Facebook to appeal Austrian global hate speech order

IANS  |  London 

Social networking giant will appeal a order that requires the company to globally impose an Austrian to curb hate speech against the country's Green Party.

Critics see the controversial order as a threat and a new challenge to free speech on the Internet, a report in Fortune on Thursday said.

"There is no place for hate speech on and this post was removed from our platform last year as requested. However, we will appeal this particular case before the Austrian Supreme to have better legal clarity around this specific post and the categorization as 'unlawful' as the new decision substantially reversed the original decision," the report quoted a spokesperson as saying.

An Austrian has ruled that must remove the posts against Greens leader Eva Glawischnig in Austria as well as other parts of the world.

The case involves comments posted to about the leader of Austria's Green Party, which the party claims are illegal under the country's hate speech laws.

That means will have to prevent and remove such posts in places where there are no European-style hate speech laws.

Critics termed the Austrian ruling as "dangerous and short-sighted", arguing that it could embolden other countries to impose local laws everywhere on

"Should comply globally with Russia's anti-gay laws, or Thailand's laws against insulting the king, or Saudi Arabia's blasphemy laws? Would Austria want those laws to dictate what speech its citizens can share online? This ruling sends a signal to courts around the world that they, too, can enforce their national laws to ban speech around the world," Daphne Keller, a lawyer at the Centre for Internet and Society at Stanford University, was quoted as saying.

The appeal against the order would put the and Google on the same front in a legal battle whether national courts should be able to impose their everywhere on the Internet.

--IANS

qd/ruwa/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Facebook to appeal Austrian global hate speech order

Social networking giant Facebook will appeal a court order that requires the company to globally impose an Austrian law to curb hate speech against the country's Green Party.

Social networking giant will appeal a order that requires the company to globally impose an Austrian to curb hate speech against the country's Green Party.

Critics see the controversial order as a threat and a new challenge to free speech on the Internet, a report in Fortune on Thursday said.

"There is no place for hate speech on and this post was removed from our platform last year as requested. However, we will appeal this particular case before the Austrian Supreme to have better legal clarity around this specific post and the categorization as 'unlawful' as the new decision substantially reversed the original decision," the report quoted a spokesperson as saying.

An Austrian has ruled that must remove the posts against Greens leader Eva Glawischnig in Austria as well as other parts of the world.

The case involves comments posted to about the leader of Austria's Green Party, which the party claims are illegal under the country's hate speech laws.

That means will have to prevent and remove such posts in places where there are no European-style hate speech laws.

Critics termed the Austrian ruling as "dangerous and short-sighted", arguing that it could embolden other countries to impose local laws everywhere on

"Should comply globally with Russia's anti-gay laws, or Thailand's laws against insulting the king, or Saudi Arabia's blasphemy laws? Would Austria want those laws to dictate what speech its citizens can share online? This ruling sends a signal to courts around the world that they, too, can enforce their national laws to ban speech around the world," Daphne Keller, a lawyer at the Centre for Internet and Society at Stanford University, was quoted as saying.

The appeal against the order would put the and Google on the same front in a legal battle whether national courts should be able to impose their everywhere on the Internet.

--IANS

qd/ruwa/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

image
Business Standard
177 22