First Brit Prosecuted Over Twitter Libel
Tasha26 writes "A former town Mayor, Colin Elsbury, made legal history by being the first Brit to pay damages for libel on Twitter. His tweet on polling day said 'It's not in our nature to deride our opponents however Eddie Talbot had to be removed by the Police from a polling station' [and was held to amount] to pure election slur. The Twitter libel was settled at Cardiff High Court with total bill hitting £53,000 (£3,000 compensation + £50,000 legal fees). The fine works out at more than £2,400 per word. After Courtney Love's recent £260k settlement in a Twibel case, this case reaffirms that anything posted in the public domain is subject to libel laws."
Twibel? Seriously, you're coining a portmanteau out of one shared letter (i)? Fuck off.
For all that's wrong with Britain's libel system, this actually sounds like it'd pass muster in America as well, and a good thing for it, too.
The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
just wait until someone posts crap about you online that's patently ubtue then...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
3K actual compensation for the libel, 50K to the bottom feeding lawyers... And we think we have it bad here in America...
Well, that depends on who is doing the saying.
for instance, I am pretty sure not only from the wording, but the fact that you posted AC that the accusations you made are illustrative of what you see as a problem and not a direct accusation of the person names being any one or part of those things.
However, had you been claiming to be, and identified as such, Eddie Talbot's closest friend and ally, or perhaps someone with something to gain over making those statements, they could be much more believable as being real. This is part of the problem with libel. It's not just what was said, but the context of what was said and by whom. On election day, saying that someone was arrested at a polling booth implies more then just that. It implies there was a reason why and you should get out and vote against them.
What would be nice is if the truth would be an affirmative defense to libel. But people can craft statements that are technically accurate, but not representative of the truth. For instance, I could probably say you had sex with a 14 or 16 year old and it would be true. I'm assuming you might have had a sexual encounter in high school. But if you are 48 years old when I make that statement without reference to it happening when you were 14 or 16 too, the reality of the situation becomes all distorted and way more negative then the complete truth would imply.
Here's a fine attempt to make a reasonable prosecution sound unreasonable:
"The fine works out at more than £2,400 per word."
Yes, but those words were put together in such an order that the statement was libellous. So that's £53,000 for each instance of libel/defamation. So what's the problem? You can't slander people (particularly your political opponents) and hope to get off scot-free
You know, he's never denied being a pedophile, rapist murderer. I'll leave that up to the reader to consider.
And so I publicly state that you, Bitztream, are a child molester, the hour before your interview as a school teacher...........
You still feel the same way?
Hours before an election someone lies about an opponent hoping some won't vote for the opponent. That is clearly libel.
Pedophilia.
The problem comes when other people start believing the things an asshat is saying about you, which is trwtf. Apparently most people haven't understood yet that others can lie, no matter how many times a day they say they're Christians and go to church every Sunday.
My roommate lost his fiancee recently because one of his ex's mothers started gossiping that he was a child molester. The fiancee had to choose between being excommunicated from her family for being engaged to a "child molester" and staying in the relationship. Apparently shitting out kids makes you an authoritative and infallible source of information and wisdom in certain circles, and anyone who disagrees with a Mother or has different information be damned.
I know, it's stupid, but it's how people work. No, the fiancee's family didn't like my roommate to begin with, but calling him a child molester gave them the excuse they needed to escalate the drama to force the fiancee to either give up her boyfriend or give up her family.
It really was an amazing situation to watch. I lost of a lot of faith in humanity while I was on the sidelines of that one. For some reason, a drug-addicted single Mother who didn't have the capacity to save herself for marriage has more credibility at Church than a lack of evidence.
In fact, for some people, if they find out which roommate I'm talking about, even though it should be obvious from this post that the accusation was completely baseless, will begin to suspect him of being a child molester simply because I mentioned that someone had accused him of it.
Now, if he'd lost his job because of that gossip, of course he should have legal recourse. Fortunately this gossiping whore^H^H^H^Hbaby-mamma^H^H^H^H^H Mother didn't call up his boss, probably because she knew that she'd be in hot water if she did so and the boss believed her.
Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
hypothetical example - Eddie Talbot being accused of sleeping with a 14 year old?
What, is he a Prince or something?
