By
Adam C. Sherman and Jordan S. Cohen
on June 17, 2016
Posted
in Defamation Removal, Google, Internet Defamation General
For businesses and professionals defamed on the
internet, most simply want the false content removed. Fortunately, there are a
number of ways to obtain removal, one of which is through a court order.
Websites and other entities do not want to be tasked
with having to weigh the facts of any situation and making a judgment call.
Therefore, most will not delete content just because a party alleges a post is
false.
Most websites will, however, remove content declared
false by a court, even though court orders are typically against the actual
posters of the content and not the websites themselves.
In short, court ordered removal involves obtaining a
judgment against the poster of defamatory content online and then presenting
the court order to the websites (or, when relevant, Google) on which the false
content is appearing.
Of course, obtaining a court order involves filing an
actual lawsuit with legitimate claims and pursuing the authors of the harmful
content. When a defendant is known (or can be identified and later named as a
defendant), the parties might settle and each sign an agreed order, which can
be presented to the court to grant the requested judgment.
We have seen instances in which a defendant is
identified, yet that person is extremely difficult to track down and does not
answer the complaint and, therefore, a plaintiff can move for a default
judgment.
Similarly, it might be difficult to identify the
defaming party but, following the completion of court-granted service by
publication or alternative service, the plaintiff can move for and obtain a default
judgment.
Crafting an order
As frequently mentioned on our blog, the Communications Decency Act immunizes websites from liability for most
user-generated content. Thus, a defamed party must go after the posters
themselves and, as stated above, court orders must be against the specific
online posters and not the websites on which the statements were published.
Court orders must also declare the statements in
question (at the specified URL or URLs) to be false and defamatory, perhaps
including in the order the actual defamatory statements – making it clear to a
website, when presented with a court order, why the particular post is
unlawful.
Additionally, an attorney preparing a court order
should also include language mandating removal (or, rather, mandating that the
defendant or the parties request removal – given that a website generally
cannot be forced to remove false content when the order is against the poster).
This might include a section mandating that the
parties request removal from Google, in case it becomes necessary to submit a
request to Google to remove false content from its search results index.
Finally, an attorney drafting a court order might want
to include additional language that can assist with the removal of future
identical or substantially similar content that is later found online.
Whether the poster of the false content has published
identical content elsewhere, or if another less-sophisticated website
republishes a false posting, verbatim, passing it off as its own (which seems
to happen a lot to Ripoff Report postings), the defamed party might not
discover these identical posts until after the court order has been entered.
Thus, by incorporating a clause mandating removal of
identical or substantially similar false content discovered at a later time,
the plaintiff can still contact a website or Google with the court order and
show that removal of the URL(s) is still mandated.
How different entities respond to court orders
In general, legitimate websites will act on valid
court orders.
For example, Pissed Consumer notes on its website that
it removes false content pursuant to court orders. Similarly, WordPress—upon
receipt of court orders—contacts the owners of the relevant WordPress sites and
ask them to take action.
When site owners do not take action within seven days,
in response to court orders, WordPress typically suspends their sites and
effectively removes the content.
As mentioned previouslyon our blog, Ripoff Report does
not remove defamatory postings.
However, according to its court order policy, Ripoff
Report will review a valid agreed order (but not a default judgment) and redact
false statements when: 1) the court order is “supported by admissible evidence,
including reasonably corroborated affidavits under oath, that specifically
identified statements of fact in the report on Ripoff Report are false and
defamatory”; and 2) where there is no doubt that the order in anyway violates
the First Amendment.
Of course, Ripoff Report does not remove entire
postings, which can still rank highly in search engines. Therefore, an attorney
representing a defamed party should consider submitting the court order to
Google with the objective of having Google remove the search results pertaining
to the particular Ripoff Report postings.
This same approach can be utilized for other websites
that are unresponsive to court orders, including the aforementioned
unsophisticated website, many of which often demand money for removal.
Google will generally remove search results linking to
defamatory content in response to a valid court order, so long as it can be
shown that the defamed party actually notified (or attempted to provide
notification) to the posters of the content, and where it is not reasonably
possible to get the content removed from the particular website(s) directly.
For more information, contact Colleen Devanney at
855.542.9192 or cmdevanney@vorys.com. Read more about the practice at
http://www.defamationremovalattorneys.com/.
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