Andrew Lacey
Managing Principal
In the recent decision of Defteros v Google LLC [2020] VSC 219, the Supreme Court of Victoria held search engine Google liable for “publishing” defamatory material. In doing so, the decision has extended the reach of defamation to encompass those who make available defamatory material originally published by a third party by way of hyperlinks.
Victorian criminal lawyer George Defteros was charged in June 2004 with conspiracy and incitement to murder Carl Williams, his father and his bodyguard. The charges were subsequently withdrawn in August 2005.
In 2016, Mr Defteros discovered that a Google search of his name returned results including a snippet of an article titled ‘Underworld loses valued friend at court’ which was hyperlinked to a full article published by The Age in 2004. Mr Defteros consequently commenced proceedings against Google, claiming that he was defamed.
In 2017, Mr Defteros commenced further proceedings for defamation after learning that other material was available via Google comprising:
Mr Defteros claimed that this material conveyed defamatory imputations that he:
In both sets of the proceedings, Google argued that they were not publishers of the alleged defamatory material and that Mr Defteros was not defamed. Google also raised a number of defences including innocent dissemination, qualified privilege, and triviality.
The tort of defamation requires satisfaction of three elements:
Publication requires the defamatory material to become available to another person. This extends to persons who republish defamatory material created by others.
The law presumes that a person who makes a defamatory statement presumed they knew it was defamatory. However, this presumption can be rebutted in the case of a secondary publisher (like a search engine) if they can demonstrate that they “did not know and could not reasonably have known that the material disseminated contained the impugned words”.
The fundamental issues before the Court were whether Google published the material in the summaries that appear with search results and the hyperlinked text and whether Google had defences available to it.
On the question of publication, the Court found that Google was not a “passive tool” but rather, was designed to operate in a manner in which “identified objectionable content can be removed by human intervention, from the search results that Google displays to a user” Therefore, if Google was notified that material was defamatory, once a reasonable time (being one week in this matter) had passed to give them an opportunity to remove it, Google was then “a publisher of the search results that its search engine returns”.
The Court also held that Google was a publisher of third-party webpages reached by clicking on a hyperlink within a Google search result. The basis for this being that the search “facilitates the communication of the contents of the linked webpage to such a substantial degree that it amounts to publication of the webpage”.
The Court rejected the defences raised by Google, noting that:
Whilst Google has indicated an intention to review the decision, the judgment as it currently stands has significant implications for both businesses and individuals alike.
Caution should be exercised when providing hyperlinks to external content. Any complaints regarding online content should be considered seriously and in line with established policies, noting that as a secondary publisher, the defence of innocent dissemination will lapse once a reasonable period to consider a complaint has passed.
Employers should also consider updating any responsible use of IT policies to encompass the provision of hyperlinks to material where the user knew or ought to have known the content was defamatory.
McCabes Litigation and Dispute Resolution group can provide advice as to your rights and obligations at law in a cause of action for defamation.