Man Fined $4,000 For 'Liking' Defamatory Posts on Facebook (cnn.com) 210
In what appears to be a first, a court in Switzerland has fined a man the equivalent of over $4,000 just for clicking the "like" button on what a judge said were defamatory Facebook comments. From a report: The court in Zurich found that the man indirectly endorsed and further distributed the comments by using the ubiquitous Facebook "like" button. The man, who was not named in the court's statement, "liked" several posts written by a third party that accused an animal rights activist of antisemitism, racism and fascism. In court, the man was not able to prove that the claims were accurate or could reasonably be held to be true. "The defendant clearly endorsed the unseemly content and made it his own," a statement from the court said. The court fined the man a total of 4,000 Swiss francs ($4,100). He has the right to appeal his sentence. Facebook said the case had "no direct link" to the company, and a spokesperson declined to comment.
Good (Score:5, Funny)
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i guess just the shame is not enough anymore.
Re:Good (Score:5, Funny)
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Subscribe
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Share on a friend's Timeline...
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This is Why (Score:3, Funny)
This is why Trump and REAL Americans want absolutely nothing to do with you Eurotrash.
#covfefe
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"Like with his treasonous collaboration with Russia's crimes in the USA,"
Your Trump aren't you? Or do you also like to say stupid things?
"exposed as a traitor by firing FBI director James Comey"
Are you sure you are not Trump? This unsupported drivel sounds like something Trump would say. And every anti-Trump protester have been wanting Comey fired since last July. And now when he is actually fired they complain and accuse. These people change sides and reverse course using another set of facts faster than T
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Uranium One (Score:3, Interesting)
Bill and Hillary Clinton enriched themselves through shady deals with Russian oligarchs and Russian government, quite possibly using her power as then SecState to enable the deal while she was pocketing millions.
Even the NY Times described it thusly: "Cash Flowed to Clinton Foundation Amid Russian Uranium Deal"
"Whether the donations played any role in the approval of the uranium deal is unknown. But the episode underscores the special ethical challenges presented by the Clinton Foundation, headed by a forme
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Washington Post is fake news, so...
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Well they sure go out of their way to manufacture news. And do so quite often, which makes me wonder how come people in the US don't label them at the same or worse level then Fox. You can only print so many stories about muh-russians hacking electrical grids/xyz consipracy/running with basic things that are easily debunked/and things that didn't happen.
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http://covfefe.com/ [covfefe.com]
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Wow, that was fast.
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Russians want to co-operate and do business with Europe.
An alliance between Russian with its huge resources and population and Europe (especially Germany) with their capital and technology would totally dominate the US. That is the main reason why the US are setting Europe and Russia up against each other.
Divide and conquer.
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But it is a member of EFTA...
Who Will Think Of The Bots? (Score:3, Funny)
Who will think of the bots this will dramatically impact?
When Russian bots dream, they dream of oil burning sheep.
Think on them, before you fine too much.
Vast herds of Russian bots might go hungry, unable to pay their fines.
Will you help them?
That's a lot of value judgement... (Score:5, Interesting)
For one thing, does "liking" using the button imply endorsement? Does "like" mean what they think it means? Or was the person's intention? And what if it was inadvertent clicking?
What if the button was called "interesting..." instead?
You would think that a court would restrain itself and hesitate to rule, given so many possibilities of meaning and ambiguities here...
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... for a court to be putting into a "like" button.
For one thing, does "liking" using the button imply endorsement? Does "like" mean what they think it means? Or was the person's intention? And what if it was inadvertent clicking?
What if the button was called "interesting..." instead?
You would think that a court would restrain itself and hesitate to rule, given so many possibilities of meaning and ambiguities here...
http://legal-dictionary.thefre... [thefreedictionary.com]
Read the summary (Score:3, Informative)
The court in Zurich found that the man indirectly endorsed and further distributed the comments
Personally, I like the ruling. Slander is slander. Spreading false bullshit should be a punishable civil offense in the US, too.
Never inadvertantly caused a "like" click? (Score:2)
Trying to scroll FB on my phone I've accidentally liked or otherwise committed emoji actions. Just like I've accidentally caused videos to start playing, sites to be opened, etc.
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Re:Read the summary (Score:5, Interesting)
Then the button needs to be called "Endorse and support" and not "Like," so that it is explicit in its meaning to both the user and the viewer
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Re:Read the summary (Score:5, Insightful)
That may only be secondary to their intention, Facebook does a lot of weird stuff behind the scenes to create feeds and it's not always explicit as to what is the catalyst, and it may nor be the intention of the person, and may not be understood, that by using that function it will enact some other peripheral 'features'
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Then the button needs to be called "Endorse and support" and not "Like," so that it is explicit in its meaning to both the user and the viewer
That's not how Facebook's algorithm works. Clicking 'Like' means a post deserves a wider audience. It could be for so many reasons.
