Defamation
Naffe v. Frey
Yelp, Inc. v. Hadeed Carpet Cleaning, Inc.
Lawyers in the Vortex: When Attorneys Become Public Figures
A Quick Thought on Bloggers, Opinion, and Today's Ruling from the Ninth Circuit
Getting Dirty to Protect Crowdsourced Data and Public Information
Ice Roads and Chilled Speech: ECHR Tags News Portal for Reader Comments
A Win for Opinion: Sixth Circuit Tackles Website Top-Ten Lists
McGibney v. Moore
Goren v. Doe
Ourway Realty, LLC d/b/a Plainridge Racecourse v. Keen
Distinguishing Fact from Opinion: The Second Circuit Rules on Scientific Articles
"Dirty" Verdict Sets Up Section 230 Appeal
Zhang v. China Free Press, Inc.
Monsarrat v. Filcman
Reputation vs. National Security: The Supreme Court Takes on an Airline Defamation Case
Baker v. Haiti-Observateur Group
British Ruling Sets Standards for Twitter Libel
Who is a Journalist? Here We Go Again…
Misidentifications Past and Present: Terror, Suspicion & the Media
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  There was substantial media coverage of the
There was substantial media coverage of the  Earlier today, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit released its decision in
Earlier today, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit released its decision in  Yesterday, the Digital Media Law Project joined an all-star cast of organizations (including the
Yesterday, the Digital Media Law Project joined an all-star cast of organizations (including the  The Chamber of the First Section of the European Court of Human Rights held unanimously on October 10 that making a news portal liable for defamatory comments posted by its readers does not violate article 10 of the European Convention of Human Rights protecting free speech.
The Chamber of the First Section of the European Court of Human Rights held unanimously on October 10 that making a news portal liable for defamatory comments posted by its readers does not violate article 10 of the European Convention of Human Rights protecting free speech. 
 
 In a recent case before the Second Circuit, the Court of Appeals held that conclusions in scientific articles are akin to statements of opinion for defamation purposes and cannot give rise to actionable claims of false advertising under the Lanham Act or state statutory equivalents. In the Court's words, "the line between fact and opinion is not always a clear one" - and this recent decision has muddled that divide even more.
In a recent case before the Second Circuit, the Court of Appeals held that conclusions in scientific articles are akin to statements of opinion for defamation purposes and cannot give rise to actionable claims of false advertising under the Lanham Act or state statutory equivalents. In the Court's words, "the line between fact and opinion is not always a clear one" - and this recent decision has muddled that divide even more. A federal jury's
A federal jury's  The Supreme Court has granted certiorari to the first defamation case it's heard since 1990, and in it, the Court will be balancing injury to reputation against -- what else? -- national security.
The Supreme Court has granted certiorari to the first defamation case it's heard since 1990, and in it, the Court will be balancing injury to reputation against -- what else? -- national security.
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A  In the wake of the
In the wake of the 



Description:
In November 2010, Mara Feld arranged for her thoroughbred gelding to be shipped to a horse farm. The horse was instead sent to a horse auction and may have been slaughtered in Canada. The horse's fate became a topic of great debate on Internet sites dealing with thoroughbred race horses and at some point Crystal Conway became involved in the ongoing online discussions. On December 11, 2010, Conway posted on her Twitter account: "Mara Feld aka Gina Holt - you are fucking crazy!"
On December 10, 2013, Feld filed a complaint alleging one count of libel. Afterwards, Conway filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the complaint did not state a claim upon which relief can be granted because her statement was an opinion. Conway further argued that the use of vulgarity signaled its lack of clinical or factual significance. Feld responded that the statement in question was not obviously a statement of opinion, because it could be interpreted differently. Furthermore, Feld argued that the use of profanity did not transform the statement into mere opinion.
The court held that the tweet had to be read in the context of the ongoing online discussion, rather than in isolation. In that context, the court found that the tweet could not reasonably be understood to state actual facts about Feld's mental state. Therefore, the complaint could not support a claim of defamation and Conway's motion to dismiss was granted.