The fine was £3,000. About £130/word.
The legal fees are nothing to do with the fine - Britain has a "loser pays" legal system so being ordered to pay legal fees isn't considered part of the fine.
On the plus side, this means there's a rather strong deterrent against frivolous lawsuits - "no win, no fee" (assuming your solicitor takes the case on that basis) only applies to your legal team, not the other sides. On the minus side, it means that a big company can add a paragraph to their legal threatograms saying "Please note that if you lose in court, you'll have to pay our fees. We're up to £1,500 already and we haven't even started yet."
I have a feeling that if he wanted to, he could sue for damage to reputation. Maybe it isn't worth it, but I tell you, if someone started spreading that story about me, they'd be getting a letter from my lawyer with helpful advice about either shutting up and retracting or getting a second mortgage in preparation for paying me damages.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
What ever happened to:
Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.
When did we all turn into a bunch of pussies who are unable to shrug off this sort of bullshit?
Speak a little louder into my fountain pen.
If words can be become a threat to authority or corporate profit, they must be tightly controlled. This is one of a myriad ways of doing so while providing an illusion of protecting the public.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
When did we all turn into a bunch of pussies who are unable to shrug off this sort of bullshit?
According to Wikipedia, 130AD. Or, possibly, the 17th century, when the law of libel was codified. Penalties for using words to damage someone's reputation are ancient, there's nothing new here.
Gabble??? Or did you possibly mean Joseph Goebbels?
Your and idi0t.
That's about the only consideration your retardation needs in this case. Lulz.
Canada: The US's more awesome sibling.
There's a phone call for you. It's Godwin calling you on line 1.
Whenever in an argument, remember this.
Yeah? How does that work? How does a word kill a person if it can't pick up a gun and pull the trigger? How does a word get up in the morning, take a shit and a shower, and put on its uniform? What size boot does a word wear?
Depending on which you prefer, you can try reading here or here. First one is relevant to a person mentioned by GP, but second is more geeky.
Wait, AC RTFA? I thought daylight saving was ahead an hour not nineteen days.
The US government have made it clear that we have no inalienable rights; any we do not defend vigorously will be taken.
"The pen is mightier than the sword" happened to it.
Call me what you like to my face. Accuse me of things in public and then you will hurt me, and I will expect it to be righted.
IANAL. But I believe if a court case happens and you lose you pay costs. Does this also happen in the USA? How much do your lawyers cost? About the same for a court case, more, less?
We actually have a system called Legal Aid which supports people on lower incomes, allows them reduced price / free legal support but the present government in all its wisdom is cutting this down to be virtually non existent. Allegedly. (covers me against being sued, right? :-) )
What this person said, with extra emphasis.
Also worth noting that the court doesn't seem to have ordered him to pay £3,000, he *offered* to pay it (i.e. the case was settled). It may well be that no judgment is made, but I will keep an eye out for one.
The amount of compensation awarded in a civil matter are generally decided according to how much damage was done to the person making the complaint. If he'd been accused of sleeping with a 14 year old, the amount of compensation would probably have been higher.
and then let's be generous and say 40 hours to get precedents
Why the hell should should a lawyer earn 10000 pounds just for *1 week* of simple research [90% of which is probably done by a secretary anyway]? That's a freakin' year's salary for some people!
On the minus side, it means that a big company can add a paragraph to their legal threatograms saying "Please note that if you lose in court, you'll have to pay our fees. We're up to £1,500 already and we haven't even started yet.
Can we sue them for extortion, then?
"The fine works out at more than £2,400 per word."
On the topic of meaningless algebra, if you express the length of a regulation football (American) field in cm it also works out to just under £5 per cm.
If he were in free fall at terminal velocity for 10 seconds, he'd be spending over £96 for every meter he fell. That's a lot of money!
Or we could stop expressing numbers idiotically and just say he was fined £3,000 and charged £50,000 in legal costs.
heh, the second one was cool :)
The person I responded to doesn't understand that real action is required to kill somebody. Words by themselves can do nothing. Somebody has to act. This point goes over everybody's head (including the moderators) every single time I try to bring this up. The man acquired nothing that wasn't given to him. He gained power through appeasement long before any military action was needed.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
mod parent up; AC is correct that the headline was wrong. maybe we're just used to that here.
