- Joined
- Nov 14, 2019
i'm going to fund this like biden funds ukraine.
suspiciously.
suspiciously.
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Mine eyes have seen the glory of Null's filing in court
Josh is rolling out the hard disks where receipts of sneed are stored;
He hath loosed the fateful lightning of a Jewish lawyer's word:
His truth is marching on.
However, if there were made up claims of illegality, or allegations that can be proven to be untruthful then, there's more to work with, since that would be more akin to lying about unethical manufacturing processes or safety issues.
Not just that, and in addition to the "actual malice" bar I mentioned previously, there's the "substantial truth" bar from
The Kiwis marching five by fiveThe Kiwis go marching one by one
Hurrah, hurrah!
We taunt the trannies just for fun
Hurrah, hurrah!
The Kiwis go marching two by two
Hurrah, hurrah!
They'll know our wrath before we're through
Hurrah, hurrah!
The Kiwis go marching three by three
Hurrah, hurrah!
Dong-Gone will face his destiny
Hurrah, hurrah!
The Kiwis go marching four by four
Hurrah, hurrah!
It's now Total Retard War
Hurrah, hurrah!
Hurrah! Hurrah!
Claiming that the site hosts illegal content, creates imminent threats to human life, drives people to suicide (especially if said person is found to be alive) etc.What would made up claims about the kiwifarms even look like?
Unless the news got the information from them in the first place, especially given the admission of the group as an organized campaign.And how would one prove they knew they were wrong, given everything that's said about the farms in the news?
Claiming that the site hosts illegal content, creates imminent threats to human life, drives people to suicide (especially if said person is found to be alive) etc.
Unless the news got the information from them in the first place, especially given the admission of the group as an organized campaign.
FIRE may even take the case. Skokie was a landmark ACLU case. FIRE is itching for their own.That's right. FIRE is trying to be what ACLU used to be and have recently changed their name from "Foundation for Individual Rights in Education" to "Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression". And everyone knows that autists posting on the internet is the same as neo nazis marching in Skokie.
Would that actually be considered relevant by the courts to a claim about interference? LFJ's lawyer would probably object to any sort of discovery request along those lines or ask the court to keep it sealed.tbh i'm banking on LFJ breaking down once proceedings turn to discovery. A lot of the points will be about accusations against her, and null would be able to get testimonies from everyone affected by LFJ, potentially putting it into the public record.
Skokie was much more of an edge case in that arguably the residents of the Jewish neighborhood in question were a captive audience being forced to endure a Nazi march. And yet the ACLU took the case and won it.FIRE may even take the case. Skokie was a landmark ACLU case. FIRE is itching for their own.
I would love for the troons to bring up Byuu in court.
The clown show that was the twitter posts providing an exact timeline of when the 'death' happened, the fact Byuu being American is indisputable, and the Government of Japan saying no Americans died in Japan that month...that would single handedly destroy one of the biggest pillars of lies against the site right there.
Claiming that the site hosts illegal content, creates imminent threats to human life, drives people to suicide (especially if said person is found to be alive) etc.
Unless the news got the information from them in the first place, especially given the admission of the group as an organized campaign.
Wouldn't rule it out, especially if it can be used to establish motives and interests.Would that actually be considered relevant by the courts to a claim about interference? LFJ's lawyer would probably object to any sort of discovery request along those lines or ask the court to keep it sealed.
In determining whether an actor's conduct in intentionally interfering with a contract or a prospective contractual relation of another is improper or not, consideration is given to the following factors:
(a) the nature of the actor's conduct,
(b) the actor's motive,
(c) the interests of the other with which the actor's conduct interferes,
(d) the interests sought to be advanced by the actor
Even if they're smart enough not to, if they've been using that allegation in their email campaigns there could very well still be a process to determine if it was truthful. Even if not found technically defamatory (not a reckless disregard of truth), any new information from the discovery process should be interesting and can have other effects outside of the case.I would love for the troons to bring up Byuu in court.
The claims that were made to service providers would have to be revealed via discovery. When I saidWhat sort of illegal content have they claimed Kiwifarms hosts?
I was making the point that there would be a difference between if the emails contained true facts versus if they had made up claims, since truth can be used as a defense, without asserting that they did make up stuff in their emails to the service providers.likely revolving around the wording used throughout the campaign.
[...]
However, if there were made up claims of illegality, or allegations that can be proven to be untruthful then, there's more to work with, since that would be more akin to lying about unethical manufacturing processes or safety issues.
The court can try to find that out, ask CF how they came to that conclusion etc.I thought Cloudflare was the one who said the stuff about imminent threats to human life during the Keffals thing. Did LFJ also say something about that?
The information coming from the discovery would still be useful outside of the case though, so it's not entirely pointless.Remember, even if they make false claims about the farms, It's not enough to prove that the claims are inaccurate. Null has to prove to the jury that LFJ knowingly lied about that stuff. Every news article about the Kiwifarms is negative, and there's no way that group is behind every story. Those claims were circulating long before LFJ started the organized campaign.
They would probably want to seal the discovery because of that.Even if they're smart enough not to, if they've been using that allegation in their email campaigns there could very well still be a process to determine if it was truthful. Even if not found technically defamatory (not a reckless disregard of truth), any new information from the discovery process should be interesting and can have other effects outside of the case.
Well there are only a few possible sorts of illegal content. I think it they are nonconsenual pornography (revenge porn or CP), IP violations, and financial fraud. Not sure what else, maybe credible threats and malware/hacking.The claims that were made to service providers would have to be revealed via discovery.
In addition there is a concept of someone being impossible to defame. It's possible for a person to have a reputation so bad, that it would be legally impossible to defame them.Even then, there might be additional difficulty proving defamation should the Kiwi Farms be considered as a public figure, since the level of proof is raised to the reckless disregard of truth instead of it merely being wrong.
What sort of illegal content have they claimed Kiwifarms hosts?
I thought Cloudflare was the one who said the stuff about imminent threats to human life during the Keffals thing. Did LFJ also say something about that?
I'm pretty sure that doesn't work when the people being sued are part of the defamation.In addition there is a concept of someone being impossible to defame. It's possible for a person to have a reputation so bad, that it would be legally impossible to defame them.
You can want what you want, that doesn't mean you get it. If this gets to discovery there's not really any reason for most things to be sealed. This isn't the case of a minor getting raped. Pretty much everything involved should already be public knowledge if it's true. I'm having a hard time coming up with something that they could have said that would be both true and not public knowledge. If they're saying something that's not public knowledge it's most likely something they made upThey would probably want to seal the discovery because of that.
The Kiwis marching six by sixThe Kiwis marching five by five
Hurrah, hurrah!
We'll make them wish they'd un-alive-d
Hurrah! Hurrah!
The Kiwis marching five by five -
We'll make them weep and wail and cry -
As they all go plunging down...
In a noose...
And their grave - will be carved - with their dead name, doom-doom-doom-doooom...
So help me God I'm tempted to do the vocals for this...
I don't think the court is going to treat an error about present vs past tense as reckless disregard for the truth.Two specific things I remember from when they were starting up their email spam pressure campaigns, both relating to uploaded files but not any user posts. I think in both cases it was a separate ftp server. The first, egregious one was pointing out a link to a Mister Metokur video with something like "Bathtub Boy" in the title trying to imply that, absent any context, the video is CP. The other was related to archives of zoosadist content that probably violated an animal crush video law. Basically it treats animal abuse videos similar to CSAM, so there isn't really a "saving the evidence" exception to that. But even if a valid point, the files were removed. "Hosts" would be a lie, "hosted" would be truthful.
Kiwifarms (and Null) have had a bad reputation long before LFJ came around. As far as I am aware, people like Vordrak are not LFJ in disguise.I'm pretty sure that doesn't work when the people being sued are part of the defamation.
"Your Honor, we called this man a child molester so many times that his reputation is beyond ruining. Clearly, he cannot sue us."
They could try to convince the court to do so, not sure what grounds they'd use to keep if Byuu was alive under seal though.They would probably want to seal the discovery because of that.
Yes it's hard to prove, but them being forced to answer questions could reveal more information. Did CF have anything else to go by other than that 1 post? If they did believe the post to be true and were acting in good faith, did they involve law enforcement? etc.In regards to defamation, it seems impossible to prove, unless they outright admit they were lying.
Sure it was probably just an dumb lurker who decided to fedpost in Keffal's thread and Cloudflare probably overreacted, but it was a real post.
But it's relevant to the case to show if CF dropped KF because of the interference or if it was done out of their own volition.(And I don't think Cloudflare is being sued).
Not really going to speculate further on that part, since I just brought them up as illustrative examples.Well there are only a few possible sorts of illegal content.
If you are referring toIn addition there is a concept of someone being impossible to defame. It's possible for a person to have a reputation so bad, that it would be legally impossible to defame them.
Then would the assertion be that the campaign would cause the same amount of damage to KF if the false statements were left out?The rule of substantial truth is based on a recognition that falsehoods which do no incremental damage to the plaintiff's reputation do not injure the only interest that the law of defamation protects.
[....]
Falsehoods that do not harm the plaintiff's reputation more than a full recital of the true facts about him would do are thus not actionable.
(Haynes v. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.)
Why not? Big difference between saying someone was a fugitive vs someone is a fugitive. The distinction between past and present here paints a completely different picture, and reasonable course of action.I don't think the court is going to classify confusing present and past tense as reckless disregard for the truth.
If you are referring to
Then would the assertion be that the campaign would cause the same amount of damage to KF if the false statements were left out?
The doctrine has developed along two pathways. The first—the “issue-specific” approach—bars relief for a plaintiff whose reputation related to a specific subject matter is so tarnished that he or she cannot be further injured by allegedly false statements on the matter. The second— the “incremental harm” doctrine—bars relief where the challenged statements harm a plaintiff’s reputation far less than unchallenged statements in the same article or broadcast.
If a person has no reputation to protect, then he or she may be considered “libel-proof.”
You can easily claim you made a grammatical mistake or that you forgot they removed the content.Why not? Big difference between saying someone was a fugitive vs someone is a fugitive. The distinction between past and present here paints a completely different picture, and reasonable course of action.