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posted by janrinok on Wednesday June 17 2015, @03:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the you-can-do-anything,-but-you-can't-do-that dept.

Ars Technica reports that the European Court of Humans Rights has ruled Estonian news site Delfi is liable for hate speech posted in comments by users:

As the digital rights organisation Access notes, this goes against the European Union's e-commerce directive, which "guarantees liability protection for intermediaries that implement notice-and-takedown mechanisms on third-party comments." As such, Peter Micek, Senior Policy Counsel at Access, says the ECHR judgment has "dramatically shifted the internet away from the free expression and privacy protections that created the internet as we know it."

A post from the Media Legal Defence Initiative summarises the reasons why the court came to this unexpected decision. The ECHR cited "the 'extreme' nature of the comments which the court considered to amount to hate speech, the fact that they were published on a professionally-run and commercial news website," as well as the "insufficient measures taken by Delfi to weed out the comments in question and the low likelihood of a prosecution of the users who posted the comments," and the moderate sanction imposed on Delfi.

In the wake of this judgment, the legal situation is complicated. In an email to Ars, T J McIntyre, who is a lecturer in law and Chairman of Digital Rights Ireland, the lead organisation that won an important victory against EU data retention in the Court of Justice of the European Union last year, explained where things now stand. "Today's decision doesn't have any direct legal effect. It simply finds that Estonia's laws on site liability aren't incompatible with the ECHR. It doesn't directly require any change in national or EU law. Indirectly, however, it may be influential in further development of the law in a way which undermines freedom of expression. As a decision of the Grand Chamber of the ECHR it will be given weight by other courts and by legislative bodies."

[...]

As Access's Micek told Ars: "The website argued that its 'freedom to impart information created and published by third parties'—the commenters—was at stake. Delfi invoked its Article 10 rights to freedom of expression under the European Convention on Human Rights and the [ECHR] accepted the case."

Wiggin gives details that the claimant was a shipping company, an article concerning the operations of which attracted a large number of venomous comments. Despite the EUR30,000 claim for damages, the ECHR awarded non-pecuniary damages of EUR320.

Editor's Note: The ruling is not saying that all websites are accountable for all comments. In this case, the news site published an article which was intended to stir up public sentiment, and subsequently took no action when the user comments became so extreme as to fall under the 'Hate Speech' law. The publication of hate speech is an offence in Europe. Secondly, this occurred in Europe - claims that this has contravened the rights of people based upon the laws of other countries elsewhere are irrelevant. The Court accepted the news site's 'rights of freedom of expression' as covered by Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights.]


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  • (Score: 2, Disagree) by ikanreed on Wednesday June 17 2015, @05:33PM

    by ikanreed (3164) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday June 17 2015, @05:33PM (#197387) Journal

    And that's why you're an insane conspiracy theorist. And the rest of us live our lives without paranoid delusions.

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  • (Score: 2) by Hairyfeet on Thursday June 18 2015, @02:39PM

    by Hairyfeet (75) <bassbeast1968NO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday June 18 2015, @02:39PM (#197819) Journal

    What is insane about "you can't fix bigotry with bigotry"? Because that is EXACTLY what those "hate speech" and "affirmative action" laws try to do, they try to fix past wrongs by continuing those wrongs and merely changing who is the one who loses and gains from said wrong. this is why classical 70s socialist liberals like myself can't fricking stand SJWs, we fought for the rights of ALL PEOPLE to be judged strictly by the content of their character whereas laws like these ultimately come down to "an eye for an eye" making the whole world blind.

    At the end of the day you can't fix bigotry with more bigotry, because all you do is breed class hatred. We have seen this time after time after time, which is why we 70s socialists pushed for everyone to be treated as equals WITHOUT trying to assign past blame like some Oppression Olympics [kym-cdn.com] because it never ends...how far does one go back? 150 years? 300? 1000? Only by treating everyone as equals NOW and forgetting ancient wrongs can one truly move forward, otherwise it ends up becoming nothing but continuing the hatred, just changing the target.

    --
    ACs are never seen so don't bother. Always ready to show SJWs for the racists they are.