Australia Supreme Court rules that Google is a publisher, and orders them to 
pay $40,000 in damages.

By Didi Rankovic   
https://reclaimthenet.org/australia-supreme-court-rules-google-is-publisher


Australia is one of the countries – along, notably, with Germany – where 
traditional publishers are eager to go after Google, as being an unfair 
competitor, and miss no chance to go after the giant on those grounds.

In the US, the debate over whether social networks should be considered 
publishers is a complex and often heated affair. But under current rules, they 
are not: they are merely platforms who publish third-party content and are 
shielded from legal liability for it.

In Australia, they don’t seem to have those kinds of dilemmas, as the Supreme 
court in the state of Victoria issued a ruling saying that Google is indeed a 
publisher.

The case was not brought by some publishing corporation: the definition 
appeared almost as a sidenote that emerged during George Defteros’ successful 
lawsuit, where he accused Google of allowing his name to show up in search 
results associating him with criminals.

Defteros is a lawyer who in 2004 had “gangland figures” among his clients, and 
wound up charged with conspiracy in the murder of several persons from the 
local underworld.

This is something that was covered at the time in articles published by The 
Age, and even though the charges were dropped the following year, more than a 
decade later, these articles and links continue to top Google’s search.

Not only was this a case of Google defaming the lawyer, the court said, but 
also threw the “Google is a publisher” qualification into the ruling.

And, the well-known and equally controversial in Europe “right to be forgotten” 
principle also seems to be appearing in some form in this Australian legal 
decision.

Google’s defense, as it often is, was that its search algorithms are basically 
autonomous entities – because they are automated. (The old question, of course, 
is automated by whom? And the answer: by Google. And, these algorithms are not 
only written once, but also often tweaked.)

But the giant said in its defense that it was “not an intentional communicator 
of words or images, particularly if a user clicked through to another website.”

However, Justice Melinda Richards was unimpressed as she awarded Defteros 
$40,000 in damage, and declared Google not to be “a passive tool” but a 
publisher of its search results, adding:

“It is designed by humans who work for Google to operate in the way it does, 
and in such a way that identified objectionable content can be removed, by 
human intervention.”

--
Cheers,
Stephen
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