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Articles - Defamation
Coaches Report - Fall
2003, Volume 10, Number 2
Defamation.com
In July 2002,
an Ontario court issued one of the largest Canadian defamation
awards for Internet libel - $400,000. The court found that the
defendant had threatened to publish, and had in fact published,
a number of allegations and lies on at least seven web sites.
Such cases are becoming increasingly prevalent and have significant
implications for publishers of information on Web sites.
So what has
this to do with sport? Lots. The Internet is an important tool
of sport organizations and people working within sport. It has
become a primary mode of communication with members and is also
used by staff, committees and volunteers to do their essential
work. Many sport organizations post new information on their Web
sites on a daily basis. Coaches and athletes who are physically
separated do much of their essential communication by e-mail.
Many organizations also host chat rooms or bulletin boards to
give members and the public an opportunity to post comments or
opinions on all sorts of matters relevant to the sport. Very often
these comments are anonymous and go unedited. And herein lies
the problem.
While most
of the information on Internet web sites is factual and legitimate
commentary, a number of sport organizations have described situations
where people have posted some unsavoury comments on their sites
or on other sites set up to distribute information about a particular
sport world wide. Such comments have been made about particular
coaches and athletes, and about situations or issues going on
within an organization.
We have had
direct experience with this phenomenon. Once we were administering
a high-profile arbitration and we discovered that the arbitrator
was receiving unsolicited e-mails about one of the parties from
an unknown third person. Fortunately, the arbitrator was astute
enough not to open them. In another case we were running an appeal
of a selection dispute for a major Games, and a number of unidentified
persons were posting very nasty comments about the applicant and
his coach on a bulletin board hosted by a provincial sports organization.
Apart from being potentially defamatory, such 'cybergossip' can
(and in this case, did) worsen an already touchy situation. Such
comments are also extremely hurtful to those who are the subject
of them.
In the 2000
Fall and 2001 Winter issues of Coaches Report we wrote
a two-part piece on defamation in the sport setting, and various
defenses to it. We identified three elements that make a communication
defamatory:
. a written
or spoken communication must be made to a third person;
. the communication must convey a defamatory meaning or be capable
of being interpreted in a
defamatory
manner.
. the defamatory meaning must be about the person bringing the
allegation.
Distributing
material on the Internet is a publication. As noted by one Ontario
judge, "anybody who posts defamatory information on the Internet
is a broadcaster and can be sued as if they were a regular newspaper
or broadcast outlet".
Many view
the Internet as the last bastion of free speech, but it is clear
that some limits apply. The application of the law of defamation
is still evolving when it comes to electronic publication or transmission.
Nonetheless, the basic principles of defamation law apply, and
in fact they do so with lightning speed! Messages can travel infinitely
faster and further on the Internet than through traditional publication
channels. Five employees at a law firm in London , England found
out just how fast and how far when they were disciplined by their
employers after a colleague had sent them a sexually explicit
e-mail that they forwarded along to their friends. By the time
they were called in by their superiors, the materials had reached
20 million people around the world.
Both those
writing the material and those hosting the web site (usually,
the sport organization) need to be aware of their vulnerability
and accountability for material on the Internet. During the course
of a recent student election at Brock University (the educational
institution with which the Centre for Sport and Law is associated),
one candidate hosted a chat room on his website. Derogatory and
blatantly discriminatory comments about one of the other candidates
showed up. As the person with control over what was published
on his site, the student was held responsible for the publication.
As noted by one court in an Internet libel case, "Publishers are
not obliged to publish on the Internet. If the potential reach
is uncontrollable then the greater the need to exercise care in
publication".
It is further
sobering to note that those publishing materials on the Internet
could face legal liability anywhere in the world, not just in
the country where the material originated. A court in Australia
recently allowed an Australian businessman to bring a defamation
suit in Australia for an article published online in the United
States . The publisher, in this case a corporation, will have
to defend a case brought in Australia under Australian defamation
law.
The courts
have reinforced that defamation is all about damage to a person's
reputation and, inasmuch as a reputation can be damaged anywhere
the message is received, an action can be brought in any such
place. As well, there is much more widespread damage to reputation
when a mass audience receives the defamatory material. Electronic
mail makes it possible to communicate with hundreds of people
in an instant, and any one of those recipients can themselves
communicate with hundreds more people. Publication on a web site
can reach an audience of millions instantaneously.
Under Canadian
law, the breadth of a distribution of a defamatory publication
will influence the magnitude of an award. In other words, the
larger the audience, the larger the monetary damages that might
be imposed on the publisher.
Coaches and
athletes alike should be cautious about what they say about others
in e-mails or in a chat room. And sport organizations must be
diligent in monitoring what appears on their Web sites and should
not hesitate to remove disparaging material from a Web site over
which they have control.
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