highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
Injunctions/Super Injunctions granted to protect from trial by media or invasions of privacy seem reasonable as short/medium term measures.
I am for Super Injunctions, applied in the short/medium term purely on legal merits, accepting that exceptionally they may need to be permanent.
There's a difference between an injunction, and a "super-injunction" - and everybody calling them silly has a good point.
They'd get no respect in the US - and why?
Now I get the canard often quoted in their favour - family law, or cases involving children that shouldn't be identified - true enough, there's a place - but by and large, nobody is that interested in breaking them. And that argument won't fly with the high-profile cases so recently "busted".
And I also get the subtle, yet poignant difference between "in the public interest" and "what the public are interested in" - but all the same, freedom of speech should not be a plaything for the rich and philandering.
The reality of global media and social "community" makes them a farce, as has been shown recently, what with international "networking" and relatively local bailiwick of English court rulings.
highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
Defamation laws, particularly relevant to message boards, social networking and chat formats, are currently ridiculous. Defamation being actionable has become arbitrary, depending on the origin of the post or the location of the site.
You're conflating actionable defamation with the rationale behind granted "super-injunctions". They may well not be in any way connected.
highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
How about someone defaming me? They currently have free rein on any number of sites; they would need to be very silly to repeat defaming material where it might allow me to take action.
1. At least on this forum, probably only a select few know who you really are.
2. Let's be realistic - is anybody truly interested in defaming you?
highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
This situation means anyone with a reputation, or identifiable by inference, can be dragged through the mud with practically no comeback.
And there's a difference between global media being free to expose details, paid-off in England, with being "dragged through the mud".
And those people who are sufficiently financially endowed to be able to pay for a "super-injunction" most certainly have the ability to do something about being
defamed, slandered, or libelled in England.
highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
While smothering sordid tales of extra marital goings on is not desirable, what about those maligned able to do nothing about it except respond via the same ‘covert’ channels?
In most of the "super-injunctions" that I've heared about, it seems to be the significantly
un-financially endowed party that seems to have little recourse.
highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
Do we really want a future where the truth really is just a matter of consensus amongst the herd?
Well as an aside, for many things in life that's been the case for a very long time, that has seen before, seen, and will see after "super-injunctions".
Those who are rich enough to be able to get "super-injunctions" granted are more than rich enough to be able to afford civil cases if they truly have been defamed, slandered, or libelled, do they really need or deserve any more protection than that? Many, many "normal", Clapham-omnibus-riding people in society would not be able to afford such from England's legal system.
Do we really want a future where freedom of speech is so easily compromised on the whim and cheque-book of the rich and sleazy?
highlandsflyer":2mne1h5h said:
Which is really the Big Brother scenario?
Well opinons vary.
Legal and societal sympathies might be more readily given - and perhaps honoured - by those making such demands taking a bit more bloody resonsibility for their own actions, before going whining to teacher, first.
If the rich and shameless want more privacy, then for feck's sake they should be more discreet and less arrogant about being able to buy their way out of being caught with their pants around their ankles.
Personally, I don't begrudge them their philandering and sleaze, I just don't see why the legal system nor fundamental human rights should have to be compromised to support it - that, nor the fatuous claims that global media and internet resources should have to be censored or regulated to support the
bought privacy, and pseudo, out-dated, protection of English "super-injunctions".