In an article on the Verfassungsblog [Constitutional Blog], PD Dr. Matthias C. Kettemann and his co-authors clarify misunderstandings in connection with the "Glawischnig ruling" of the Austrian Supreme Court.
The legal dispute had attracted attention last year. Former Green politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek had sued Facebook after she had been called a "rotten traitor of the people" under an article posted on the platform.
The Austrian Supreme Court, and previously the European Court of Justice, have now ruled that Facebook is obliged to delete not only the specific illegal insult, but also meaningful content.
Does this pave the way for worldwide internet censorship, as some people claim? The authors give us the all-clear.
In an article on the Verfassungsblog [Constitutional Blog], PD Dr. Matthias C. Kettemann and his co-authors clarify misunderstandings in connection with the "Glawischnig ruling" of the Austrian Supreme Court.
The legal dispute had attracted attention last year. Former Green politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek had sued Facebook after she had been called a "rotten traitor of the people" under an article posted on the platform.
The Austrian Supreme Court, and previously the European Court of Justice, have now ruled that Facebook is obliged to delete not only the specific illegal insult, but also meaningful content.
Does this pave the way for worldwide internet censorship, as some people claim? The authors give us the all-clear.
2020