Similarly, I frequently upvote posts on Reddit because they deserve discussion, not because I agree with the assertion.
Slashdot is a bits less Bayesian - if I see a comment that needs refuting, but I am busy, I will often mark it 'intere
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I'd love to see that same decision enforced all over the world. It would really make people think twice before spreading all sorts of garbage. And if they didn't think twice, they'd be sued.
Anything that results in lawsuits whenever people get offended cannot be a good thing. You really should think this through.
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Anything that results in lawsuits whenever people get offended cannot be a good thing.
Possibly, but I am always amazed that in the US it is possible to publish the most vile and manipulative lies without any consequences. That cannot be a good thing either.
Re:Read the summary (Score:4, Insightful)
And if he clicked "angry" or "sad", indicating he didn't like the news, He'd still be "intentionally distributing" it to everyone in his network.
So even if he disapproved of the post and was angry about it, under your theory, he's still guilty.
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I disagree, AC. By hitting "Like", you're intentionally distributing whatever you "liked" to whoever is in your network. The effect is the same as posting something yourself. I think it's defamation, and again, I agree with this court. I'd love to see that same decision enforced all over the world. It would really make people think twice before spreading all sorts of garbage. And if they didn't think twice, they'd be sued.
I agree the "like" is promoting the message, and/but there's a more crucial issue.
How do we promote intelligence and truth and sanity and liberal humanistic values
without resorting to authoritarian fascist nazi tactics?
Because the more we go down the route of banning people's expression and making them pay for expressing the wrong thing, the more we go back to the Middle Ages where blasphemy was punished and so kept the ruling powers in control.
So what I'm saying is, you're wrong, yet I don't think you shou
Well it is in Europe... (Score:2)
So the feelz...
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I'm sorry, but this web site is for English speakers. If you'd like to try again to write a comment in English, I'd be happy to respond.
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I'm sorry, but this web site is for English speakers. If you'd like to try again to write a comment in English, I'd be happy to respond.
I gathered we were not speaking the same language when you asserted liking nonsense is the same as spreading it.
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Pushing a button that says "Like" on Facebook is disseminating something.
Sure is. It disseminates the fact U indicated you liked something.
The action is that you're publishing whatever it is for people to see.
Absolutely. It publishes the fact U indicated you liked something.
In a free society people get to troll and spew nonsense without fear of the states "fact" police catching up to them.
Free people get to call others names and make fun of them ESPECIALLY public figures who run PETA like organizations that are inherently lightning rods for controversy and disdain.
Free people get to express their undying love for whatever the hell they want incl
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What if the button was called "interesting..." instead?
I have mod points, but I'm not willing to try it to find out...
Re:That's a lot of value judgement... (Score:4, Interesting)
... for a court to be putting into a "like" button. For one thing, does "liking" using the button imply endorsement?
Exactly. You read a post which says someone you don't like is a child molester. You had no knowledge of that, but you're thrilled to find out. (I'm assuming you really disliked this person.) Therefore you really like the news the post reveals, so you click "Like". It turns out the story was not true. Why should you be guilty of slander? Like doesn't mean you think the news is true; it means you like the news.
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This is my understanding as well.
Truth isn't the only way to avoid a slander/defamation charge. You also can have a reasonable belief. I'd say "that guy posted it" is at least a piece of a "reasonable belief" defense.
But beyond that, does anyone really think "like" on facebook is the same as making the statement yourself? If I "like" a selfie, am I somehow posting a selfie? This is modestly incoherent.
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For one thing, does "liking" using the button imply endorsement? Does "like" mean what they think it means? Or was the person's intention? And what if it was inadvertent clicking?
Well if the post was an explicit accusation, opinion or call to action like "Spread the word, he's a child molester", "Hitler should have finished the job" or "Rape that slut" then it's pretty hard to not interpret a "Like" as an endorsement. Yes, in many cases it can be rather ambiguous what a like means but not every case.
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Agreed. "Like" does not necessarily mean I support the position of the poster. I may like the writing style or the use of a good argument. I may think it's something that more people should evaluate. I might "like" something so a friend feels better about themselves. I may believe that a site will show me more posts on a controversial topic if I click "like" or upvote it.
