NiemanLab.org: ‘Why news orgs can police comments and not get sued’
January 20th, 2009Posted by Judith Townend in Editors' pick, Events, Online Journalism
NiemanLab.org publishes a video of David Ardia, director of the Citizen Media Law Project at Harvard, at a conference of New England newspaper editors and also provides a full transcript. He explains Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act (CDA 230) and ‘how it provides wide-ranging immunity to web-site publishers for what goes on in their comments,’ the NiemanLab reports.
Tags: Citizen Media Law Project, Citizen Media Law Project at Harvard, David Ardia, Harvard, web-site publishers
Similar posts:
- BeatBlogging.Org: Editors are not liable for changing comments
- Web Publishist: Why group-wide templates are bad news for newspaper publishers
- FTM: Google’s Eric Schmidt leaves newspaper conference ‘unscathed’
- Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Economising in spending, not fairness
- Editors Weblog: The launch of Slate.fr in beta

February 1st, 2009 at 11:26 am
[...] Posted an item NiemanLab.org: ‘Why news orgs can police comments and not get sued’ [...]