By - Mathew J. Schwartz
Category - Facebook Application
Source - http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/client/240001792
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| Facebook Application |
On May 30, the high court agreed with Brookes' request that Facebook
should be forced to reveal the identities of the alleged harassers,
including their names, email addresses, and IP addresses, allowing her
to trace their real identities via requests to their service providers.
As a result, Brookes would be able to file a private suit against at least four people who allegedly wrote the harassing online posts.
According to legal experts, her case is the first-ever private
prosecution in Britain involving online harassment, although Facebook
reportedly has yet to receive the official legal papers, which must be
served in the United States, since that's the primary place Facebook
stores its data.
[ Does Facebook care what its users think? Read How Facebook Ignores Its Users. ]
Reached for comment about the case, a Facebook official stressed that the social network encourages people to use their real names
when creating accounts. "Nothing is more important to us than the
safety of the people [who] use our service. Unlike many other websites
and forums, Facebook has a real-name culture, which provides greater
accountability and a safer and more trusted environment," said Facebook
spokesman Iain Mackenzie via email.
What happens when harassment or other types of inappropriate posts get
made online? "We are clear that there is no place for bullying or
harassment on Facebook and we respond aggressively to reports of
potential abuse," Mackenzie said. "We provide our users with the tools
to report abuse on every page and the option to block people from having
any further contact with them. Reports involving harassment are
prioritized, reviewed by a trained team of reviewers, and [the harasser
is] removed if they violate our terms."
But Brookes contended that Facebook's complaint-reporting system was
unequal to the task of dealing with serious cases of harassment,
especially since she had trouble keeping up with--and reporting all
of--the abusive content, and she couldn't block the abuse because she
needed to make screen grabs to illustrate to Facebook what was
happening.
"A few days after the fake profile started, I realized I needed proper
legal help about this because the reporting system on Facebook doesn't
work. There's nowhere else for you to contact," Brookes told The Telegraph
newspaper in Britain. She also told the newspaper that her attackers
were well-organized and appeared to operate with impunity. "These people
are not random people who are bored. These are a group of people that
share information and pick people out and target them on purpose," she
said.
Brookes' law firm said the case highlighted the need--at least in
Britain--for some type of mechanism that would help police Internet
abuse and unmask taunters. In particular, it noted that after Brookes
went to local police in Sussex, England, with hundreds of pages of
printouts of the abusive comments, they'd told her that there was
nothing they could do. "After getting involved, we contacted Facebook on
several occasions and the fake profile page that was set up in Ms.
Brookes' name was successfully taken down," read some of the details of
the case released by Bains Cohen.
But after that takedown, someone posted new comments--not on
Facebook--using Brookes' name, image, and real address, along with lewd
comments about her daughter. When Brookes again alerted local police,
they offered to install panic alarms in her home, but according to her
lawyers, otherwise they "had no idea what to do."
"There is a clear anomaly in the law and the way in which Internet abuse
is treated and investigated by the police--depending on whether the
victim is in the public eye, or an ordinary member of the public," said Bains Cohen.
Source - http://www.informationweek.com/news/security/client/240001792

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