May It Please the Mozzers,
Attention everyone who co-blogs! If you create a blog collaboratively with another person, you may be wondering whether your fellow blogger could get you into legal trouble.
We've known for years that website operators cannot be held responsible for their users' content thanks to the broad immunities created by section 230 of the CDA. That's old news.
What's still unclear, however, is whether you can be held responsible for content created by a co-blogger if you both blog on the same site. Perhaps you're a guest blogger? Or maybe you work collaboratively with fellow enthusiasts to publish a blog about a common interest?
A case came down this month that adds some clarity on this issue on liability for co-blogging.
Attention everyone who co-blogs! If you create a blog collaboratively with another person, you may be wondering whether your fellow blogger could get you into legal trouble.
We've known for years that website operators cannot be held responsible for their users' content thanks to the broad immunities created by section 230 of the CDA. That's old news.
What's still unclear, however, is whether you can be held responsible for content created by a co-blogger if you both blog on the same site. Perhaps you're a guest blogger? Or maybe you work collaboratively with fellow enthusiasts to publish a blog about a common interest?
A case came down this month that adds some clarity on this issue on liability for co-blogging.
Best Western International, Inc. v. Furber
2008 WL 4182827 (D. Ariz. Sept. 5, 2008)
2008 WL 4182827 (D. Ariz. Sept. 5, 2008)
In this case, a group of people co-blogged about problems they were experiencing with Best Western International ("BWI"), the hotel chain. Each of the people were members in the non-profit corporation BWI and each owned and operated a hotel under the Best Western brand name.
They were not "partners" or "employees" of the same corporation. They were just individual people who shared concerns about the way BWI did business. They started a website, shared responsibilities in operating it ,and invited people to write on it. The blog didn't make any money, was not a separate business, and was accessible to the public if you knew where to look. Its main purpose was to act as a forum for all of the hotel operators involved with BWI to air their concerns.
BWI, as you can imagine, didn't like the conversations being had on the site and decided to sue everybody. BWI makes what seems like a million allegations, tries to bury the defendants in paperwork, and throws every imaginable legal claim at the folks who initiated and co-blogged on the site.
The defendants argued that while each should be responsible for the posts that he or she authored or helped author, they should not be legally responsible for posts written by other people. It sounds pretty common sense when you put it that way, doesn't it? On the other hand, if they are all operating and creating the site together, shouldn't they all be responsible for what's happening on the site? These are questions of law that courts are just starting to look at with frequency and clarity.
In this case, the judge ruled that Section 230 of the CDA does in fact provide immunity for posts written by co-bloggers. So long as he or she didn't create or develop the post, he or she can't be liable for it. This is true even if you marketed the website, published your own posts, or solicited other people to post on the site.
It is important to note that although the bloggers in this case aren't being held liable for their co-bloggers' conduct, there are many situations in which co-bloggers could still be liable for each others' content. For example, if your co-bloggers are employees of the same company, then the company is responsible for all of the co-bloggers' posts. Alternatively, you could be found liable for a co-blogger's post if a judge rules that you are partners or joint venturers, i.e., sharing in the profits and engaging in a joint enterprise together.
Bottom Line: If the collaborative blog is not a business (does not make any money), is not incorporated, and there is no employment relationship, then co-bloggers would not be liable for each other's content.... Well...according to this judge, anyway. It remains to be seen whether this type of section 230 analysis becomes a trend.
I'll keep you posted!
Best Regards,
Sarah
P.S. My professional hero, Professor Eric Goldman, also blogged about this case and cites his very intelligent article on the legal ramifications of co-blogging. I commend both to your attention if this area interests you.
I'll keep you posted!
Best Regards,
Sarah
P.S. My professional hero, Professor Eric Goldman, also blogged about this case and cites his very intelligent article on the legal ramifications of co-blogging. I commend both to your attention if this area interests you.
I think that it is worth noting that the situation appears to be different in the UK, where it is possible to be held responsible for the delivery of offensive content, regardless of the author.
We have obvious reasonable measures mitigations, but if an illegal post is made on my forum then, as publisher, I believe that I remain culpable for that content if I do not have appropriate reasonable measures in place for the monitoring and moderating of that content.
Incidentally, the relevant paper I was going to quote here appears to have disappeared, so things could have changed - I am on the road all day tomorrow, but I may dig around a little on Thursday if needs be.
As I recall, the defendant was Demon, but that is all I can remember.
[EDIT: It would appear that the European Directive allows for a burden of proof which must show that the hosting party was aware of the content they were displaying, rather than simply a conduit. For the purposes of this case, and for most, it is clear that any one blogger in the conversation would know of the others.
I cannot imagine that any regularly updated blog would have much of a defence, were they to claim that the comments relating to their posts were unknown to them.]
Lovely information, as usual Sarah.
I'm sure Jason will be pleased as punch to hear that he's not liable for anything I post on Social Media Explorer. Given what a wild, renegade hothead I am... ;)
BWI probably said to themselves..."We got the money, F*** it lets just sue them all."
The beauty of the American justice system, sue whomever whenever for whatever...there is nothing to deter wrongful or "stupid" lawsuits!
It is not so very different in the UK any more.My car was eaten by a car wash on Sunday and my wife has spent all of yesterday and today fending off anti-litigious overtures.I am a bit peeved not to have had my Delica for a few days, but as long as it gets mended I am happy to accept that it was just one of those things. Nobody was hurt and it was just an accident.It seems from a straw poll of my friends and colleagues that I am very much in the minority and that trying for a fast buck is the order of the day.It is sad that, despite years of ridiculing the US litigation fetish, we are sliding down the same slope.
Richard-
Kudos to you for not sueing! I have had a smiliar experience where I worked for an employer who owed me $2000 in back pay. He had quite a few lawyers and I know I obviously could have gotten my money because I had logs of work I had done...anyhow I settled for cussing him out (Jerry McGuire esque just with curse words) in front of the entire office and left.
Not wanting to deal with the hassles of getting my money or seeing him again I just wiped my hands clean and continued on with my life not looking back. Someone once told me that the best "payback" is living your life happy and well...I couldn't agree more!
Just to be clear, The carwash operators (Sainsbury's) will be paying to repair my vehicle. I only mean that I am not suing for damages and mental anguish, which seems to be the carrion cry of the ambulance chaser.
This is unreal. Another issue is that bloggers that co-blog for clients or company websites for search engine optimization and website promotion purposes may get their clients in trouble too.
I better make sure my co-bloggers know that they write it, they take responsibility for it. Wish all businesses operated under the same law.
Which courts does this ruling set precedent for?
Hmmmm....
Time to hire a bunch of shadow bloggers? :o)
It would open a whole can of worms if that weren't the case.