Pennsylvania Ruling Protects Anonymous Online Comments
  crn.com
  Pennsylvania Ruling Protects Anonymous OnlineComments By Peter Bochner, CRN
                      Pittsburgh
                      1:28 PM EST Wed., Nov. 22, 2000                       In a ruling that one group said "extends tremendous                     protection" to the creators of anonymous online                     comments, a state court judge here said that public                     officials and others, including employers, cannot use                     frivolous defamation lawsuits to ferret out the identity of                     their critics. 
                      The case, Melvin vs. Doe, arose when a state superior                     court judge found comments critical of her on a Web site,                     then filed a defamation lawsuit seeking disclosure of the                     author's name. 
                      A key holding in Wednesday's ruling protects the identity                     of an anonymous Internet user until the that person has                     had an opportunity to prove that the defamation lawsuit is                     without merit. Judge R. Stanton Wettick Jr. said that, in                     this case, "John Does' identity shall be subject to a                     protective order," emphasizing that "without anonymity,                     [Internet] speakers will be less willing to express                     controversial positions because of fears of reprisal." 
                      In a statement Wednesday, the Public Citizen Litigation                     Group in Washington, wrote, "If judges in other states                     apply a similar standard, under which a plaintiff must meet                     a summary judgment standard in order to identify anonymous critics, the result will be to                     extend tremendous protection to anonymous Internet speech in most states." 
                      The ruling in Melvin vs. Doe is "the first fully reasoned, publishable decision that I am                     aware of," said Paul Alan Levy, a lawyer with Public Citizen. "Other judges will pay it some                     heed. It's not perfect, but it's a significant advance over the routine unthinking disclosure                     made in previous cases." 
                      It is unlikely the decision will have any immediate impact on the lawsuit filed by Ingram                     Micro against a group of people who posted comments on the Yahoo message boards                     because that suit was filed in California. However, the Ingram Micro lawsuit is an example of                     how a company can inhibit the freedom to post anonymously, particularly among                     employees who can be fired for such actions, Levy said. 
                      "People have told me that there is less general discussion on the Yahoo message board                     about Ingram Micro [since the lawsuit]," said Levy. "When people know there's a legal                     action outstanding, they tend to shut up." 
                      Seen from a broader perspective, the decision is only a small step in the fight for protected                     anonymous speech on the Internet, Levy said. "It will take many decisions from trial judges                     and appellate courts. That's what common law development is about. There must be lots of                     accretions to the structure of the coral reef before you can say what is law." 
                      The American Civil Liberties Union, which represented the defendant in Melvin vs. Doe,                     also hailed the ruling as an important step in Internet free speech case law. "Until today,                     a[n] employer claiming defamation could get a court to disclose the name of an anonymous                     Web author simply by filing a lawsuit," said ACLU National Staff Attorney Ann Beeson,                     one of the ACLU attorneys to litigate the case. |