In a Chinese defamation case, the Beijing Internet Court has ruled in favor of the plaintiff and contrary to American tort norms regarding ISP immunity and posthumous defamation.
Sixth Tone reported on the suit "filed by the son of the late playwright, screenwriter, and composer Zhao Zhong" (赵忠). The suit alleged that an anonymous user of Baidu's Baike, China's answer to Wikipedia, edited Zhao's biographical page to defamatory effect. The edits by user "charming and beautiful woman" (Qiaonü Jiaren) criticized Zhao as a "thief" and cultural "traitor," and deleted the libretto of the opera Red Coral from his listed oeuvre. The changes remained on the page for five years, from 2013 to 2018, until Zhao's family noticed and demanded correction. Baidu reversed the edits. The son nevertheless complained of negligence in Baidu's failure reasonably to moderate content and consequent reputational injury to the family.
The court ruled against Baidu. Beijing tort lawyer Qu Zhenhong told Sixth Tone that Baidu's compliance with the defamation notice-and-takedown procedure of PRC Tort Law article 36 did not relieve the internet service provider of liability under article 6 for the defamation's five years in publication. That approach deviates from the powerful ISP immunity of 47 U.S.C. § 230 in the United States—which has faced slowly mounting criticism both at home and in Europe.
A second deviation from American tort norms arises in the allowance of a defamation action by the family after the death of the person defamed. Common law jurisdictions including the United States continue generally to observe the historic rule that defamation claims die with their claimants, though states are widely experimenting with the posthumous right of publicity by statute. Cf. The Savory Tort on Defaming the Dead.
The court made clear that it approves of a family's ancillary defamation claim, not just a decedent's claim that persists after death. "A negative social assessment of the deceased not only violates the reputation of the deceased, but also affects the overall reputation of the deceased's close relatives as well as personal reputation," People's Court News wrote in summary of the court's decision (Google translation). "Therefore, for any close relative of the deceased, they have the right to request the court to protect the right [of the] deceased, or to pursue the responsibility of infringing on their own reputation based on their close relatives."
By its publisher's description, Red Coral (Hong shan hu) "describes the story of the peoples who lived in the red coral
island and fought against the troops of Chiang Kaishek. They cooperated
with the Red Army and defeated the enemy with the guidance of the
people's Liberation Army." Red Coral was adapted to film in 1961 (DVD pictured).
Friday, August 23, 2019
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Savory Tort home page gets new savory tort(e)
For far too long, we, writer and reader alike, have labored under the over-exposed image of a cheesy tort long forgotten. No more.
The new cover for this blog comes from the culinary stylings of Dean Misty @PeltzSteele. I have firsthand, real-time knowledge of the deliciousness of this heirloom tomato tort.
The new cover for this blog comes from the culinary stylings of Dean Misty @PeltzSteele. I have firsthand, real-time knowledge of the deliciousness of this heirloom tomato tort.
Monday, August 19, 2019
'The Media Method': Pop culture-oriented teaching book hits shelves (discount code for 2019 buyers!)
The Media Method: Teaching Law With Popular Culture has hit the shelf at Carolina Academic Press. I contributed a chapter on pop-culture audiovisuals in 1L Torts to this rich volume conceived, compiled, and edited by pop-culture-in-law maven Christine A. Corcos, the Richard C. Cadwallader Associate Professor of Law at Louisiana State University. Authors discussed the project recently at the annual meeting of the Southeastern Association of Law Schools (SEALS). Here is the publisher's description:
The front-matter online includes the table of contents. Chapter 10 is my Torts Through the Looking-Glass. Here is the first paragraph (footnotes omitted).
Many law professors now teach courses by using examples from popular culture, but there is no comprehensive overview of ways to integrate non-law materials into the legal curriculum. In this text, more than two dozen law professors from the United States, Canada, and Australia demonstrate how to integrate fiction, poetry, comic books, film, television, music, and other media through the first year curriculum traditionally offered in U.S. law schools as well as a number of advanced courses in many subjects. The heavily illustrated book also includes best practices as well as pedagogical justifications for the use of such methods.
