http://www.commondreams.org/news2001/1011-04.htm
Common Dreams, NewsCenter - 11 October 2001 - Public Citizen
Court Should Not Allow Anonymous Posters of Internet :
Messages to be Identified, Public Citizen and American Civil Liberties
Union Say :
WASHINGTON - October 11 - When considering whether to allow Emerson,
N.J. town officials to learn the identities of their anonymous Internet
critics, a judge should determine whether the officials have made a
sufficient argument to warrant such a privacy invasion -- regardless of
whether the critics have retained attorneys, Public Citizen and the
American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ) told a court
today.
Also, the person who created the Web site that spawned the lawsuit
should not be liable for comments posted on it, the organizations said.
In an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief filed Thursday
http://www.citizen.org/litigation/briefs/IntFreeSpch/articles.cfm?ID=6271
in the Superior Court of Bergen County, the two organizations argued
that the First Amendment protects those who filed the comments on a site
called "Eye on Emerson," regardless of whether they have found lawyers
to protect their rights in court. Two council members, a council
candidate and a council member’s husband sued 60 John and Jane Does as
well as the site’s creator, claiming defamation. They also are seeking
information from Internet service provider VantageNet that would
identify those who posted the messages.
"This suit is a clear attempt to intimidate the townspeople so they stop
making comments about their officials," said Paul Alan Levy, an attorney
for Public Citizen, which is involved in the case because it has a
history of defending First Amendment rights. "Not only is it
preposterous, but it violates the First Amendment. Further, the judge
should realize that the First Amendment protects the anonymity of these
critics, regardless of whether they have an attorney. "
Courts have clearly established that the First Amendment protects the
right to speak anonymously, and they have upheld that right when it
applies to the Internet, the organizations wrote in the brief. Those
seeking to identify anonymous sources bear a very heavy legal burden.
In this case, the judge should be mindful that those seeking to identify
their critics are public officials who have the power to reject zoning
requests, withhold city services and even to use police power, the
organizations wrote. Identifying the critics would have a chilling
effect on the willingness of townspeople to speak out in the future.
Further, anonymous message posters who have not been able to hire a
lawyer to argue their cases in court still are entitled to the same
First Amendment protection, the groups said. For those message posters,
the judge has an independent duty to review the plaintiffs’ evidence to
be sure there is enough to warrant enforcement of the subpoena to obtain
identifying information.
Case law also indicates that the creator of the Web site, Stephen
Moldow, is immune from liability for messages posted on his site. The
Communications Decency Act says that no provider of an interactive
computer service shall be treated as a publisher or speaker of any of
the information provided by someone using the site. Congress passed the
law because it was worried that companies running Internet sites in
which millions of messages are posted would shut down if they could be
liable for what people wrote.
"Moldow’s site, which is devoted to topics relating to local government,
represents a terrific gift to the community," Levy said. "If someone
like Moldow has to face the prospect of ruinous litigation from any
person who is criticized on the Web site, then very few citizens would
ever set up such valuable sites."
Public Citizen is working with J.C. Salyer and Ed Barocas of the
ACLU-NJ.
CONTACT: Public Citizen http://www.citizen.org
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