On Thu, 22 Oct 2015 13:19:14 +0200
Laura Creighton <l...@openend.se> wrote:


>  One thing to recall is that 'who/what can be defamed' 
> varies a lot.  In Sweden you cannot defame a corporation.  The
> defamation regulations in the Penal Code only apply to private
> individuals.  If you cannot bleed, you cannot be defamed.  In certain
> situations the Swedish Marketing Act may be used to stop defamation of
> a corporate entity -- if a rival has, without basis, tainted a rival's
> reputation -- but this sort of protection is limited.  This makes
> Sweden an attractive place to discuss Mosanto, and their evil
> practices, even though, like a lot of places Sweden's defamation
> law does not have a clause saying roughly 'if it is true, it isn't
> defamation'.  Just 'intent to villify' is enough.  
> 
> Laura

Corporations also cannot be defamed here in Australia (but only since
2006). Truth is a complete defence; but on the other hand,
intent is irrelevant. This has the unfortunate consequence that by
mocking a fictional character you run the risk of defaming a real
person who happens to have the same name, or even similar
characteristics, even if you have never heard of them. 

-- 
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to