catalina_francisco
Happily insatiable always
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2002
- Posts
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Looks like the times are changing and people will now be held accountable for using the internet to create libel against another. This case is being seen as setting the benchmark for further cases of a similar nature.
" Payout for false Facebook profile
A businessman whose personal details were "laid bare" in fake entries on the Facebook social networking website has won a libel case at the High Court.
Mathew Firsht was awarded £22,000 in damages against an old school friend, Grant Raphael, who created the profile.
The judge ruled that Mr Raphael's defence - that the entry was created by mischievous party gate-crashers at his flat - was "built on lies".
The profiles were on Facebook for 16 days until they were taken down.
Mr Firsht accused Mr Raphael of creating a false personal profile, and a company profile called "Has Mathew Firsht lied to you?".
Mr Raphael said that "strangers" who attended an impromptu party at his house in Hampstead in north London sneaked off to a spare bedroom and created the profiles on his PC.
He did not strike me as being the kind of man to waste valuable time on ancient disputes
Deputy Judge Richard Parkes QC
Deputy Judge Richard Parkes QC described his claim as "utterly far-fetched".
The judge heard that the private information concerned Mr Firsht's whereabouts, activities, birthday and relationship status. It falsely indicated his sexual orientation and political views.
Mr Firsht said it included allegations that he owed substantial sums of money which he had repeatedly avoided paying by lying, and that he and his company were not to be trusted.
He was awarded £15,000 for libel and £2,000 for breach of privacy.
The two former friends went to school together in Brighton but fell out about six years ago over a business dispute.
Mr Firsht accused Mr Raphael of bearing a grudge against him and of creating the false Facebook entry with the aim of causing him anxiety and embarrassment.
The judge said Mr Firsht was "plainly a businessman of single-minded drive and dedication".
The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences
Jo Sanders
Media lawyer
But Mr Raphael's company had gone into voluntary liquidation and, by the time the present dispute arose, "Mr Firsht was prospering and highly successful, and Mr Raphael was not".
The judge said Mr Firsht would have accepted an apology if Mr Raphael had offered one at an early stage, thus avoiding the distress and expense of litigation.
Media lawyer, Jo Sanders, of Harbottle & Lewis, said the ruling would change perceptions about social networking sites.
"The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences," she said.
"Sat at home or school or in the office, it's easy to think of social networking sites as harmless fun, that it's like chatting with friends, and that things posted there are either a joke or just a mischievous way of causing embarrassment. This ruling puts an end to that."
"The golden rule should be to only put up information or images you are happy for everyone to see and are happy to put your name to," she added."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/7523128.stm
Published: 2008/07/24 16:32:56 GMT
Catalina
" Payout for false Facebook profile
A businessman whose personal details were "laid bare" in fake entries on the Facebook social networking website has won a libel case at the High Court.
Mathew Firsht was awarded £22,000 in damages against an old school friend, Grant Raphael, who created the profile.
The judge ruled that Mr Raphael's defence - that the entry was created by mischievous party gate-crashers at his flat - was "built on lies".
The profiles were on Facebook for 16 days until they were taken down.
Mr Firsht accused Mr Raphael of creating a false personal profile, and a company profile called "Has Mathew Firsht lied to you?".
Mr Raphael said that "strangers" who attended an impromptu party at his house in Hampstead in north London sneaked off to a spare bedroom and created the profiles on his PC.
He did not strike me as being the kind of man to waste valuable time on ancient disputes
Deputy Judge Richard Parkes QC
Deputy Judge Richard Parkes QC described his claim as "utterly far-fetched".
The judge heard that the private information concerned Mr Firsht's whereabouts, activities, birthday and relationship status. It falsely indicated his sexual orientation and political views.
Mr Firsht said it included allegations that he owed substantial sums of money which he had repeatedly avoided paying by lying, and that he and his company were not to be trusted.
He was awarded £15,000 for libel and £2,000 for breach of privacy.
The two former friends went to school together in Brighton but fell out about six years ago over a business dispute.
Mr Firsht accused Mr Raphael of bearing a grudge against him and of creating the false Facebook entry with the aim of causing him anxiety and embarrassment.
The judge said Mr Firsht was "plainly a businessman of single-minded drive and dedication".
The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences
Jo Sanders
Media lawyer
But Mr Raphael's company had gone into voluntary liquidation and, by the time the present dispute arose, "Mr Firsht was prospering and highly successful, and Mr Raphael was not".
The judge said Mr Firsht would have accepted an apology if Mr Raphael had offered one at an early stage, thus avoiding the distress and expense of litigation.
Media lawyer, Jo Sanders, of Harbottle & Lewis, said the ruling would change perceptions about social networking sites.
"The significance of this case is that it shows that what you post is not harmless, but has consequences," she said.
"Sat at home or school or in the office, it's easy to think of social networking sites as harmless fun, that it's like chatting with friends, and that things posted there are either a joke or just a mischievous way of causing embarrassment. This ruling puts an end to that."
"The golden rule should be to only put up information or images you are happy for everyone to see and are happy to put your name to," she added."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/7523128.stm
Published: 2008/07/24 16:32:56 GMT
Catalina
