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To: Link Lady who wrote (17561)1/12/1999 9:59:00 PM
From: Link Lady  Respond to of 18056
 
canoe.com

Tuesday, January 12, 1999

Slammed in chat rooms,
brokerage files lawsuit

Thomson Kernaghan

By KATHERINE MACKLEM
The Financial Post
Yahoo! Inc., operator of one of the world's most popular Web
sites, is being sued for libel by Thomson Kernaghan & Co. Ltd., a
privately held Canadian investment dealer.

The lawsuit claims Yahoo! and a string of other defendants were
"reckless, malicious, vicious, callous, reprehensible, shocking,
oppressive and high-handed."

The suit is one of the first filed in Canada against Yahoo! It is
significant because it delves into the largely uncharted territory of
Internet libel and the responsibility of both the individuals who
write defamatory messages and the operators that provide the
forums, such as chat rooms, for discussions.

Silicon Investor Inc., which operates financial bulletin boards,
is also named in the suit, as are a handful of individuals known
only by the pen names they sign to postings on the World Wide
Web, such as "Black John," "Tech," and "Danimal 2002."

Thomson Kernaghan says a press release and other messages
posted on the Web were malicious and portray both it and Mark
Valentine, a second plaintiff in the suit and a Thomson Kernaghan
vice-president and director, as acting illegally.

The case, filed in Ontario Court, general division, is the latest in
a volley of lawsuits involving Thomson Kernaghan and Mr.
Valentine regarding controversial investments made by the firm.

Most of the other lawsuits aim in the opposite direction, with
Thomson Kernaghan as the target, and claim the brokerage and
Mr. Valentine have illegally manipulated stock prices.

It is these allegations of manipulation that triggered the libel
suit, which singles out a press release posted on the Web (and
also disseminated by newswire services) by Texas-based
Restaurant Teams International Inc.

The press release announced a suit against the brokers alleging a
breach of agreements concerning an investment in Restaurant
Teams by Thomson Kernaghan and its clients. That suit accuses
the brokerage of illegally short-selling the company's stock.

It also says, and this is quoted in Thomson Kernaghan's libel
suit, that "it is appalling that these funds [managed by Thomson
Kernaghan and/or Mr. Valentine] . . . can come to the United
States and make investments in growing companies only to short
sell their stock to the point that they destroy the investments made
by hard-working people. . . . We believe this is a prime case of
market manipulation."

Two of Restaurant Teams' principals and its stock promoter are
also named in the Thomson Kernaghan suit.

The libel suit claims a total of $5-million and asks the court for
"the imposition of punitive, aggravated and exemplary damages
against the defendants."

The brokers will ask Yahoo! and Silicon Investor to disclose the
true identities and addresses of people who have posted
messages that it deems offensive.

To date, only a handful of libel suits have been launched
concerning material posted on the Internet.

People falsely believe they can hide behind anonymous
messages, said Michael Geist, a law professor at the University
of Ottawa who specializes in Internet law. They need to have a
better sense of what happens when they post messages, he said.

"Just as there are limitations on the right to free speech, there are
on the right to anonymity," Mr. Geist said.

Spokespeople for both Yahoo! and Silicon Investor said they do
not comment on lawsuits. In the past, Yahoo! and other chat-room
operators have complied with court orders to provide information
on their users' identities.

In addition to the Restaurant Teams lawsuit, Thomson
Kernaghan has been named by about a half-dozen companies in
other lawsuits accusing it and the funds it manages of
short-selling stock after investing in convertible debentures in the
companies. In an interview in November, Lee Simpson, Thomson
Kernaghan's chief executive, denied any wrongdoing.