:) You win for best response..
This fatty's for you my brother
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
"Eddie Talbot is a litigious bastard." That much at least we now know to be true.
Hasn't he read "Twitter grammar for dummies", chapter 2, "Watch your commas!" pp. 32-24 (2008)?
Assignment 1: Tick the correct answer and then post it on Twitter:
1. The Mayor said, Talbot is an ass.
2. The Mayor, said Talbot, is an ass.
The person I responded to doesn't understand that real action is required to kill somebody. Words by themselves can do nothing. Somebody has to act. This point goes over everybody's head (including the moderators) every single time I try to bring this up. The man acquired nothing that wasn't given to him. He gained power through appeasement long before any military action was needed.
But with killing, there's always a line that needs to be drawn. Even moment of death isn't clearly defined, and is being stretched by advances in medicine. Assuming a situation where a bullet fired by a gun immediately results in a death of a human it hits: Does a person kill when he pulls a trigger of gun? Does a person kill when he utters a word, which triggers a voice-activated gun (technically trivial to rig even a normal gun to do this). Does a person kill when he utters a word, which "triggers" a firing squad? Does a person kill when he utters a word, which "triggers" a firing squad execution sentence to be carried out? What about sentencing somebody to be killed by a firing squad, in a situation where sentence is very likely to get carried out?
Where you draw the line?
I hope you have some savings after making a post like that
Oh c'mon.. too simple. The guy pulling the trigger is the killer. There is nobody else.
Now, with voice activated machines. A voice can trigger a machine reliably. A machine can't choose to refuse. That's the key. So yeah, the voice is the trigger. But when you tell a person, it's another thing altogether. So let's make it easy. The last person in the chain is the guilty one..
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
this case reaffirms that anything posted in the public domain is subject to libel laws.
Did anyone really think that you got immunity from the law just because you were using the internet?
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
Yeah? How does that work? How does a word kill a person if it can't pick up a gun and pull the trigger? How does a word get up in the morning, take a shit and a shower, and put on its uniform? What size boot does a word wear?
mod parent -5 full retard
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
The person I responded to doesn't understand that real action is required to kill somebody. Words by themselves can do nothing. Somebody has to act. This point goes over everybody's head (including the moderators) every single time I try to bring this up.
No, it doesn't go over everybody's head. We do realise that words don't physically kill people in the same way that shooting them does. It's not us who are fucking retards
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
The article doesn't support the summary's claim of "£50,000 legal fees"
That's being generous - TFA doesn't mention the value of costs at all, there is no reason to believe that it would be anything like GBP50,000.
A quick Google shows that even rags like the Daily Mail use the weasel words "up to.." Legal fees of a couple of thousand would strictly speaking be "up to GBP 50,000."
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
It's not us who are fucking retards...
Your post indicates otherwise. As it would for anybody who attempts to conflate speech and action. Even if you're not retarded, you're being lazy, looking for the convenient way out.
You the listener, are alone responsible for your actions. Your refusal to accept that is why there can be no further progress.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
Ah yes, The old "devil made me do it" defense.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
Oh c'mon.. too simple. The guy pulling the trigger is the killer. There is nobody else.
Now, with voice activated machines. A voice can trigger a machine reliably. A machine can't choose to refuse. That's the key. So yeah, the voice is the trigger. But when you tell a person, it's another thing altogether. So let's make it easy. The last person in the chain is the guilty one..
Interesting point of view, I think I can understand it, but I disagree with it. Humans are partially a bit like machines, following orders, peer pressure etc. Giving order to shoot to a firing squad is as certain a decision to kill somebody, as giving the order to a voice-activated gun mechanism. It becomes apparent, if the one giving the order is blindfolded and doesn't know what will carry out the order. "I gave the order and he was shot to death by that order, but I don't know if it was human or robot pulling the trigger, so I may or may not be guilty of killing him" doesn't fly with me.
Yes, human are like machines, and they can be programmed like machines. The programming error here is in the response mechanism. So, it is possible to program humans to think before they act. Society is programming kludge into the system by misdiagnosing the symptoms as the cause. And of course, it's intentional in that control of speech and thought is a very important tool of the authorities that are being defended by everybody here, if in a back handed way.
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone