Legal Guide for Bloggers

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), I just noticed, has a “Legal Guide for Bloggers.” Right along the lines of my last post, it starts out:

Whether you’re a newly minted blogger or a relative old-timer, you’ve been seeing more and more stories pop up every day about bloggers getting in trouble for what they post.

It continues:

To be clear, this guide isn’t a substitute for, nor does it constitute, legal advice. Only an attorney who knows the details of your particular situation can provide the kind of advice you need if you’re being threatened with a lawsuit. The goal here is to give you a basic roadmap to the legal issues you may confront as a blogger, to let you know you have rights, and to encourage you to blog freely with the knowledge that your legitimate speech is protected. [emphasis added]

I haven’t had the chance to review the site in full, but the table of contents covers all of the basic areas of media law. The EFF is providing an excelent service with this site, but one might guess that most bloggers visit it after they or someone they know gets into trouble. The old saying is “ignorance is no excuse for breaking the law,” but when individuals are suddenly made responsible for a long list of potential legal trouble, there is great potential for catching someone off guard or even for making baseless legal threats.

I think it’s reasonable to expect bloggers to fall under a lower standard than a media corporation with a paid legal department.

A cite from the World Wide Web Consortium

I noticed today (while Googling myself) that a site on the “Commercialization of the Internet” was linked for an entry in “A Little History of the Internet” by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). I’m under March, 1993.

The Acceptable Use Policy prohibiting commercial use of the Internet re-interpreted, so that it becomes becomes allowed.

Who would have thought that a class project done in my first semester as a Masters student would contribute to the history of the Net? I’m honored.

It starts here: applying all of media law to society

I’ve been waiting for this article. C-Net and Reuters report on attempts by South Korea to better control libel online. In the story, a girl on a subway didn’t clean up after her poopy dog and a photo of her spread across the net.

While those South Koreans who actively take part in public debate over the Internet–they are dubbed “netizens” [and are perhaps the most “wired” people in the word]–were searching for the identity of dog poop girl, innocent people were mistakenly identified and their reputations sullied.

Much like my Master’s thesis argument about how the Internet has applied centuries of copyright law on a previously-unresponsible public, this story shows how personal publishing on the net may bring the public under all of media law (libel, copyright, privacy, journalist privilege, etc.). These laws have governed media companies for years, and have developed into a system which is at times confusing, but arguably very effective.

But much the public has never had to learn about or even care about these laws.

Now, South Korea is prosecuting net-libelers, and much like some American case law and proposed legislation, is considering a law to outlaw anonymous forum posting.

Libel laws exist because defamation has correctly been determined to be a crime. However, the question that we as a society need to ask is if it is fair to immediately and blindly apply this developed law to the public (I would cautiously argue, no). There are a number of options other than using the full force of existing law. Technological controls, educating the public, and creating different standards for different types of publishers are all options that should be carefully considered. Perhaps the best option, social norms and social sanctions, has been working well thus far because they operate under “common sense” rules. It’s these types of common sense, or expected, social rules that the law should eventually come to reflect.

Thoughts on Video: Theory

There are a number of social-theoretical homes for the idea that video’s move online will bring great changes to the mass communication landscape:

  • First, sharing of video online has the possibility to enhance peoples interaction , and to create new and different communities of interest. Rather than the 50’s, network-style of community (large, centered around a few possibilities), video online may further fragment the public into very small communities (for example, shojo anime rather than whatever happens to be on Adult Swim). While network-based TV brought us together under what editors and producers thought was important, a search online and a willingness to become active within a group online creates a different kind of community.
  • Second, it will further press (perhaps to a head) many of the legal issues surrounding sharing of copyrighted content on the web. To borrow from Art Bell, one might call this a “legal quickening” effect.
  • Finally, in addition to pushing law, it may also be the force which drives demand for broadband and thus (finally) expands the capacity for our network.

More on this (and the other issues below) another day.