Another Attempt At Using the Courts To Suppress an Online Review
gandhi_2 writes with this excerpt from the SF Chronicle:
"A San Francisco chiropractor has sued a local artist over negative reviews published on Yelp, the popular Web site that rates businesses. Christopher Norberg, 26, of San Francisco posted the first review in November 2007 after visiting Steven Biegel at the Advanced Chiropractic Center on Valencia Street. In the six-paragraph write-up, Norberg criticized Biegel's billing practices and said the chiropractor was being dishonest with insurance companies. ...The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a local nonprofit that supports free speech online, is considering helping with Norberg's defense. Matt Zimmerman, an attorney with the group, said Biegel will get far more negative publicity from filing the lawsuit than from a bad review on Yelp. He said the foundation is seeing more and more cases of people trying to use the courts because they're unhappy with postings on the Internet."
I'd trust a veterinarian to treat me before I'd trust one of those fraud artists.
Kevin Smith on Prince
This happens all the time.
I personally got a call about a blog post I wrote about a shady SEO company. For those of you who don't know much about search engine optimization, it is very easy to see if some website is horrible from that perspective. The said company's own website wasn't even properly indexed, the *very* basic things such as having proper titles on each page were missing, etc... Well, I posted a short, intended to be humorous entry about it in my blog.
A few days later I got a call from them. They told me to remove the entry, told me they had been talking to their lawyers (and I instantly recognized the company's name as it is rather large, international law firm), named a few labels for crimes, including but not limited to defamation... I tried to ask if they could cite what specific thing I said in my blog about their site was not correct but they avoided answering to that.
Well, to be honest I got a bit scared. Thankfully, I just then happened to be on the year's largest computer festival in my country and there was a stand from EFF one floor below me. I visited there, conversed a while, got somewhat less scared and added an edit to my blog that I have been contacted by said firm in this manner but didn't remove anything. Got some nice amounts of link juice from the blogosphere but the company never returned to the subject.
As unrelated note, I soon found out how the company had even found out about my (rather small reader base, even if largely read in the local SEO scene) blog. When I googled with the company's name, my blog entry was second result even though there had been no optimizing at all for it...
Chiropractors have had many detractors over the years and have a long history of using political manipulation and legal intimidation in response. They pursue a variety of goals including suppression of criticism of their questionable practices and mandating insurance coverage for chiropractic "care." They have generally been successful. That they try to suppress online criticism is a predictable continuation of longstanding behavior
If he has proof to back that up, fair enough but to accuse someone of illegal practices like that when you've no proof is libel. It doesn't matter if it's done on a community site or not.
If I was running a business and a disgruntled customer posted a lie about me ("all of his PCs are built in his basement by chained up mexicans!") I would want to have some legal recourse. These kinds of lies can destroy a business, especially those on a site people are likely to visit for information on a business.
From TFA, it sounds like he accused the chiropractor of insurance fraud. If he can prove it, no problem. If he can't, then the chiropractor was well within his rights to sue.
/. to headline this as an act of suppression.
Depending on the facts, it may be a bit premature for
Yep, this is defamation. Sucks to be him. The EFF won't get anywhere, you don't have a free speech right to defame a private party. This isn't a situation where a trademark is being used for commentary, or copyrighted material is being cited for criticism and commentary, etc. This guy criticized a private party, in writing (libel), about his professional life and insinuated he was involved in crimes of dishonesty.
I hope the verdict is big.
It's all in the phrasing. If the review said "Dr. X is billing insurance companies for procedures not performed." then it may be libel since it is being stated as a fact. If the review said "I don't think Dr. X is billing insurance companies correctly." then it is stated as an opinion and therefore less likely to be libel.
Just because the internet affords the illusion of privacy and anonymity doesn't mean that you're completely shielded from consequences to your actions. If you're posting accusations about someone and stating them as facts then you better step up and provide some proof.
A bad review isn't worth trying for the logs to see who posted it. There's no justification for trying to remove someone's opinion. But when they start making accusations of illegal activity then the line has been crossed.
When will companies realize that threatening lawsuits and such will only bring more attention to the very text they don't want people to see?
I wouldn't even have known about this if they hadn't threatened to sue, placing the article in the spotlight.
Jeez. Streisand effect anyone? Why do companies never learn?
Norberg [...] said the chiropractor was being dishonest with insurance companies.
I'm guessing that the part you quoted (which doesn't mention insurance companies *at all*) isn't the part where he claimed fraud.
So much for the open minded people here.
FWIW I've had my back, ankles and knees helped by a good chiropractor. (sports injurys) There are many different schools of chiropractic care.
Pick the right one.
You wouldn't go to a neurosurgeon for a broken arm would you?
"I drank what?" - Socrates
Unless Norberg can prove his charges, this is libel, and he should be sued.
I got a bit of kick out of a line in the article. While /. readers nationwide and internationally are more than familiar with the EFF, the article refers to it as a "local non-profit," since that is in fact where they are HQ'd.
You never expect irony, do you?
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@iyfwrestling
what's the relevance of the customer being an "artist"? in SF everybody is an artist anyway.
Can i say you ARE a fraud? Not without proof, but i have a right, due to my experience with your services, to tell people i FEEL you are a fraud and you did xyz to me.
Unless we lost our right to free speech that is.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Someone who has a history of this is Ed Trice, who for a long time successfully used harassment and lawsuit threats to stop people in the checkers and chess variant community from saying negative things about him or his business operations. Finally, one chess variant online community had enough of him and, while not saying anything negative about him publicly, pointed out they had no involvement with him or his chess variant (called "Gothic Chess").
Later on, he started editing the Wikipedia and annoying the regular editors there. When people discovered the patent to his chess variant expired for non-payment, he did the same kind of harassment on Wikipedia. However, this time people did not back down and he made a fool of himself.
Around the same time he upset someone named Ed Labate and lost a lawsuit as a result. He tried the same harassment tactics again to stop people talking about this court case, again without success.
There's another yelp situation that was on one of the local legal call in shows. Well reviewed bay area dentist treats patient. Patient fails to pay. Dentist attempts to collect. Patient posts bad review on yelp and threatens even worse reviews unless dentist stops collection activity.
Isn't it cheaper to provide a good service instead of keep fighting criticisms?
mauronr
The problem is that once such a review is posted on the Internet, it is pretty much eternal. There is no way to retract it and any further commentary is dependent on the original web site where it is posted. Which may or may not be picked up further on down the line by "aggregators" and "syndicators" of the content.
This pretty much means there is no limit to the damage that can be done. Suing doesn't really work, because even if you win, the review is still there for all to see. You might get it taken down from the original site but that doesn't remove it. You might win a million-dollar judgement against the poster, but it still doesn't change anything. Your business is ruined. Whether or not the posting is true or not.
The fact is, nobody cares if the posting is true. It is immaterial. It is also worth noting that negative comments outweigh positive ones in both quantity and impact. Usually most studies have found the ratio is something like 10:1 in favor of negative comments. The result is all you see are negative comments and all people pay attention to are negative comments.
Honesty and quality of the business have no importance in this at all. It could be the the cleanest most friendly restaurant in town and someone goes there with a bad attitude and writes a negative review somewhere. The truth of the matter is the 99% of the people that have a good experience just aren't motivated enough to write anything at all, anywhere. So all you see are negative reviews and quite possibly unfounded, untrue reviews. So what does the business owner do in a case like that? Simple - fold up and go somewhere else. Because in the world of unretractable, unqualified Internet reviews there is simply no way to win.
Of course, the good news is that most people really don't pay that much attention to these reviews. Not because they are unreliable but because it is too difficult to bring up Internet reviews when selecting a place to eat lunch or go shopping. This is changing with larger screen Internet capable cell phones. This is one area where these phones can really make a difference. Of course, when all you can find are unending negative reviews of restaurants in your area, where exactly are you supposed to have lunch?
We are open minded ... if someone could come up with non anecdotal evidence and show the use of clinical trials and other scientific methods in those schools of chiropractic care you are talking about we could simply accept it as plain medicine. Alternative medicine is quackery which sometimes gets things right by accident.
Abandoning the scientific method is abandoning progress ... chiropractic care will never progress, it will remain in the realm of quackery.
I was under constant pain for years. Doctors prescribed pills.
Two visits to a chiropractor for a whopping $80 total I was pain free. Completely. The problem was not alleviated, it was solved.
It seems like the Norberg's comments fall in a rather blurry area between libel and opinion. Rather than taking this to court, generating more bad publicity and awarding only the lawyers, why does the chiropractor simply publish a rebuttal to the review, explaining his side of the story? Yes, I know, one bad review is worth ten good ones etc. etc., but I personally prefer to make a decision based on reading many points of view. Just like you and the other slashdotters that have made it this far down the forum.
On the topic of chiropractic, here is an alternative treatment (the person who invented it, and those who administer it today are chiros, btw): SAM
I've taken this treatment and have proved it to myself. Tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of others have also. Still, I predict a thorough thrashing in this forum. By people who have not taken it. Who mainly will not even critique the treatment itself but rather myself, or some generalized person "like" me.
