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Twitter sued over Hardy tweet

Melbourne writer and TV identity Marieke Hardy. Photo: Damian Bennett

TWITTER is being sued for defamation for the first time under Australian law.

Joshua Meggitt, the Melbourne man wrongly named by writer and TV identity Marieke Hardy as the author of a hate blog dedicated to her, is now suing Twitter inc itself.

Mr Meggitt’s lawyer, Stuart Gibson, served a legal notice yesterday on the San Francisco-based social media giant, a company valued last year at $US7 billion ($A6.5 billion), as the publisher of a tweet by Hardy last November.

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Her tweet read: ”I name and shame my ‘anonymous’ internet bully. Liberating business! Join me,” with a link to her blog, where she incorrectly named mr Meggitt as the author of ”ranting, hateful” articles about her.

It was a tweet seen around the world, and now that Hardy (below) has already reached a confidential legal settlement with mr Meggitt, believed to be about $15,000, and published an apology on her blog, his lawyers are seeking damages from the social media site where the original defamation had the greatest exposure.

The original tweet appeared on Twitter’s homepage, and was copied by some of Hardy’s 60,897 followers and other Twitter users taking part at the time in a worldwide online anti-abuse campaign. many also commented on the original post in ways that could be construed as defamatory.

”Twitter are a publisher, and at law anyone involved in the publication can be sued,” mr Gibson said. ”We’re suing for the retweets and the original tweet – and many of the retweets and comments are far worse.”

Twitter users are not being sued individually as part of this legal action, mr Gibson said.

While it is widely believed that Twitter itself can’t be sued, he cites a landmark 2002 High Court case in which Melbourne mining magnate Joseph Gutnick won the right to sue US business news publisher Dow Jones in Victoria, under Australian law, rather than in the US.

Mr Gibson also argues that, as his client has never signed on to Twitter, he has never agreed to the site’s terms and conditions. to sign on, all users agree that they take sole responsibility for any content they generate.

Media lawyer David Poulton, who advises Fairfax Media, said: ”There’s not a lot of difference conceptually between Twitter or other internet publishing and an airmail copy of a newspaper; it’s just quicker.”

Even Twitter users might be able to sue the social media company for libel if they have grounds, mr Poulton said.  It would depend on how a court interpreted Twitter’s terms of use.  but if found liable, Twitter could ”potentially could seek recovery [of any damages] from the defaming user,  either under its terms of use or because the law generally permits a re-publisher like Twitter to seek indemnity from the original publisher of the offending words.”

Publishing platforms such as Twitter and Facebook could be held responsible for posts by their users in Australia, warns internet law lecturer Peter Black, from the University of Queensland. while US laws provide immunity against liability for an “interactive computer service”, Australian law provides no such protections.

Both Google and Facebook have been targeted by suits and court orders under Australian law already.

Twitter sued over Hardy tweet

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Man sues Twitter over hate blog

Tweeting troubles … Melbourne writer and critic, Marieke Hardy, named Joshua Meggitt via Twitter. Photo: Damian Bennett

TWITTER is being sued for defamation for the first time under Australian law.

Joshua Meggitt, the Melbourne man wrongly named by writer and TV identity Marieke Hardy as the author of a hate blog dedicated to her, is now suing Twitter Inc itself.

Mr Meggitt’s lawyer, Stuart Gibson, served a legal notice yesterday on the San Francisco-based social media giant, a company valued last year at $US7 billion ($A6.5 billion), as the publisher of a tweet by Hardy last November.

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Her tweet read: ”I name and shame my ‘anonymous’ internet bully. Liberating business! Join me,” with a link to her blog, where she incorrectly named mr Meggitt as the author of ”ranting, hateful” articles about her.

It was a tweet seen around the world, and now that Hardy (below) has already reached a confidential legal settlement with mr Meggitt, believed to be about $15,000, and published an apology on her blog, his lawyers are seeking damages from the social media site where the original defamation had the greatest exposure.

The original tweet appeared on Twitter’s homepage, and was copied by some of Hardy’s 60,897 followers and other Twitter users taking part at the time in a worldwide online anti-abuse campaign. Many also commented on the original post in ways that could be construed as defamatory.

”Twitter are a publisher, and at law anyone involved in the publication can be sued,” mr Gibson said. ”We’re suing for the retweets and the original tweet – and many of the retweets and comments are far worse.”

Twitter users are not being sued individually as part of this legal action, mr Gibson said.

While it is widely believed that Twitter itself can’t be sued, he cites a landmark 2002 High Court case in which Melbourne mining magnate Joseph Gutnick won the right to sue US business news publisher Dow Jones in Victoria, under Australian law, rather than in the US.