The front-matter online includes the table of contents. Chapter 10 is my Torts Through the Looking-Glass. Here is the first paragraph (footnotes omitted).
Students today view the world relative to its representations in digital media. This digital looking glass, or mirror, of reality incorporates fact and fiction and has itself come to define our popular culture. Accordingly, today’s students benefit from the examination and analysis of challenging subject matter in the real world relative to its digital imaginings. Instructors in torts can promote learning by bringing into the classroom popular cultural expressions extracted from the vast audiovisual libraries of the Internet. These demonstrative exhibits can be used to support problem analysis, to explore policy and theory, to bridge study and practice, and to raise issues in professionalism. This chapter demonstrates the range of multimedia material available in popular culture today with relevance to torts. My aim is to encourage instructors to build their own libraries of materials and to enhance student learning by holding up torts to the looking glass.Use code TEACH19 for 25% off in 2019!
Sunday, August 18, 2019
Advice for New Law Students, 2019 Edition
New law students, allow me to refer you to and to recommend my 3Ps for 1Ls (2018).
This morning my pastor preached on Proverbs 15:31-33. It occurs to me that the teaching, which deals with spiritual maturation, is especially appropriate and extrapolatable to the start of the school year, for us all, teachers and students, of any level, and, to be sure, of any faith. Here's the NIV:
31 Whoever heeds life-giving correction
will be at home among the wise.
This morning my pastor preached on Proverbs 15:31-33. It occurs to me that the teaching, which deals with spiritual maturation, is especially appropriate and extrapolatable to the start of the school year, for us all, teachers and students, of any level, and, to be sure, of any faith. Here's the NIV:
31 Whoever heeds life-giving correction
will be at home among the wise.
32 Those who disregard discipline despise themselves,
but the one who heeds correction gains understanding.
but the one who heeds correction gains understanding.
33 Wisdom’s instruction is to fear the Lord,
and humility comes before honor.
and humility comes before honor.
Pastor Kim pointed out that there's a difference between a "wise guy" and a wise person, and the latter takes work. (Aug. 18.) Verse 32 is especially intriguing: "[O]ne who heeds correction gains understanding."
The words for "discipline" and "correction" in verse 32 vary with translations. But I think it's fair to say (not being a scholar of these things) that the Hebrew words put a little more rebuke and reproof into the former and a little more instruction and rectification into the latter.
As is often the case with Proverbs, this is good advice that goes beyond faith and has application in commonsense life. In our academic pursuits, we should always be open to correction. Pastor Kim laid out correction, even rebuke, as sine qua non of learning and growing.
Pastor Kim also pointed to the word "humility" in verse 33. The antithesis of pride, humility renders us susceptible of correction, and therefore ready to grow in knowledge, intellect, and wisdom.
Happy new academic year! Be humble and get wise.
Mass. Superior Court dismisses nuisance claim over airport skydiving concession on Cape Cod
Chatham Municipal Airport approach (CC BY 2.0 woodleywonderworks) |
Chatham Municipal Airport on Cape Cod |
Saturday, August 17, 2019
Abraham & White would limit further extension
of First Amendment as tort defense
In a new article, Kenneth S. Abraham and G. Edward White, University of Virginia Law, argue against the further extension of the First Amendment ("imperialism") to constitutionalize tort law when torts are accomplished through speech. Specifically, they study the First Amendment in defamation, privacy, and IIED before contemplating the First Amendment problems that lurk in fraud, product disparagement, product warning defect, and interference. The interference problem has interested me since The Insider. En route to their conclusion, the authors critically examine the truth-falsity dichotomy. Here is the abstract for First Amendment Imperialism and the Constitutionalization of Tort Liability.
To what extent does the First Amendment impose limits on the permissible scope of tort liability? Until recently, the clear answer would have been, “only under very limited circumstances.” During the last few decades, however, the First Amendment has been so greatly expanding its empire that giving this answer is no longer possible. “All bets are off” would be a more accurate answer, because the forms of speech to which the Supreme Court has extended First Amendment protection have become impressively broad. Although existing First Amendment restrictions on the permissible scope of tort liability currently are limited, the very existence of those restrictions confirms that many torts involving speech potentially are subject to First Amendment protection. And many torts do involve speech – the duty to warn about the dangers of prescription drugs, fraud, and even some forms of simple negligence are just a few examples.Hat tip @ TortsProf.
If the First Amendment of the future limited all or even many of these different constitutionally unprotected forms of tort liability, then its scope would be pervasive. We contend, however, that neither existing First Amendment doctrine nor sensible constitutional policy supports extending free speech protection to torts that are accomplished through speech, except in extremely narrow circumstances. Extending First Amendment protection to such torts would aggravate what we argue are two of the principal risks posed by First Amendment imperialism: the erosion of the cultural distinction between truth and falsity, and devaluation of the status of speech about matters of public concern. Our contention is that most of the forms of speech involved in torts that are accomplished through speech currently are, and should remain, excluded from First Amendment protection. To support this contention, we examine the First Amendment’s extension to previously unprotected forms of speech over the last three-quarters of a century, compare the new First Amendment protections to the doctrinal elements of a series of torts that always or often are accomplished through speech, and argue that it would make little sense, as a matter of tort or constitutional law, to restrict liability for those torts on First Amendment grounds.
Friday, August 16, 2019
LatAm NGOs propose model of internet platform self‑regulation consistent with human rights
NGOs working on the project, from the report. |
This document offers recommendations on specific principles, standards and measures designed to establish forms of public co-regulation and public regulation that limit the power of major Internet platforms (such as social networks and search engines).
The purpose of this effort is to protect users' freedom of expression and guarantee a free and open Internet. Such intermediaries increasingly intervene in online content, through the adoption of terms of service and the application of business moderation policies. Such forms of private regulation affect public spaces which are vital for democratic deliberation and the exercise of fundamental rights.
The proposal seeks to align with international human rights standards and takes into account existing asymmetries related to large internet platforms without limiting innovation, competition or start-up development by small businesses or community, educational or nonprofit initiatives.The proposal seeks to create a self-regulatory framework that will avert public regulation of the internet. Needless to say, that will involve the voluntary collaboration of the major players, Facebook, Google, Twitter, et al. From what I saw of their recent participation in RightsCon in Tunisia, they are game.
I'm all for seeing where the self-regulatory approach takes us, but I worry about two problems. First, I'm not sure how long the big players will be willing to spend money on social responsibility while unscrupulous competitors bypass self-regulation and continue to reach audience across the technologically egalitarian internet. Second, as Facebook talks about setting up its own judicial system, I worry about whether we're creating corporate nation-states that will censor anti-majoritarian expression, e.g., perceived "hate speech," with the blessing of NGOs that purport to uphold human rights. But one step at a time....
Here via Observacom are links to the report in español, português, and English.
Wednesday, August 14, 2019
My Summer Book Report
- Yuval Noah Harari, Homo Deus. Yes, I drank the Harari Kool-Aid. I am a true believer. Frightfully enjoyable stuff. Sapiens is on my desk now.
- Ian McEwan, Machines Like Me. Poor Ian McEwan (Atonement) has taken it on the chin from scifi fans for daring to dabble in the genre in this thought-provoking book that I quite adore. Sure, the basic question of "Data"'s humanity (cf. ST:TNG) is trodden territory, but give a guy some credit for doing his homework and bringing his signature writing flair to the table in this page turner. It's a far better book than Solar. We don't talk about that.
- David Sedaris, Calypso. Unfathomable how his books go from best to even better. You must have David read you his audiobooks.
- Bryan Stevenson, Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption. Essential reading for the legally inclined. Can’t wait for the movie. Three words: Michael. B. Jordan!
- Luis Alberto Urrea, The House of Broken Angels. For my fellow book group member who’s a LatAm aficionado, I am willing to revisit the trippy genre of my undergrad lit major once per year. It’s always a, um, magic carpet ride, if you will.
And here is the most interesting stuff I read this summer,
professional edition. These are the categories!
