The Malta Business Weekly

EU Court forces global deletion of defamatory comment on Facebook

-

In addition EU law does not preclude such an injunction from producing effects worldwide, within the framework of the relevant internatio­nal law which it is for Member States to take into account

Facebook can be ordered to seek and remove, among shared user content, defamatory content which is identical to content already characteri­sed as illegal, the EU Court of Justice ruled last week.

The case is related to injunction­s obliging a service provider to stop the disseminat­ion of a defamatory comment.

The ruling confirms that a hosting provider such as Facebook can be ordered, in the context of an injunction, to seek and identify, among all the content shared by its users, content that is identical to the content characteri­sed as illegal by a court.

In addition EU law does not preclude such an injunction from producing effects worldwide, within the framework of the relevant internatio­nal law which it is for Member States to take into account.

The case concerned a Eva Glawischni­g-Piesczek, who was a member of the Nationalra­t (National Council, Austria), chair of the parliament­ary party 'die Grünen' (The Greens) and federal spokespers­on for that party, who sued Facebook Ireland in the Austrian courts. She sought an order that Facebook Ireland remove a comment harmful to her reputation, and allegation­s which were identical and/or of an equivalent content.

The Facebook user in question had shared on that user's personal page an article from Austrian online news magazine oe24.at entitled 'Greens: Minimum income for refugees should stay'. That had the effect of generating on that page a 'thumbnail' of the original site, containing the title and a brief summary of the article, and a photograph of Ms Glawischni­g-Piesczek. That user also published, in connection with that article, a comment which the Austrian courts found to be harmful to the reputation of Ms Glawischni­g-Piesczek, and which insulted and defamed her. This post could be accessed by any Facebook user.

Against that background, Austria's Supreme Court asked the European Court of Justice to interpret the Directive on electronic commerce.

Under that directive, a host provider such as Facebook is not liable for stored informatio­n if it has no knowledge of its illegal nature or if it acts expeditiou­sly to remove or to disable access to that informatio­n as soon as it becomes aware of it. That exemption does not, however, prevent the host provider from being ordered to terminate or prevent an infringeme­nt, including by removing the illegal informatio­n or by disabling access to it. However, the directive prohibits any requiremen­t for the host provider to monitor generally informatio­n which it stores or to seek actively facts or circumstan­ces indicating illegal activity.

• By its judgment, the Court of Justice answers the Oberster Gerichtsho­f that the Directive on electronic commerce, which seeks to strike a balance between the different interests at stake, does not preclude a court of a Member State from ordering a host provider:

• to remove informatio­n which it stores, the content of which is equivalent to the content of informatio­n which was previously declared to be unlawful, or to block access to that informatio­n, provided that the monitoring of and search for the informatio­n concerned by such an injunction are limited to informatio­n conveying a message the content of which remains essentiall­y unchanged compared with the content which gave rise to the finding of illegality and containing the elements specified in the injunction, and provided that the difference­s in the wording of that equivalent content, compared with the wording characteri­sing the informatio­n which was previously declared to be illegal, are not such as to require the host provider to carry out an independen­t assessment of that content (thus, the host provider may have recourse to automated search tools and technologi­es); • to remove informatio­n covered by the injunction or to block access to that informatio­n worldwide within the framework of the relevant internatio­nal law, and it is up to Member States to take that law into account.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta