Foez Dewan
Principal
The High Court has ruled that Google cannot be held responsible for defamatory articles accessed via its search results and hyperlinks.
Background
Google has been locked in a legal battle with Melbourne criminal lawyer George Defteros for the past six years. Defteros became well-known during Melbourne’s “gangland wars” for representing clients such as gangsters Alphonse Gangitano and Mario Condello.
In 2004, Defteros was charged alongside Condello with the conspiracy to murder and incitement to murder underworld figures, including Carl Williams. This information was published in an article by The Age in 2004. The charges against Defteros were eventually dropped in 2005.
Google was notified of the defamatory article in February 2016 but did not take it down until December that year. During this period, it had already been accessed by readers 150 times.
In 2020, Defteros successfully sued Google for $40,000 in the Supreme Court of Victoria. The Supreme Court held that Google had defamed Defteros by publishing the article and refusing to take down its hyperlink. The Court of Appeal upheld the decision of the Supreme Court.
Google took the case to the High Court, arguing that its role is only to provide a tool to navigate, not publish content.
The High Court
Today, the High Court ruled by a majority in support of Google, finding that the internet giant was not the publisher of the defamatory material.
Google’s role is to make information universally accessible, and it does so by providing assistance through hyperlinks in directing readers to other webpages. The High Court said that this has no role in the bilateral process of actually communicating the contents of articles to readers; to hold that it does would expand the principles relating to publication.
Chief Justice Kiefel and Justice Gleeson said in a joint statement that “in reality, a hyperlink is merely a tool which enables a person to navigate to another webpage…a search result is fundamentally a reference to something, somewhere else”.
In a separate judgement however, Justice Gageler noted that although Google should not be considered a publisher for the purpose of regular search results, the tech company’s liability may be different in the case of sponsored results. This is because sponsored results may involve a degree of “enticement or encouragement to click on the hyperlink”.
Ultimately, the High Court justices ruled that there was no basis for finding publication as Google had in no way approved, encouraged or participated in the article being published on The Age’s website.
The High Court overturned the decision that Google should pay Defteros $40,000 in damages.
Significance of the Case
This decision has set the precedent that Google is not legally responsible for any material readers may click on, unless they are sponsored materials.
While the use of a hyperlink may mean that a publisher gains an extra read, internet giants such as Google are nothing other than “reference providers” and should not feel the need to censor the search results they merely make accessible to readers.