Defaming by Suggestion: Searching for Search Engine Liability in the Autocomplete Era

Author: Anne Cheung

Published in: Andras Koltay, ed., Comparative Perspectives on the Fundamentals of Freedom of Expression, 2015.

Abstract:
Whilst different jurisdictions have yet to reach consensus on search engines’ liability for defamation, Internet giant Google is confronting judges and academics with another challenge: the basis of liability for defamation arising from its Autocomplete function. In 2014, for example, the Hong Kong Court of First Instance held that a claimant whose name was often paired with ‘triad member’ in Autocomplete had a good arguable case of defamation to proceed with and dismissed a claim of summary dismissal application made by Google in Dr Yeung Sau Shing Albert v Google Inc (Yeung v Google). Earlier, in 2013, the Federal Court of Germany held Google to be liable for violating a plaintiff’s personality rights and reputation for associating his name with ‘fraud’ and ‘Scientology’ in an Autocomplete search RS v Google).

Abstract and paper can be viewed from SSRN, click here.