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... for a court to be putting into a "like" button.
For one thing, does "liking" using the button imply endorsement? Does "like" mean what they think it means? Or was the person's intention? And what if it was inadvertent clicking?
What if the button was called "interesting..." instead?
You would think that a court would restrain itself and hesitate to rule, given so many possibilities of meaning and ambiguities here...
Logically, just liking something is a statement and not promoting it (this all, btw, is in a country without a First Amendment.)
But in this, I think they were relying on the like button mechanically adding to a popularity counter, or some other such thing, which increased the number of people it was passed on to as a story for their scroll walls. Hence to like is to help redistribute the offending speech, and thus legally actionable.
Wow, talk about shitting on free speech (Score:5, Informative)
Ok, is Switzerland, so maybe they have different laws from what I’m used to. But in the civilized world, we value free speech. The right to free speech often translates into the right to be a total asshole, but that’s the price we pay to ensure that well-meaning people don’t have their rights stomped on by a fascist government.
Now, speech can be INVOLVED in criminal behavior. For instance, libel and slander. These come down not to the speech but the consequences of the speech. You can “defame” a fictional character all you want, and you can say really asshole things about non-specific people.
In this specific case there’s this “third party” who said defamatory things about an animal rights activist — who are THEY? Why aren’t we hearing more about this third party? Why aren’t they in trouble? Why is some moron with a like button fined $4000 when the original defamer is left unscathed?
I’m really liberal, but this sounds like some of that SJW shit the conservatives are always going on about.
Re:Wow, talk about shitting on free speech (Score:4, Informative)
"Free speech" does not protect things like defamation of character, slander, libel, or inciting violence.
Free Speech and Violence (Score:3)
"Free speech" does not protect things like defamation of character, slander, libel, or inciting violence.
In the United States, free speech does not protect defamation, whether that defamation is slander or libel (two types of defamation).
Inciting violence is actually somewhat protected so long as it is not actually likely to occur. The government can ban "incitement to imminent lawless action that is likely to occur" without violating the First Amendment, at least under 1969 Supreme Court precedent that is good law today.
However, there are a LOT of ins and outs to the law of free speech in the United States. I
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Except that was done by the original party. Based on Swiss law, Slashdot is committing libel by publishing this whole nonsense. If you can't information about nonsense, even if it that nonsense might include the fact that someone slandered someone else, then journalism and free speech are pretty much meaningless.
Re: Wow, talk about shitting on free speech (Score:2)
Any countries that has "inciting violence" laws does not have free speech.
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We don't know anything about the third party. Maybe they're the subject of a separate case. Maybe they've already settled their differences. Maybe, and this is what I suspect, they're not in Switzerland and not within the reach of the Swiss courts.
But the guy in Switzerland is within reach of those courts, and if they think that he's breached their law - and they are the ultimate authority on that question, if nothing else - then they're completely within their rights to punish him for it.
Defamation is not
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Did Theovon fuck his hamster last week?
I'm only asking questions here.
--
BMO
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But in the civilized world, we value free speech.
Actually the vast majority of the world has no free speech civilised or otherwise. A lot of it has protected speech such as the right to bitch about your government, but very few places actually have a right to free speech.
Re: Wow, talk about shitting on free speech (Score:2)
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Oh, and you misspelled "civilised"
OED says both spellings are accepted, but the 'z' spelling is more common.
The American Heritage dictionary does not acknowledge the 's' spelling.
Google auto-corrects to the 'z' spelling.
Meriam-Webster doesn't seem to include the 's' spelling.
Wiktionary notes that the 's' spelling is "mostly British".
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Goddamn, do you always manage to be so angry? Your blood pressure must really be something.
Chilly in here (Score:2)
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Pretty soon the Internet will be filled with the sound of crickets.
... and you had better click their "like" button!
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"Fools" said I, "You do not know
Silence like a cancer grows
Hear my words that I might teach you,
Take my arms that I might reach you"
But my words like silent raindrops fell,
And echoed in the wells of silence
There go the mods (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't the Slashdot moderation system based on likes? If moderators can get sued for promoting a post, Slashdot isn't long for the Internet.
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Isn't the Slashdot moderation system based on likes? If moderators can get sued for promoting a post, Slashdot isn't long for the Internet.
If Slashdot were Swiss... This may come as a shock, but the Internet exists in many different legal jurisdictions.
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The EU and nations in the EU area have lawyers and reports sent to governments when free speech is attempted.
Wait for other nations to try out their blasphemy laws.