·
Torts
Kenneth S. Abraham
& Leslie Kendrick, There’s No Such
Thing as Affirmative Duty, Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Research
Paper No. 2018-59 (on SSRN). OK, so maybe I didn’t actually read this
65-page paper. Instead I read about it, and who could do otherwise?,
when Anthony Sebok
at Cardozo Law wrote such a great review for
JOTWELL. Abraham and Kendrick call
for abandoning the Restatements’ wearisome
struggle to chart the contours of affirmative duty. Instead they would take what I would describe
as a more European approach, looking at duty, affirmative or otherwise, as a
function of risk creation. I do think
this approach has a bead on the doctrinally drifting direction of duty from the
Second to Third Restatements, so maybe this is the future. Sebok aptly observes that this kind of
thinking jives with Stephen Sugarman’s proposed merger of intent and negligence. Fortunately I’m less than 20 years from
retirement, because I fear that by that time, torts will just be a squishy blob
of relativistic uncertainty not unlike the inside of an atom. Teaching that will be for younger minds.
Enrico Bonadio &
Nicola Lucchi, Copyright and Pornography, in
Non-Conventional Copyright: Do New and Non-Traditional Works Deserve
Protection? 418 (Enrico Bonadio & Nicola Lucchi eds. 2018) (SSRN). Copyright.
Pornography. You do the
math. Seriously, worth a read, and
informative multinational perspective.
Adam Candeub, Nakedness and Publicity, ___ Iowa L.
Rev. ___ (forthcoming 2019) (SSRN). Adam Candeub at Michigan State Law explores
the right of publicity as a revenge-porn remedy. And why not?
Tort and IP’s disfigured offspring does so much else….
Megan Deitz, Note, A Crime
Remembered: The Possible Impact of the “Right to be Forgotten” in the United
States for Crime Victims, Criminal Defendants, and the Convicted, 9 Ala. C.R. &
C.L. L. Rev. 197 (2018). Kudos,
Megan Deitz, J.D. U. Ala. ’18. This is
what I was talking
about. Ban the box is great, but it’s not
going to get us there. And to think that
I found this article through an AEJMC
newsletter… heresy!
Anthony L. Fargo, Protecting Journalists’ Sources Without a
Shield: Four Proposals, 24 Comm. L. & Pol’y 145 (2019) (abstract
at T&F). Tony Fargo
at Indiana University-Bloomington has pursued a range of interests in his
career—he’s the founding director of the Center for International Media Law and
Policy Studies—but all the while remained the
national authority on reporter’s privilege.
With a federal shield law a long time not coming, this articles explores
alternatives in (1) whistleblower protection, (2) government transparency
to disincentivize leaking, (3) legal protection for anonymous sources, and
(4) encryption tech.
Giovanni De Gregorio,
Secret Filming and the Right to Inform
Under an European Constitutional Perspective: The Case of Alpha Doryforiki
v. Greece, 2:2 Rivista di Diritto dei Media 410 (2018) (SSRN). I’m a fan of European privacy law, but even
the most committed fan has to admit that it has generated some absurd
results. Count among them the notion
that investigative journalists secretly recording corruption run the risk of
violating politicians’ privacy rights.
Giovanni De Gregorio reviews the latest case law.
For heaven’s sake, no one tell the bureaucrats in Texas (see Texas v. Doyle, infra).
Thomas Healy, Anxiety and Influence: Learned Hand and the
Making of a Free Speech Dissent, 50 Ariz. St. L.J. 803 (2018) (SSRN).
The relationship between Judges Hand and Holmes, and especially Hand’s
slow-cooking influence on modern First Amendment jurisprudence as a result, has
been the intriguing study of many writings before, Healy’s included. Nevertheless, in this compelling essay, Thomas Healy at
Seton Hall Law here revisits the subject for a close look, laying out the
timeline and examining exactly what Holmes’s evolving position took and did not
take from Hand’s earnest offerings.
Matteo Monti, Automated Journalism and Freedom of
Information: Ethical and Juridical Problems Related to AI in the Press Field,
1:1 Opinio Juris in Comparatione: Studies in Comparative and National Law
(2018) (SSRN). I am not a fan of the trend that puts “and AI”
after everything, and voila!, new
article, new theory, new field of law, new main dish. All the same, this article on AI implications
for journalism, with an especial eye to the problem of tort liability, is a neat,
thoughtful, and very readable roundup from an unexpected source. Don’t be confused by the title: in American
parlance, this is more about free speech, or free flow of information, not FOI in
the access sense. Matteo Monti is a
Ph.D. candidate at the Institute of Law, Politics, and Development of the
Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, a public university in Pisa.
Let's burn some books, Dark Ages style! And maybe a philosopher, too. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, c.1515–27, Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1917.) |
Texas v. Doyle, No.
PD-0254-18 (Tex. Ct. Crim. App. Feb. 27, 2019) (via
Texas Tribune). I’m just going to say it, because we’re all
thinking it, and something needs to be done: there’s something wrong with the water
in Texas. This case is the latest in
what’s going on a decades-long saga of First Amendment challenges to the Texas
Open Meetings Act (OMA). You read that
right: public officials are claiming that the open meetings act violates their
First Amendment rights. It would be
funny, except they won.
Admittedly and rightly, the First Amendment calls for
heightened scrutiny of criminal laws (and tort law) when violation is
accomplished only by First Amendment-protected activity, such as speech. Texas officials have long and fruitfully argued
that the criminal-enforcement provisions of the OMA deprive them of their First
Amendment right to communicate with one another. Specifically, they contest the vagueness of
applying the OMA to “meetings”—such as serial, or “daisy chain,” communications—alleged
to subvert the OMA.
First Amendment problems in criminal law are often overcome
by mere scienter; ask Michelle Carter’s counsel about that. But it’s famously difficult to prove intent
to subvert a freedom of information act, so transparency advocates have fought
for enforcement mechanisms that operate shy of criminal intent. I honestly don’t know whether this problem in
Texas resulted from overzealous enforcement or opportunistic politicians in
smoke-filled rooms, but the nonsense has got to stop. I’ve seen OMA violations in other states, and
I’ve seen innocent non-compliance, and I’ve never been confused about the
difference between the two.
Lawrence J. Trautman,
The Value of Legal Writing, Law Review, and
Publication, 51 Ind. L. Rev. 693 (2018) (SSRN). A business law professor at Western Carolina
University, Lawrence Trautman capably offers
this hefty opus, the latest entry in the legal-scholarship-matters genre. The addition is welcome, as if more evidence
should be needed to refute the snarky, anti-intellectual, and ultimately
counter-factual rhetoric about the uselessness of legal scholarship (much less
legal writing). (See my own
missive of some years ago for background, hat tip at UMass
Law Review and Steve
Zoni.) In his abstract, Trautman “hope[s]
this Article may become a required reading as one of the first assignments for
all incoming first-year law students, or even before any classes begin.” I’m down with that, but we might need an
abbreviated version.
Charles Duhigg, The Real Roots of American Rage, The
Atlantic, Jan./Feb. 2019. It
goes without saying that everything in The
Atlantic, my favorite magazine, is worth reading. But my wife thought to point out this article
to me. I’m trying not to read too much
into that. Pulitzer-Prize winner Charles Duhigg takes a deep dive into
outrage in our present social and political environment—newly salient upon the
Dayton and El Paso shootings. Building
out from some groundwork in psychology by UMass Amherst’s James Averill, Duhigg
establishes that ignoring our social anger or suppressing it is maybe the worst
thing we could do. He explores research that
shows instead a possible way forward.
Jon Acuff, Do Over: Make Today the First Day of Your
New Career (2015). Just a couple
years ago, I discovered Jon Acuff. Yeah, I know, I got there late. Anyway, I read the free preview, chapter 1, of
his 2015 book, Do Over. You
can too. I’m not going to read the
rest, because I more or less like my job (underpaid), and I’m not really the
self-help-reading sort. Nevertheless, I
liked this, as I seem to like just about everything Jon Acuff writes and says. He makes me smile.
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
Student prevails in part in UMass Amherst due process disciplinary case in First Circuit
Last week the First Circuit held in favor of a student accused of a violent assault; however, the court largely upheld as constitutional the due process provided to the student in campus adjudication.
The case adds to federal appellate precedent on the requirements of procedural due process on campus. The First Circuit's conclusions on these facts are not new water marks. At the same time, observers predict that the multitude of circuit disagreements in this area will lead inevitably to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling.
In the instant case, a male student was accused of a violent assault on a female student, his romantic partner, while studying abroad in Spain under the purview of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. The First Circuit ruled that the university failed to provide adequate notice and hearing prior to imposing a five-month suspension on the student, after the allegations but well before the adjudication. Authored by Rhode-Island-born U.S. Circuit Judge William J. Kayatta Jr., the court's holding came from a unanimous three-judge panel that included retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter.
The court affirmed judgment for the university as to the adequacy of the campus adjudication and consequent expulsion of the accused. The student had challenged the adjudication for the exclusion of some evidence and the lack of opportunity to confront his accuser. Constitutional rights in the context of the campus administrative process were not offended by those omissions, the court held, applying the flexible procedural due process test of Mathews v. Eldridge (U.S. 1976). It's the latter point, confrontation, that especially vexes critics and marks arguable disagreement with other circuit courts.
The case arises against the backdrop of a heated national debate over higher education reform. To my consternation, Title IX has become an area in which serious cases of sexual harassment and physical assault are lumped together on the nations' campuses with gross abuses of the rights of students and faculty. Legitimate disciplinary processes have been perverted, and therefore caused to undermine civil rights law, by overzealous bureaucrats seeking to enforce politically correct group-think on students and to undermine academic freedom and faculty governance. Purely in my personal capacity, I filed my own observations with the Department of Education in March.
The instant case is Haidak v. University of Massachusetts-Amherst, No. 18-1248 (1st Cir. Aug. 6, 2019).
The case adds to federal appellate precedent on the requirements of procedural due process on campus. The First Circuit's conclusions on these facts are not new water marks. At the same time, observers predict that the multitude of circuit disagreements in this area will lead inevitably to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling.
In the instant case, a male student was accused of a violent assault on a female student, his romantic partner, while studying abroad in Spain under the purview of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. The First Circuit ruled that the university failed to provide adequate notice and hearing prior to imposing a five-month suspension on the student, after the allegations but well before the adjudication. Authored by Rhode-Island-born U.S. Circuit Judge William J. Kayatta Jr., the court's holding came from a unanimous three-judge panel that included retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter.
The court affirmed judgment for the university as to the adequacy of the campus adjudication and consequent expulsion of the accused. The student had challenged the adjudication for the exclusion of some evidence and the lack of opportunity to confront his accuser. Constitutional rights in the context of the campus administrative process were not offended by those omissions, the court held, applying the flexible procedural due process test of Mathews v. Eldridge (U.S. 1976). It's the latter point, confrontation, that especially vexes critics and marks arguable disagreement with other circuit courts.
The case arises against the backdrop of a heated national debate over higher education reform. To my consternation, Title IX has become an area in which serious cases of sexual harassment and physical assault are lumped together on the nations' campuses with gross abuses of the rights of students and faculty. Legitimate disciplinary processes have been perverted, and therefore caused to undermine civil rights law, by overzealous bureaucrats seeking to enforce politically correct group-think on students and to undermine academic freedom and faculty governance. Purely in my personal capacity, I filed my own observations with the Department of Education in March.
The instant case is Haidak v. University of Massachusetts-Amherst, No. 18-1248 (1st Cir. Aug. 6, 2019).
Monday, August 12, 2019
Profs talk pop culture at law school conference
At the annual meeting of the Southeastern Association of Law Schools in the last week of July, colleagues and I had the opportunity to share ideas about teaching law with popular culture. I learned a great deal at that session (and others). I was able to share about my own use of audiovisual content as it's changed over the years. I'll say more as we near publication of our book project, The Media Method. Meanwhile, this teaser ....
Carolina Academic Press mocked up a display copy of the forthcoming Media Method. |
Contributors to The Media Method include Professor DeLeith Duke Gossett at Texas Tech School of Law. Presenting at center here, DeLeith is a former student of mine. Teachers will understand the giddy pride induced by collaborating with such a colleague. |
Save 25% if you order The Media Method in 2019!
Use the Code TEACH19 when ordering online at caplaw.com.
Use the Code TEACH19 when ordering online at caplaw.com.
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