Australian court holds Google responsible for linking to defamatory websites

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This article is by Nicolas Suzor, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law at Queensland University of Technology. It originally appeared on The Conversation.

analysis 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.

This case is not yet over. It now goes back to court on on November 3 to establish damages that Google may be ordered to pay. Google may also choose to appeal to the High Court.

Jurisdictional uncertainty

This case highlights a complex jurisdiction problem: this case was against Google Inc, a US company, not Google Australia. Dr Duffy lost a case against Google Australia several years ago, because the court found that the search giant’s Australian arm had no effective control over search results.

Essentially, transnational corporations like Google are able to structure their operations to benefit from US law, which provides them with much greater protection. Google’s Australian arm handles support and sales, but does not operate the search engine itself.

In the United States, the First Amendment protects publishers, unless the plaintiff can show that the publisher deliberately acted maliciously.

Search engines, website hosts, social networks and other internet operators have an additional layer of protection in the US under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. This means that they are immune from lawsuits over content that is posted by third parties.

What this means is that foreign corporations can often ignore Australian judgements. It is practically impossible to enforce an Australian award for damages or an order that the search engine remove the content in US courts.

It also means that Australian technology companies are disadvantaged compared to foreign operators. The uncertainty and risks of our law mean that many companies are unable to operate in Australia, which is a real loss to Australian innovation and to local consumers.

Liability for linking

Australian courts face a difficult question when interpreting defamation law. The law is still unclear about when someone can be held responsible for the actions of an unrelated third party. This is only the latest in a series of cases against Google and others – and courts have come to conflicting decisions.

Defamation law protects the reputation of individuals. It is unlawful to publish false information that causes others to think less of another person. Historically, defamation law applies to everyone involved in publication – from journalists, to editors, publishers and even newsagents.

In the digital age, the boundaries of liability are very uncertain. Google has argued that it should not be treated as a “publisher” just because it indexes websites created by others. Google also argued that it should not be responsible for search results produced automatically by its search algorithms.

But the court here found that Google was liable for just linking to defamatory content. In this case, Google has no control over what people post on the Ripoff Report but it does help people find and access those comments.

Balancing law enforcement with freedom of speech

Australians deserve to be protected by the law; it is dangerous to enable US law to dictate our standards. This threat of American legal hegemony is what worried the High Court so much in the 2002 Dow Jones v Gutnick case.

At the same time, it is dangerous to require private companies to decide what content is lawful and what content must be removed.

The trade-offs here are extremely difficult. On the one hand, where search engines and other intermediaries are not held to account, people are exposed to real harm by the continued availability of abusive and defamatory content.

On the other hand, holding these private companies responsible, particularly if they are forced to pay damages, means that they will often either leave the country or limit their risks by removing speech that may not actually be unlawful.

A faster, more legitimate process

Internet intermediaries like Google, Facebook and others clearly have some role to play in preventing the distribution of harmful abuse and defamatory material on their networks. But the law must also be sensitive to the real dangers of holding these companies liable.

More than anything, this case shows that we need better, more legitimate mechanisms for addressing complaints about harmful material online.

Ultimately, it’s likely that we need some compromise here – new procedures that do not take six years and millions of dollars in court costs to protect people’s rights, but that are able to efficiently, transparently and legitimately investigate complaints.

Nicolas Suzor, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law, Queensland University of Technology This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Image credit: Robert Scoble, Creative Commons

6 COMMENTS

  1. When someone in Australia types google.com into their browser, it redirects to the local site, which is google.com.au. But her complaint seems to be partly about google.com, which only Americans would use. Does the Australian court have jurisdiction over defamation everywhere in the world?

  2. Australian defamation law with respect to websites is (like many areas of law attempting to grapple with technology) a pretty terrible mess. It is extremely difficult to operate a forum that discusses any product or manufacturer, or any sort of review site, from within Australia. For community sites this basically means you ban discussion of anyone, their businesses or their products, or you hope like hell no one ever decides to sue you, because just defending yourself in court could bankrupt you, let alone having a decision go against you. There are no protections for website owners and operators for the views expressed by users. Even comments on news sites. Your only sure defense is to proactively delete potentially libellous posts. Which is of course stupid, but that’s the legal system we have.

  3. Google is not the only search engine, do they also plan to hold Yahoo responsible who also links to the Ripoff Report?

    This is utterly ridiculous, search engines should not be held responsible for just for linking to a websites, no website should be held responsible for what is on another website just because they linked to it.

    • I don’t think the Judge or Dr Duffy have thought it through. They aren’t unusual. Censor’s apparently think banning a game that can be downloaded is a useful way to spend their time. People like Harvey Norman waste their breath demanding Australia post open every parcel crossing our borders and charge GST on them. Hell, here we even have a very tech savvy journalist saying:

      > Australians deserve to be protected by the law; it is dangerous to enable US law to dictate our standards.

      In this case that’s like saying it’s the deluge of America TV damages Australia cultural identity. Mind you, he’s right – there is no doubt TV has made us more American in some ways. Kids looks at me like I’m a crazy old man when I shudder at them saying “take out”, or Zeee instead of Zed, or SUV instead or 4WD. And yes, opening those huge unfettered information pipes to the rest of the world necessarily means some of our laws – particularly those regulating information flow (like deformation) are going to be dragged down to the lowest common international denominator. It’s either that or shut down the pipe.

      I sympathise with the hand wringing about it. T,here is a lot not to like about US society. But if you are a tech journalist who is supposed to be ahead of the curve when it comes to technology and its effects, it’s probably best done in private.

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