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The USA has freedom of speech and freedom after speech. The EU and nations in the EU area have lawyers and reports sent to governments when free speech is attempted. Wait for other nations to try out their blasphemy laws.
FYI - Switzerland is not part of the EU
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Only one word for this (Score:5, Insightful)
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That's two words, even if you did put them very close together.
Re:Only one word for this (Score:4, Informative)
That's two words, even if you did put them very close together.
It is a neologism, from the novel 1984. They combined a lot of different words together.
The reference is to the concept that having a thought, or an opinion can be a crime.
And if it is a crime to push the "like" button on a facebook page, it fits thoughtcrime to a T. This crininal must utilize crimestop in the future to rid himself of his illegal thoughts and illegal opinions. Then he will not be guilty of his terrible crimes.
Re:Only one word for this (Score:4, Insightful)
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No. It is a crime because pushing the LIKE button spreads the message. It isn't just that you liked it, it is that you published it to your network. You helped spread a false and defamatory statement. It is not thoughtcrime at all. It is an actual crime of promoting a lie, something that is punishable under US law also. The only thing new here is ruling that the LIKE button is a form of publication ... which it is.
Bullshit. So tell me exactly how many US citizens have been arrested for pushing the "like Button. Show me the statutes, and where "like" is publishing. I can't find them myself, so perhaps a superior European can show me.
Thoughtcrime it is unless you can show me who's been prosecuted here. We get it, you hate us. But that doesn't mean any old bullshit you care to spew is true.
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I never said that US citizens are arrested for pushing LIKE.
That's good, because unlike Switzerland, we aren't. There are mountains of ambiguity in it, even if it weren't considered free speech. Who exactly pressed the "like" button? Are there degrees of like? To your idea that they are spreading the untruth, is laughing, upset, or even disliking emoticon still a punishable offense since by your definition, the crime is the repost. Even outside of the like buttons, If a person comments on the bad posting, be it agreement, commiserating, or disagreeing, they further
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If a person comments on the bad posting, be it agreement, commiserating, or disagreeing, they further spread the posting.
True. And I'd be interested to see how the Swiss court would rule on that.
You make many other excellent points. After reading through them, I still think there is grounds for hitting LIKE to be used as a piece of evidence in a defamation trial, but perhaps not as the sole point of action. But if I can show that a person has hit LIKE to promote many such posts, that I think overcomes most of your objections (accident, casual contemplation, etc).
And I'll call it "Thoughtcrime" too, because by jingo, I can do that! It isn't against the law here in the backwoods.
And I'll support your right to use a term incorrectly, all th
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Thoughtcrime it is unless you can show me who's been prosecuted here. We get it, you hate us. But that doesn't mean any old bullshit you care to spew is true.
So, that is the new standard to assert wheather something is a toughtcrime? That someone has been prosecuted int switzerland doesn't reach the bar? It has to be in the US?
Way to not follow the conversation. The person I was having the conversation with had stated that:
It is not thoughtcrime at all. It is an actual crime of promoting a lie, something that is punishable under US law also. The only thing new here is ruling that the LIKE button is a form of publication ... which it is.
So we got into the comparative thing. I call it thoughtcrime, because here in the USA, the specific action, that of pressing the like button, is considered free speech. People are allowed to r
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Mother posts that her child has passed away.
Friends, looking to offer comfort but not knowing what to say, like the post.
Friends get sued for causing emotional grief because they like that her child died.
It's the same logic just in a different story. The Like button is a one-size-fits-all solution with a bunch of different meanings depending on context and person.
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Your emotional grief example is a strawman argument that has no relationship to the actual issue of the case.
Re:Only one word for this (Score:5, Informative)
. It is an actual crime of promoting a lie, something that is punishable under US law also.
No, it really isn't. We still have freedom of speech here. Even slander and libel aren't crimes, they are torts. Sure, there are laws governing how the civil case should be handled, if the damaged party cares to bring such a case, but that's different from criminal law.
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I generally think we should treat social media companies as neutral carriers and make the people using the platforms responsible for their own speech (
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You unbellyfeel newspeak.
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Not thoughtcrime. Willfully distributing FALSE STATEMENTS. That's a crime in the USA also. The only thing new here is that the court ruled that the LIKE button qualifies as distribution of false statements. This wasn't about opinion. This was about not doing the fact checking before spreading lies.
Here in the wilds of America, "liking" something on Facebook is considered "free speech"
https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]
It is considered analogous to having a bumper sticker. And make no mistakes, opinions can be wrong, but there is no law against having a stupid or false opinion.