I come here for the love
From the summary you are say he's posting accusations to yelp about the relationship with the insurance company? That's not a review, that's slander.
Here's an earlier article about the case, by Elinor Mills at CNET.
Oddly my wife and I are in this same situation, and we didn't even make public postings on the internet -- we just filed a complaint with a certification board.
You're not going to win. You won't be able to prove any of this stuff happened. My wife and I have talked with MANY attorneys and every last one of them has pretty much said we're screwed. The fact that's it's true isn't enough.
Through some miracle, homeowner's insurance will usually cover your court costs if you are sued for defamation. Ours took our claim and will pay for everything. CALL THEM. If they take your claim, they will probably just settle and the whole problem will go away. Then, of course, yoru homeowner's premiums will shoot through the roof, but it's better than the alternative.
If you do not own a home or have some form of liability insurance, I hate to say it, but you really should be shaking in your boots at this point.
That probably makes you feel outraged -- where is the justice? The fact is, your insurance is protecting you not just from this guy, but from the unfair legal system IN GENERAL. Try to think of it this way. The legal system is set up to allow this guy to bend you over fairly easily because you made a simple mistake. That's wrong, but you ain't changing it. You're just a pebble on the beach. Take the way out.
You could take it to court. Even if you win, you'll probably spend $50k in the process. If you lose... Well, good luck getting insurance to cover it at that point. Your life will be over.
If you really suspect him of using illegal billing practices, file a HIPAA complaint. You are protected by federal law against any retaliation. The DoJ is extremely draconian in its HIPAA enforcement. Depending on what exactly this guy did, and what the DoJ can prove in court, he might actually go to prison.
You're only saying that because your spine needs to be aligned.
You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
Figures. The liberal whacko lawsuit capital of the USA. Hope that jackass chiropractor is ready to lose his business. They're nothing but frauds anyway. Dont like my opinion? SUE ME. fuck face.
Does this mean that the Chiropractor wants the reverse to be true also? If I give him a good review and his revenue goes up, I get a cut of his increased profits? If that's the case, I think newegg owes me a Brinks truck.
As a doctor (practicing General Practice in Australia), what I tell my patients is that chiropractors may help certain problems, usually chronic, related to the spine. However, there are a lot of dodgy chiropractors out there, and a lot who mislead patients as to what exactly they can help with.
That's what I tell patients. My private opinion isn't nearly so polite. There are too many parents out there not having their child adequately treated or not getting them immunised, based on their chiropractors advice.
"Stop trying to pretend that free speech means the right to say anything about anybody anytime and anywhere."
Here's the text to the first amendment (the whole thing):
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances
Hate to burst your bubble, but those limits you think are there simply aren't. Read it. I'll bet you've never even looked at this before.
You can't go online and lie about someone falsifying billing records any more than you can put a full-page ad in the newspaper about it. It's called libel, and that's what the guy is being sued for.
I'm not saying the guy is lying or that the suit is justified. I don't know. Neither does anyone else here. Answering that question is what trials are for. Whether he's a quack or not, the chiropractor has a right to clear his name of these accusations if they are not true.
Freedom of Speech doesn't allow you to run out into the street and scream that your pharmacist is a child molester, unless he is.
Sorry to break it to you, but a chiropractor is no near to be a doctor. We have enough fake doctors already (including MDs who actually have a crappy doctorate and dentists who also abuse the Dr title) to accept chiropractors to call themselves doctors as well. They are just glorified massagists.
Many chiropractors do X-rays too, so that's proabably a wash
Just once I'd like to see honestly presented before-and-after x-rays. 3D volumetric analyses would be even better.
I even read a book (_Inside Chiropractic_) hoping to gain some insight into what people think is really going on, but struck out there too.
If there are any chiropractors here who can explain things in real 'physics' terms (not circular chiropractic definitions) that would be fab.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
is this slowly turning into some king of fortress of free speech ?
beware he who denies you access to information for in his mind, he already deems himself to be your master (SMAC-ish)
Bloggers should be aware that some of the free-est speech (for better or worse) occurs not in their blog posts, but in the comments those posts generate... See, for example, Glenn Harlan Reynolds. "Libel in the Blogosphere: Some Preliminary Thoughts" [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=898013#] where he writes: "...the blog operator is immunized from liability by the Communications Decency Act. 47 U.S.C. Â230(c)(1) provides that âoeNo provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.â As a result, libelous matter contained in comments posted on blogs by their readers, or emailed to blog publishers and subsequently reprinted, cannot give rise to a libel action against the blogger â" though of course the original source enjoys no such immunity." [internal citations omitted, DR]