To: jhild  who wrote (4803 ) 2/3/2000 10:25:00 AM From: Needticker     Read Replies (2)  | Respond to    of 4814  
You people know who you are.   Stock Message-Board Poster Slapped With Restraining Order by the court (posted earlier)  By Beth Kwon  Staff Reporter  1/31/00 10:12 PM ET  A California court Monday issued a temporary restraining order  against an Internet message-board poster who made caustic  postings about a bulletin-board stock.  Message-board posters reacted angrily to the decision against  Floyd Schneider and predicted a chilling effect on  message-board stock discussions. The temporary restraining  order was issued on behalf of Bryant Cragun, a shareholder in  ZiaSun Technologies (ZSUN:OTC BB), who has also been a  target of Schneider. And it followed a preliminary injunction  filed last week against Schneider by the U.S. District Court in  Washington state. That case was brought by ZiaSun.  Schneider says he'll abide by the restraining order, issued by  California Superior Court in San Diego, which orders him to  retract press releases and "any statements" implying ZiaSun's  employees are "disreputable, dishonest, unscrupulous or  engaged in criminal behavior." Says Schneider: "It's either that  or going to jail."  "We don't mind criticism, but we don't like when people are  twisting the truth to this level," said Mark Harris, ZiaSun's vice  president of investor relations.  Schneider, who goes by "the Truthseeker" and "Floydie," started  posting vitriolic missives about ZiaSun, an Internet services  company based in Solana Beach, Calif., in November 1998.  "ZSUN is a very bad deal," Schneider posted on Silicon  Investor on Dec. 7, 1999. Schneider has suggested that  ZiaSun and its officers are "Satan bound" and that one of  ZiaSun's vice presidents was a "stuttering liar." Schneider also  posted press releases on his Web site, TheTruthseeker.com,  reiterating a strong sell recommendation. (He says he hasn't  had a position in the stock.)  Last June, the company sued Schneider for engaging in a  "cybersmear" campaign. Last week's injunction prevents him  from posting "false and defamatory statements" about ZiaSun  and its officers. But it didn't keep Schneider quiet. "It just says I  can't post anything that's not the truth," Schneider said then.  "I'm very careful."  Regardless of the facts of the matter, experts say the preliminary  injunction and temporary restraining order were surprising.  "I don't assume that the defendant's an angel here, but this is a  very unusual type of remedy," says Lyrissa Lidsky, a professor at  the University of Florida who specializes in cases dealing with  message boards. "The merits of the case haven't been  adjudicated yet. Usually under First Amendment doctrine, a  preliminary injunction is treated as what's called a 'prior  restraint,' and it's particularly disfavored under the First  Amendment. There's a heavy presumption that prior restraints  are unconstitutional. Now that two courts have done it is even  more surprising. It sounds like a dangerous precedent is being  set."  The message-board community was disheartened. "It's  muzzling of dissent," posted Janice Shell, herself a Net  vigilante who says she tries to expose questionable stocks, on  Silicon Investor. "I'd have preferred that Floydie be a bit more  circumspect in his accusations, but this really goes too far."  The only defense for message-board posters, says Jared  Silverman, a New Jersey lawyer and former chief of the New  Jersey Bureau of Securities, is the truth. "Basically what the  case says is that people who start making accusations through  various Internet methods, be it chat boards or whatever, should  be very careful of what they say because they could be held  accountable for it."  As for the message-board community, it could result in quieter  boards. "I think it's a very bad precedent," says Jeffrey Mitchell,  a Silicon Investor poster who's worked alongside Shell. "It's  silencing John Doe. If you put something out on a message  board, you're screwed," he says.