Now what you are not allowed to do on Facebook here in the hinterlands is threaten physical violence aganst someone - just like anywhere else. Libel laws are also in play. But for the person who actually performs threatenin
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He was not arrested for having an opinion he was arrested for spreading information.
To compare with your bumper sticker analogy:
Take it up with the Supreme court. I had no part in their decision, merely agree with it.
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Thoughtcrime!
Whilst I disagree with this by principle, it is not thoughtcrime.
Like many people who claim "thoughtcrime" you don't have any idea about what thoughtcrime is. Probably because you've never actually read Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Thoughtcrime was where the wrong facial expression could give you away, wearing a frown or a smile would be taken as a sign of seditious or subversive thoughts, so the term "thoughtcrime" was coined. The citizens and residents of Airstrip One would always wear a face of cautious optimism
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Thoughtcrime!
Whilst I disagree with this by principle, it is not thoughtcrime.
Like many people who claim "thoughtcrime" you don't have any idea about what thoughtcrime is. Probably because you've never actually read Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Thoughtcrime was where the wrong facial expression could give you away, wearing a frown or a smile would be taken as a sign of seditious or subversive thoughts, so the term "thoughtcrime" was coined. The citizens and residents of Airstrip One would always wear a face of cautious optimism to avoid being charged with thoughtcrime.
In this case, he actually did something instead of being accused of just thinking it.
Seriously. Must a real world example be the exact action from a book? Regardless, Wikipedia has thoughtcrime describing an "illegal thought" and I happen to agree with it. Argue with them.
My thoughts about something are my opinions about it. If I think that Sophia Vergara is really appealing, that is my opinion. Pretty simple. If I I push the like button regarding a positive post about her I have expressed my thoughts. If say, I thought about whatever this guy was "liking", that would likewise be my opin
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Clickcrime is also a suitable description. Those criminal mouse clicks on a legal site doing legal things, they terrify me.
Citizen! be careful of conflating, because it can lead you into original thought! We must make certain to not stray from the permissible. Go forth and sin no more, friend.
Slashdot moderation no more for me (Score:5, Insightful)
I was about to start throwing my weight around in here, moderating up/down, but then I realised I could face legal consequences for endorsing anyones views. :-/
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I was about to start throwing my weight around in here, moderating up/down, but then I realised I could face legal consequences for endorsing anyones views. :-/
So move out of Switzerland. While not part of the EU, it's still pretty damn trivial to relocate to Germany, especially since you probably speak German as your first language. Most Swiss do [swissinfo.ch]. Just don't up-mod any Nazis and you'll be fine.
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1) I'm Scottish :)
2) I live in New Zealand
3) "danke", "ja","nein" & "ich liebe dich" are the only words of German I know. Can I still move there?
4) I was being ironic and making a point which you obvious missed. Maybe it's the mountains, you always get poor reception up there.
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Oh! I missed out another word I know in German. ;) :D
"schöne".
I had a German girlfriend who said it so much that makes it, almost, unforgettable...
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3) "danke", "ja","nein" & "ich liebe dich" are the only words of German I know. Can I still move there? :)
Nope. You fail. Swiss Germans say "merci", not "danke".
hmm (Score:2)
No Constitution = No Rights (Score:3)
And this, boys and girls, is what you get when you don't have a constitution that guarantees free speech. The lefties in the US are trying for the same thing by equating speech they don't like to assault and then rioting http://www.foxnews.com/politic... [foxnews.com] and beating people in the head with bike locks to shut down speech they disagree with. http://www.nbclosangeles.com/n... [nbclosangeles.com] Every fascist leftie, piss ant bureaucrat and judge becomes their own little dictator who can shit on you from on high. The only thing stopping this crap in the US is our constitution and enforcement of the rule of law (which apparently doesn't happen in Berkeley, CA...
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The constitution doesn't protect slanderous speech.
One more reason to not use Facebook (Score:2)
As if we need another reason.
Makes no sense. (Score:2)
He can easily prove that he made a true statement, even if you take clicking "like" as a statement. He liked the comment he clicked on. Are they going to get him to testify against himself and say he _didn't_ actually like the comment?
This is incredibly stupid. The statement he made was "I like this statement." He did not claim anyone was racist or anything else.
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That said in no way do I feel this fine was just or reasonable.
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If only it was in Sweden, I'd understand it. Sweden left sanity decades ago. But this happened in Switzerland, which is usually a pretty sane country.
Re: Share? Maybe. But Like? Effoff Sweden! (Score:2)
Sweden and Switzerland are different countries.