Sunday, April 14, 2013

France: Recourse for Deformation on Facebook Will Only Succeed in Case of Many Friends


According to the French Supreme Court, insults posted on social networks are not statements made in public. The insulted party can therefore not sue for defamation of character or public insult. 

The case involved employees who posted insulting texts about their employer on Facebook. They were fired and a lower court upheld the dismissal arguing that the employees had publicly insulted their ex-employer.

The Supreme Court overturned the verdict, arguing that the texts of the employees were only visible for friends. It was therefore part of private communications. It reasoned that the statements could only be accessed by persons that were authorized by the account holder, and therefore not be read by the general public.

The verdict does not clarify what exactly the difference between private and public communication is. Statements made on a Facebook-page that can be accessed by the general public, can still be considered to be private if the account holder has a “small circle” of friends.

The employees in question celebrated the verdict. The penalty for public insults can reach Euro 12,000 per incident under French law, while a non-public insult carries a fine of maximum Euro 38. Racist insults made in public are punishable with a fine of up to Euro 45,000 plus prison time.

In France, it will be harder for employers to fired employees that post derogatory statements or insults about them on their Facebook-pages.

(Image courtesy of Tigerlily Flatform)