “news”
networks Fox
News, Fox Business, Newsmax and
OAN got a painful, awkward lesson in the legal meaning of Moynihan’s
phrase. Since the election, these
networks have broadcast their opinion, and that of President Trump’s, that the
2020 election was stolen. Of course, they have a First Amendment right to state
this. But, lacking any evidence
whatsoever, Trump, our fabulist-in-chief, in tandem with these Trump-echo
networks, made up “facts” to lend support to this opinion: conspiracies
involving George Soros; midnight ballot dumps; biased poll workers; and
electronic voting systems from Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic that
supposedly switched votes from Trump to Biden in swing states. These conspiracy theories
even forced one election systems worker into hiding because
of death threats. And here is where the
networks crossed a line. Moynihan’s famous aphorism actually describes
defamation law perfectly. False statements of facts, even if mixed with
opinion, can give rise to lawsuits by those reputationally injured, even
against the press. And so, Smartmatic and Dominion merely
threatened defamation lawsuits — and many of these networks caved, issuing not
only specific retractions but also admissions that they possessed no evidence
of ballot switching or of the dark conspiracies that they had been
advancing. Normally, one would not
think of corporations as the go-to defenders of truth and democracy, but in
this case, it was their threat of defamation lawsuits that brought forward
truth, and that hopefully will increase confidence in the outcome of our
election. In the famous story, it’s a
child who calls out the emperor for having no clothes; today, it’s voting
machine companies. Tomorrow, it may be poll workers falsely accused of
improperly scanning ballots, voters falsely accused of illegal registrations,
not-for-profits falsely accused of illegal ballot harvesting and anyone in a
news story, or a widely-circulated Facebook post or Tweet, who is falsely
accused of illegal activity in connection with an election. Smartmatic and Dominion are
on to something. The explosion of falsity by propagandist networks must be met
with a flood of defamation suits. And while social media
companies themselves might be — for now — able to escape such suits because of
Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996, individual users of
Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram with large followings should know that they
might be held liable for spreading specific lies that sully the reputation of
businesses or individuals. Lawsuits for intentional
infliction of emotional distress can be another tool in the fight for truth
against right wing-conspiracies. Fox News found this out when the Second
Circuit held
that the parents of murdered DNC staffer Seth Rich could sue over a segment
purporting to link Rich to WikiLeaks in furtherance of an alt-right theory that
his death involved leaked DNC emails. Legislators, too, can help.
New York should consider laws to extend the statute of limitations for
defamation suits, mandate double or treble damages in egregious instances, and
protect whistleblowers who bring forward evidence of malicious and deliberate
false reporting. The First Amendment would
not be implicated by any of these laws, nor would there likely be much increase
in the number of defamation suits filed. Falsely yelling “fire” in a crowded
theater has never been protected by the First Amendment; falsely yelling that
someone burned ballots is not protected either. Steinberg is the president
of the New York State Trial Lawyers Association. Visit our COVID-19 Response
page here, join the NYSTLA
COVID-19 Listserver, or please contact Nick Novak
at 212-349-5890 Ext. 800 or at nnovak@nystla.org.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment