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RE: The Economist and e-Archiving
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: The Economist and e-Archiving
- From: "Rick Anderson" <rickand@unr.edu>
- Date: Mon, 23 Jun 2003 19:38:41 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
> How do we preserve the historical record and the right to disagree in a > public-distributed-forum? It's not a question of the right to disagree. It's a question of the right to defame. Correct me if I'm wrong, someone, but I'm pretty sure that right does not exist in France, the UK or the US. > Isn't there a difference between something in the Economist, which is a > publication of record and a defame chuck website? Defamation is defamation. The fact that it's published in the Economist does not, I'm pretty sure, accord any special legal protection to a defamatory article. I understand the concern for the historical record. But the assertion that ceasing to distribute the article is tantamount to "wiping out the historical record" of the case seems a bit much. > Explain, and even mandate an explanation, but why delete it? Because deleting it is the only way to stop distributing it. I think it makes sense to add an explanation to a faulty research article, and to leave the article in the archive. I'm not sure that's a sufficient remedy for defamation. It would end up being like this: "Hey, everyone, please ignore what I'm about to say. Now: Chuck is a compulsive burglar and puppy-kicker who is trying to overthrow the U.S. government." That just doesn't seem to work, somehow. ------------- Rick Anderson rickand@unr.edu > If chuck is a public enough figure he has fewer rights to stop you, of > course. But if chuck has enough resources, he may be able to get > you to pull even what is true-truth is not necessarily a defense or may > not be affordable (i.e. some truths may be so expensive because of > situations like the Barschall case, that individuals or organizations > may be unable to utter them-or distribute them-. > > As a private citizen chuck probably has more rights rather than fewer. > Chuck
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