Archive for the ‘Law’ Category

Web 2.0: The Unwanted Friend Request of Litigation

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

CTSumm_Wheel-BlogHeader.jpg 

The rising star of Web 2.0 has brought the dawn of social and professional networking sites such as Facebook, MySpace and LinkedIn.  These free services have grown in popularity so that it’s rare to find a person under the age of 35 who doesn’t have some type of personal Web page.  With the dawning of these networking groups has come the dawning of numerous lawsuits.
 

 

The Indiana Supreme Court recently rendered an opinion on the intricacies of MySpace.  A 14-year-old student was adjudicated delinquent on what would have been criminal harassment charges had the student been an adult.  The student was charged because of statements she posted about her school principal in a MySpace private group and on a separate profile.[1]

 
 The Indiana Supreme Court undertook a detailed discussion of how MySpace operates, how only members of a group could see specific postings, and if a profile were set to “private,” only “Friends” could view it.  Additionally, the Court took issue that the State offered no witness to address how MySpace actually works. 

 
 The Indiana Supreme Court held that the State failed to prove that the student made the MySpace statements with the intent required for criminal harassment.  The Court’s analysis covered in great detail that a message posted on a personal profile or available only to a private group with only members having viewing rights did not prove the student’s intent to harass.  The student did not reasonably expect the principal to view any postings by either joining the private group or viewing her public profile. 
 

 

The main thrust of the Indiana Supreme Court’s opinion was an understanding of how MySpace operates.  A party’s failure to understand how these social networking sites actually work can break their case. 

 
 The Supreme Court of Iowa also weighed in on a social networking case.  The case’s key issues centered on proving the elements of a criminal conspiracy as well as the conspiracy exception to the hearsay rule.  The hearsay at issue was party invitations sent from Facebook.[2]

 
 A group of college students were holding a house party, for which they posted an invitation on Facebook. The college students planned to charge admission and split the party profits.  The students bought beer and made JELL-O shots for the partygoers.   
One attendee, a-20 year-old student who drank at the party, later killed another person on her drive home.  The college students who planned the party were charged with serving alcohol to persons under the legal drinking age.  The charge also stated that the party hosts knew that the invited partygoers would include people under the legal drinking age. 

 
 On discretionary review, the Iowa Supreme Court addressed the elements to criminal conspiracy and the conspiracy exception to the hearsay rule.  The Iowa Supreme Court held that the co-conspirator exception to the hearsay rule applied to agreement to do a lawful act in an unlawful manner; in this case, sending out party invitations on Facebook.

 
 State courts are actively facing cases involving social networking sites.  These cases will continue to grow in number, ranging from defamation, trade secret violations and everything else that fuels both criminal and civil litigation.  Lawyers can expect courts to require expert testimony on how social networking sites work.  Without this evidence and intimate knowledge of how the sites operate, parties might fail to prove their cases. 




       

[1] A.B. v. State, 885 N.E.2d 1223 (Indiana, May 13, 2008)
[2] State v. Tonelli, 2008 WL 2152529 (Iowa, May 23, 2008))

Roadblocks on the World Wide Web

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

FromCTSumm_Wheel-BlogHeader.jpg

 

One recent court order required Georgetown University to turn over student ISP addresses to Warner Brothers Records in a copyright infringement suit.[i]  Warner Brothers sought to identify students who illegally traded copyrighted material on a peer-to-peer network.  Comcast Cable and AT&T both have engaged in content blocking of online activity under the color of blocking peer-to-peer sharing to protect copyrights or bandwidth issues.[ii]

 
The issue of content blocking attacks the very spirit of “network neutrality,” the premise that the internet is network free of restrictions.[iii]  However, copyright protection and file sharing issues go back to the late 1990s with the original Napster decisions.  Moreover, the fact Napster “lost” in the late 1990s paved the way for iTunes and other .99 cent music downloads to turn into a major industry. 

 
Content blocking is a hot topic that raises emotions.  Most individuals have no problem with copyright protection.  Blood begins to boil with internet service providers deciding they are going to block any particular content.  This runs the gauntlet from copyright protection to enforcing laws in the People’s Republic of China that restrict searching for specific content. Nightmare scenarios begin to unfold at the idea of a company backing a particular Presidential candidate over another.  

 
This story is far from over.  Comcast Cable is being investigated by the FCC for its content blocking actions.  Yahoo was dressed down as “spineless” at a Congressional hearing for turning over email that landed Chinese dissidents in prison.[iv]
The issue of content blocking will be the subject of litigation, Congressional investigation, and market factors for a long time to come. 




     

[i] Warner Brothers Records, Inc., v. Does 1-6, 2007 WL 4170572 (D.D.C.)
[ii] AT&T Looking at Internet Filtering,” Associated Press, January 23, 2008 and “FCC asks Comcast about Internet Filter,” Associated Press, January 15, 2008. 
[iii] Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_neutrality#_note-BERNDEF visited on January 28, 2008
[iv] “Rep. Tom Lantos Blasts Yahoo,” John Boudreau, Mercury News, November 6, 2007.

If I Represented Victoria Lindsay

Saturday, May 31st, 2008

From CTSumm_Wheel-BlogHeader.jpg

I recently posted on YouTube videos being used as exhibits that highlighting illegal conduct.1  I regret having an example so quickly. 

Eight teenagers were arrested for beating a teenage girl in Lakeland, Florida.  The youth beat up the victim so they could make a YouTube video.

The assault included one of the female attackers striking the victim on the head several times and then slamming the victim’s head into a wall, rendering her unconscious.  Three other teens forced the victim into a car and took her to another location. 2 Footage of the attack is available with most of the news articles covering the story. 

