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Can They Use Your Website In A TV Broadcast
About Scams?
by: Elena Petrova
When you
designed your website, you probably dreamt
about how wonderful it would be if one day a
popular TV program featured it, and you
would become famous overnight, and make lots
of $$$.
Well, practice
shows that your dream for your website to be
featured on national TV can indeed come
true, but NOT exactly in the way you
imagined!
A couple of
questions for you to answer:
-
Can your
website be used, without your permission,
in a broadcast about scams?
-
Can your
personal photo, without you knowing about
it, be displayed in a TV program about
illegal activities?
If you think
“No way!”, think again – it already happens!
And even more – it may turn out to be
absolutely legal!!!
You wouldn’t
think about it this way, would you? You
probably think that if such a thing happens
to you, you can sue the TV program and
retire young and rich?
What a
misconception!
Now, let me
elaborate a little on the subject of
defamation and defamation law, how it works
offline and online.
The
relationship between online and offline
Media is very young, and therefore,
unregulated. In fact, online publications
are legally recognized as a public media on
its own. This means, a publication of a
defamatory statement on your website, forum
or mailing list CAN be prosecuted in the
same fashion as a publication in a
newspaper.
But now, since
Internet is considered a public media, any
information that is published on your
website may be also considered as being in a
*public domain*, which means ANY information
that is available online may be used by
another media publication in their review of
other publications. The use of this
information will be legal.
What does it
mean for YOU?
It means that
a TV program or a newspaper can use a
snapshot of your website in their
publication or broadcast. They can use
images of your website, and they are legally
allowed to do it!
A TV program,
for example, can show pages of your website
when talking about the industry trends or to
illustrate a topic of the broadcast.
Now, what if
the program is about SCAMS in your industry?
For example,
what if a TV program decided to highlight
fraud in delivering merchandise or services
purchased via Internet?
The TV
broadcast could show your website in the
beginning of the program, as one of many
websites delivering this type of merchandise
or services, and then go onto discussing
fraud issues and interviews with victims of
online scams.
It is apparent
that displaying the pages of your website in
such a context could hurt your reputation,
even if the program did not name your
website and only used its web pages as
background images.
Legally, a TV
program is allowed to use the pages of your
website in a broadcast. Are they allowed to
use the pages of your website in the context
of illegal activities?
This is an
uncertain issue.
As we already
said, the relationship between online and
offline media don’t have specific
regulations.
Normally, a
media publication is allowed to use any
factual content related to a matter of
public interest.
Since most
illegal activities and their prevention ARE
a matter of public interest, the media
publication has the privileged defence of
*public interest matter*, should you voice
your disagreement with the use of your
website and decide to sue the program for
defamation.
Proving in
court that the TV program was defamatory for
you will not be easy. You will have to
present hard evidence that such a
publication could hurt your reputation as
the owner of that business, and that there
were people who identified you as the owner
of the business shown in the program and
that the program indeed portrayed you in the
way that some people would *shun, avoid or
ridicule* you because of the way your
business was portrayed. You must also prove
that such use of your website was unfair and
did not fall under the privilege of *fair
comment*, available to Media. You also may
be required, depending on the defamation
laws in your country or state, to present
the evidences of monetary loss due to the
broadcast of the alleged defamation.
Defamation
cases against large media corporations can
cost hundreds of thousands of dollars,
because of the tactics that those media
corporations use to prevent the plaintiff
(the person who believes he was defamed)
from getting his case to the stage of court
hearing. The plaintiff has to spend a
fortune on lawyers (you do not want a low
cost lawyer defending your defamation case
against a large, experienced in legal
battles media corporation), before the case
is ready to proceed to the court and all
requests of the defendant are satisfied.
Then another fortune is to be spent on court
hearings, which may also be sabotaged – of
course, in legally permitted ways.
Even then, the
outcome of your defamation case is
unpredictable. It will, firstly, depend on
your lawyers. Secondly, it will depend on
your witnesses, who, by the time your case
goes to the court, which can be a few years
down the line, can forget most things
related to the defamation issue, and
therefore appear unreliable. And then the
large media corporation still has the
privilege of *fair comment* and *public
interest matter*.
At the end of
the day, if your defamation case is
unsuccessful, you will be required to pay
the legal fees of the defendant, which will
double your legal bill, and can easily reach
payments of $200,000-300,000.
Now, you can
see that dealing with a large media
corporation in a legal way can be suicidal
for a small online business.
So, what can
you do to prevent using the contents of your
website in a way you disapprove?
A mere
copyright notice is not enough in this case.
You need to
employ your imagination and make sure you
spell in an unambiguous way that any use of
your website content can be contemplated
only with your explicit written permission.
Add this statement to your Terms Of Use
Agreement (if you do not have one, write it
NOW!). Make sure there is a link to this
Agreement on every page of your website.
For example:
* Your use of
www.xyz.com website specifies that you agree
to comply with this Terms Of Use Agreement.
Every time you use www.xyz.com website you
void to confirm your agreement with this
Terms Of Use Agreement. The content
available through www.xyz.com website is the
sole property of XYZ, Ltd, and is protected
by copyright, trademark and other
intellectual property laws. Except as
otherwise explicitly agreed in writing, XYZ
-owned content received through the XYZ
website may be downloaded, displayed,
reformatted and printed for your personal,
non-commercial use only, through the means
of your home computer. You agree not to
reproduce, retransmit, distribute, sell,
publish, broadcast or circulate, or in any
way disclose the information received
through the XYZ website to anyone, without
XYZ 's prior written consent. All
information published on XYZ website should
be treated as private and confidential and
the publication of such information on XYZ
website does not specify that this
information is in the public domain. Any
reproduction, retransmission, distribution,
selling, publishing, broadcasting or
circulating of the information received
through XYZ website, without explicit
written permission of XYZ, will be illegal
and prosecuted as such. *
If desired, a
note that the information on the site should
NOT be considered as being in *public
domain* can be added to your Privacy Policy.
It may also
help to create a special page named “press”
and place there your press release, which
you would like Media to use if they want to
make a reference to your website. Place the
link “Press” on your home page where it
cannot be missed. Request them to contact
you prior to any use of your website in
their publications. Put there all your
contact details including phone and fax and
the name of the person responsible for press
enquires. Include on this page the
information that you disapprove using your
website contents and images, unless you gave
your explicit permission in writing, and
that the information on your website is NOT
in the public domain.
This of course
may not help against unscrupulous reporters,
if they REALLY want to use YOUR SITE in a
negative context; but in case if the
reporters just browsing the Internet for a
picture to use, they will rather select a
site that does not have this warning.
Even if they
use your site despite the warning, you will
have a much better case and can complain to
a broadcasting authority that the program
breached privacy or other regulations
specified in the rules for a broadcast in
your country.
Media has
multiple privileges in defamation cases, and
this you cannot change. But as website
owners we have our own privileges, too!
We have the
privilege of writing our own Terms Of Use.
Internet is a much less regulated field than
any offline business, where you seldom have
a way to make every customer sign your
disclaimer and terms of use prior to using
your service. On the Internet, by the mere
use of your website, visitors may be bound
by your Terms Of Use Agreement.
Don’t miss out
on writing YOUR own rules of the game!
Copyright 2003
Elena Petrova
About The Author
Elena Petrova is the
founder of the website
MediaDefamation.ORG – a website
devoted to dealing with defamation
issues online. Visit
http://www.mediadefamation.org today
to learn about defamation law and how it
works in regard to online publications.
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