Defamation in the social networking age

Posted: Wednesday, 19 February 2014 @ 15:43

 The law of Defamation has finally in the 21st Century arrived in the on-line media and social networking age.

The Defamation Act came into force in England and Wales on 1 January 2014. It is designed to modernise the law of defamation and strike a fair balance between competing interests whilst maintaining the right of free speech.

Key Points:

• A new requirement that to have a remedy in an action for defamation an individual or other body such as a company club charity or association must establish that the defamatory statement has or is likely to cause serious harm to their reputation.

• A new requirement that to have a remedy in an action for defamation a body trading for profit must establish not only that the defamatory statement has caused serious harm to their reputation but that it has caused or is likely to cause it serious financial loss.

• A new “single publication” rule to address the problem with multiple actions for repeated on-line publication. In future the first publication will be regarded as the first and only publication, provided that subsequent publications are substantially the same.

• There is a one year limitation date for defamation actions (unless the court excludes the time limit under its powers in section 32A of the Limitation Act 1980), so the clock will start on the date of first publication.

• The rewriting of the 3 main defences which are now encoded in statute and called “truth”, “honest opinion”, and “publication on a matter of public interest”.

• A defence regarding a peer-viewed statement in a scientific or academic journal.

• A new defence for website operators who can show that they did not post the defamatory material, but with a new requirement for a complaints procedure which could lead to the host having to remove the posting.

• Trial is to be without a jury unless the court orders otherwise.

Individuals will certainly find it harder to pursue claims for defamation. A website containing any offending material and the material itself may only attract a small amount of views. However, note that the defence available to web hosts is dependent on them complying with the new complaints procedure, so it would at least be worth serving on them the new Notice of Complaint and setting in motion the process which could result in the web host having to remove the offending material within 7 days. This is worth doing whether or not you can establish serious harm to reputation or serious financial loss.

To explain the 3 main defences available:

Truth: the defendant will have to show that the statement is substantially true.

Honest Opinion: the defendant will have to pass 3 tests, and establish (1) it was a statement of opinion, (2) the statement indicated the basis of the opinion, and (3) an honest person could have the opinion on the basis of (a) any fact which existed at the time the statement was published, and (b) anything asserted to be a fact in a privileged statement published before the statement complained of.

Public Interest: the defendant will have to show that the statement was a statement on a matter of public interest and that he reasonably believed that publishing the statement was in the public interest.

The existing case law on defamation is likely to be applied to these 3 defences as it applied to the old common law defences, but we must wait and see how the courts interpret the new laws.

Nigel Musgrove
Business and Litigation Solicitor
Tel: 0845 003 5639







For free advice on this topic please call us on 0845 003 5639.

This blog is not intended to constitute legal advice, nor is it intended to be a complete and authoritative statement of the law, and what we say might be out of date by the time you read it. You should always seek legal advice to confirm whether or how any information in this article applies to your particular situation. We offer a free telephone consultation to discuss your particular circumstances.

Comments

  • There are no comments for this page - click here to be the first

Need legal advice for your business? We can help

Directors

Directors
Practical advice and legal support for company owners and directors.

Disputes

Disputes
In dispute with a customer or supplier? Get practical advice and support.

Your legal advisor

Your legal advisor
Board level legal advice without the costs of an in-house lawyer.

Speak to a lawyer

Speak to a lawyer
Cousins Business Law excels at demystifying potentially complex legal areas for small business owners
Simon Moore, MD Moore News Ltd

Get legal updates

Enter your email address to receive our monthly Blog Newsletter


We will keep your email safe in accordance with our privacy policy.

Get the FREE definitive guide to solving business disputes

Posts by author

Speak to a lawyer

Get legal updates

Enter your email address to receive our monthly Blog Newsletter
The Law Society
Top