Mr Gibson also argues that, as his client has never signed on to Twitter, he has never agreed to the site’s terms and conditions. to sign on, all users agree that they take sole responsibility for any content they generate.

Media lawyer David Poulton, who advises Fairfax Media, said: ”There’s not a lot of difference conceptually between Twitter or other internet publishing and an airmail copy of a newspaper; it’s just quicker.”

Man sues Twitter over hate blog

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Whale activists’ hunger strike pact

As Australian consular officials attempt to contact three men aboard a Japanese whaling ship, their supporters in Perth say they are expected to be on a hunger strike.

The trio penetrated tight defences to board the Shonan Maru no.2 off Western Australia at the weekend in an attempt to foil its pursuit of the Sea Shepherd ship Steve Irwin.

Federal Attorney-General Nicola Roxon said today consular officials were still attempting to make contact with the men. she said the government’s priority was to ensure their safety and well-being, and return to Australia.

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Attorney-General Nicola Roxon says the government is unable to contact the three Australians on the Shonan Maru no.2. Photo: Wayne Taylor

But according to the environmental group they belong to, Forest Rescue, the three made a pact before they left.

“They decided that if the Shonan Maru no.2 continued onward, they would go on a hunger strike, and so did we back here supporting them,” Amy Flee, a spokeswoman for the group, said.

“We will keep this up until the federal police go out there and bring our boys back to Fremantle” she said.

Geoffrey Owen Tuxworth, 47, Simon Peterffy, 44, and Glen Pendlebury, 27, aboard the Sea Shepherd vessel Steve Irwin. Photo: Guillaume Collet / Sea Shepherd

“We are quite concerned about their welfare and we haven’t had any information.”

A spokesman for Japan’s Institute of Cetacean Research said at last report the men were safe and well.

Whale activists’ hunger strike pact

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Rooney Mara: ‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ character compelling

Rooney Mara says she thinks her edgy character in “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” eventually appealed to the film’s audience.

ADVERTISEMENT Mara has been getting good reviews for her performance as Lisbeth Salander, including a Golden Globe nomination, which she says has to do with the character’s many layers.

“I think the thing that makes her such a compelling character is that you do sort of fall instantly in love with her, but at the same time you don’t always agree with what she’s doing and you also question her and you get frustrated by her,” Mara told Parade magazine. “She’s just an incredibly multilayered character.”

Lisbeth makes a strong, if a bit rough, initial impression due to her tattoos, smoking and sexuality, but her character wins out in the end.

“I think that’s with most people — the more you get to know them, the more beautiful they are,” Mara said. “I think that she’s someone you learn to love and appreciate. Looks are sort of secondary to that.”

Rooney Mara: ‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ character compelling

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Backer of those without a voice

Robert Hayes, 1942-2011

”He was the epitome of the radical romantic” … Robert Hayes was the antithesis of an ivory tower academic and no great friend of the big end of town.

As a dashing and brilliant lawyer, Robert Hayes made his mark on Australian society over more than 40 years by battling some of its least glamorous issues on behalf of its most neglected and discounted citizens.

He was one of the first crop of Australian lawyers to emerge from university training with a PhD (Monash University, 1973). Although his first job was in teaching at Monash, his life project – through his students and directly – was to have an impact on the way that the law engaged with society in the real world.

Robert Alexander Hayes was born on January 12, 1942, and grew up in Melbourne. in 1971, it was a combination of instinct, brilliance and mischievousness that had him recruited to Sydney to help to establish Australia’s most revolutionary law school, at the University of NSW. As a young academic, he had also taught at Canada’s McGill and Toronto universities, where he later held visiting professorships.

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When he took time out to practise as a barrister, Hayes’s advanced qualifications attracted the derision of some senior NSW lawyers, to whom intellectualism remained a threat. One of his early students at UNSW, Stuart Littlemore, recalls the treatment received by Hayes at Liverpool District Court, from the demanding judge Ernie Knoblanche. Rejecting a submission from counsel for a co-accused, Judge Knoblanche turned to the new advocate and observed: ”That’s unless Dr Hayes has something academic he wishes to contribute.”

Such was the attitude towards those presenting as too sharp of mind.

An expert in defamation, Hayes was recruited in 1980 as a full-time commissioner of the Australian Law Reform Commission. There he rescued its wayward four-year-old inquiry into privacy law, in time for its chairman, Michael Kirby, to deliver the historic three-volume, 1400-page report in the last days of 1983.

As Kirby remembers it: ”Hayes marshalled a big team of commissioners, consultants and a broad national dialogue to hammer out the fundamental principles of a new national law on privacy protection in the age of computers … [a] major, national legal achievement.”

Despite his intellectual pedigree, however, Hayes was no great friend of the big end of town. As Littlemore describes it, he alternated – depending on the circumstances – between describing himself as the son of a struggling tradesman, and as the son of a highly successful builder, ”quite able to send his sons to a GPS school in Melbourne [Scotch College]”.

He saw the role of a critical lawyer as being to reserve the most acerbic and uncompromising analysis for the most privileged. The more powerful you became in society, the less you should be trusted. He was to instil the same instinct in two generations of Australian law students, across seven universities including also the universities of Queensland and new England and his final home, the University of Western Sydney.

Some of his most lasting impacts stemmed from personal experience, after his daughter was born with down syndrome. With his first wife, Susan (nee Morgan), he wrote a trail-blazing book, Mental retardation: law, policy and administration (1982), transforming legal and policy attitudes by insisting that intellectually impaired people be visible and respected as human beings and citizens. according to Kirby, its impacts reached well beyond mental impairment: ”This became a mantra for all minorities in Australia.”

After Hayes had returned to UNSW and a period as senior member of the federal Administrative Appeals Tribunal, this focus led in 1990 to his appointment, aged 48, as president of the NSW Mental Health Review Tribunal. He held the key post for 10 years, during which time he remarried, to Elayne Hoole, in 1991.

As a law lecturer, Hayes was popular for his humour, style and directness. He confronted career-hungry students with the reality that conflicts over the rights and duties of citizens were often sordid and tragic, and rarely glamorous. his torts lectures began with stories of children being packed off to school by their mother, with fresh egg-and-lettuce sandwiches in their bags, only to mown down by a negligent driver or crushed by a falling building: ”terrible … imagine it … egg and lettuce everywhere”.

Littlemore described Hayes’s jokes as ”execrable … they owed a lot to the Benny Hill school of humour, only not so intellectually difficult”. according to a close friend, Suellen Bullock, Hayes explained his fondness for flying business class because, ”you have attractive women bringing you drinks and responding when you press a buzzer … in a modern marriage there is very little of that nowadays”.

As president of the Mental Health Review Tribunal, however, Hayes’s efforts in the least glamorous areas of the law reached their peak. Striving for fairness, dignity and care for citizens confined to the custody of the state as a result of mental illness – including those once labelled as ”criminally insane” – he led the last line of defence for some of the most misunderstood, marginalised and forgotten members of society.

Hayes collaborated with Michael Eburn to produce Criminal law and procedure in new South Wales (2002), now in its third edition. He remained involved in many community services, including the Intellectual Disability Rights Service and as chairman of Charmian Clift Cottages, a residential program for mothers with mental illness and their children.

Between 2002 and 2004, Hayes had further close engagement with legal practice, as director of studies for the NSW Bar Association. This appointment coincided with more rigorous standards of clinical and continuing legal education. according to Littlemore, ”we were fortunate indeed to have the right man in the right place at the right time … Robert put in place a very high standard of performance that has been upheld, and we are all in his debt”.

During his final academic appointment, at Western Sydney, Hayes continued his research and advocacy on liability, detention and treatment of the mentally ill, in partnership with psychiatric experts. in 2008, with Matthew Large, Chris Ryan and Olav Nielssen, he wrote in the Journal of Medical Ethics on ”the danger of dangerousness” as a criterion for treatment without consent under mental health legislation, when what was needed were criteria that focus on a patient’s capacity to refuse treatment: ”Dangerousness criteria unfairly discriminate against the mentally ill, as they represent an unreasonable barrier to treatment without consent, and they spread the burden of risk that any mentally ill person might become violent across large numbers of mentally ill people who will never become violent.”

With other authors, including Nielssen and Large, Hayes wrote in 2009′s Psychiatry, Psychology and Law on justifications and rationalisations for the civil commitment of sex offenders. While criticising preventive detention as unscientific, unethical and impractical, he showed his grip on the world by acknowledging a ”political reality … that these laws are unlikely to ever be repealed. Hence we also consider how the laws should be applied”. Hayes was the antithesis of an ivory tower academic.

In his later years, Hayes and Elayne established a much-loved second home in the Provencal village of Murs. in early 2010, not long before his diagnosis as terminally ill, he won the affection of a final cohort of French students in a common law master class at the Aix law school of the Universite de Provence.

To Littlemore, Hayes was ”the epitome of the radical romantic … a practical form of radicalism. It was achievable”.

Robert Hayes is survived by Elayne, children Josie, Andrew, Claudia and Edward, and grandchildren Eliza, Lorenzo and Leonard.

A. J. Brown

Backer of those without a voice

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