This savage total abandonment of humanity was some sick lust to post something on YouTube. 

I wish a painless and quick recovery to the victim.  I wish the district attorney handling this case total success. 

The civil lawsuit that will likely follow will not rival anything like Enron, the Southwest Airlines safety scandal, or the White House missing email cases when it comes to electronically stored information.  It does have e-Discovery I would seek as a plaintiff attorney for the victim.  Just because a case does not involve a multinational corporation does not mean small cases do not have e-Discovery. 

If I were the district attorney or the plaintiff attorney, I would seek the following electronically stored information:

            Cell Phone Text Messages: Teenagers communicate by text messages.  There is a complex shorthand language that will require some translation, but these messages might show a conspiracy between the teenage attackers.  This may require an expert to copy the cell phones or a third party subpoena to the cell phone company to acquire the text messages. 

            Cell Phone Photos or Video: It is difficult to find a cell phone that does not take photos or shoot video.  Any exciting clips may show further evidence of guilt.  A defense lawyer might find statements by co-defendants urging the attack to stop. 

            Instant messages: Third party experts might be required to copy instant message history from the defendants’ computer hard drives. 

            Blog postings: Teenagers communicate via posting on social networking sites such as MySpace.  These sites allow users to post “tags” on their “friends” pages communicating plans, meetings, or other statements.  I would have an expert copy each teenager’s webpage to seek each blog posting and tags for any evidence showing a plan to assault the victim.

            YouTube Videos: I would have an investigator review every posting by any defendants on YouTube and copy potential party admissions.  If these youth were planning to post an attack on YouTube, there might be video to show their plans. 

The above are just a few ideas.  Even though this isn’t a large case or a very complex one, it still contains e-discovery and attorneys should not forget that.

I hope the district attorney handling the case and the plaintiff attorney seek computer experts to gather any possible electronically stored information. 

Go do justice. 


    

    

2 “8 Teens Charged in Videotaped Attack,” AP, April 8, 2008, lasted visited http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080408/ap_on_re_us/teen_beating

 

Right of Petition in Cyber Space

Wednesday, January 9th, 2008

The Right to Petition the government for redress of grievances is the often forgotten clause of the First Amendment. This “ignored” Fundamental Right to petition elected officials to set right what is wrong is being dramatically enhanced by the power of blogs, YouTube videos, and social networking sites.

A Brief History of the Right to Petition

The “Right to Petition” is the last clause of the First Amendment, stating that Congress shall not restrict the right to “…petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” In the simplest sense, it is the Right to Complain. While the Right to Petition is not that simple, the basic application of the Right was for citizens to go door to door with a petition on an issue, then send their petitions to their Congressmen.

The abolitionist movement in the 1830s is best early example of the Right to Petition. Those fighting the horrors of slavery petitioned Congress on this wrong. The number of petitions was actually moderate, until Congress began tabling those petitions to appease Southern interests. Petitions exploded after the ban.

The “Gag Rule” was one of the first major challenges to the “Right to Petition.” The “Gag Rule” required all petitions on the subject of slavery to be tabled, violating the spirit if not the letter of the First Amendment. This silencing effect on the abolitionist movement caused an explosion of anti-slavery petitions through the 1840s.

There are many heroes who defended the First Amendment in this period. One was former President turned Congressman John Quincy Adams and another Congressman Joshua R. Giddings from Ohio. President Adams fierce defense of the right would earn him the nickname “Old Man Eloquent” and other unprecedented honors for a 19th Century statesmen. Congressman Giddings would later have a roommate in his congressional boarding house named Lincoln.

The Right to Petition has been the beginning of virtually all the great moments that define American history: Abolitionist Movement. Women’s Suffrage. The Civil Rights Movement.

The Right to Petition in the 21st Century

Alexis De Tocqueville noted that Americans of all walks of life have opinions on everything. This classic American trait has exploded in cyberspace. Wikipedia cites there are 112 million blogs tracked by the search engine Technorati as of December 2007. All of those blogs range from online diaries, to political commentary to people just sharing their views on the world.

The ability of any person to comment on a grievance they think the government must redress can be instantly shared with a large online community. Government officials testifying before Congress have instant commentary on their statements. Moreover, video blogs (vlogs) can make a plea for action deeply personal beyond a simple petition.

The power of technology has not been lost on politicians. Both candidates for the US Senate in Virginia announced their campaigns on YouTube. Presidential Candidates from both parties experienced “YouTube” questions during the primaries. Candidates have also hosted town hall style meetings on MySpace.

The ability to “blog” about a “grievance” can bring attention and government action prior than any point in our history. Bloggers can petition the government with lightning speed and effect just as issues have exploded because of the media (example, Terri Schiavo’s case ultimately prompting legislative action by both the state of Florida and Congress). Bloggers attacking Trent Lott’s statements at Strom Thurmond’s birthday helped drive the media storm that ended Senator Lott’s career as Majority Leader. Ironically enough, a blogger in Iowa turned Mike Huckabee’s victory night into a bitter interview for one of his advisors. Ed Rollins on January 3 had his lunchtime discussion overheard by a blogger in a restaurant. The blogger posted the strategy plans she overheard that were the subject of at least one uncomfortable televised interview.

Americans are not afraid to speak their minds. This has caused a problem for bloggers facing liable suits, invasion of privacy claims, and other legal challenges. However, the power of the blog gives individuals an incredible power to seek redress of grievances by organizing with limited resources and a claim to right a wrong.