Facebook is ordered to remove content defaming a politician

Facebook is ordered to remove content defaming a politician and post a banner on its home page announcing the ruling after losing legal fight in Austria

  • Vienna commercial court also ordered Facebook to pay €4,000 in damages 
  • Former Greens party politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek won the court case
  • Politician’s lawyer welcomed what she said was ‘progress’ against hate speech

Facebook has been ordered to remove content defaming a politician and post a banner on its Austrian homepage announcing the ruling after losing a legal battle.  

The Vienna commercial court on December 9 also ordered the internet giant to pay €4,000 (£3,349) in damages to former Greens party politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek.

The ruling was only made available to both the plaintiff and Facebook on Wednesday.

Glawischnig-Piesczek in 2016 requested the removal of Facebook posts that judges found defamed her and could be seen by users of the social network around the world.

The Vienna commercial court on December 9 also ordered the internet giant to pay €4,000 (£3,349) in damages to former Greens party politician Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek (pictured) 

The complaint also concerned messages from a fictitious account which, according to the Greens, were slanderous and which the social network refused to delete.

After a higher Austrian court referred the case to the European Union’s top court for an opinion, the European body in 2019 ruled that national courts in Europe can order online platforms to remove defamatory content worldwide.

After the December ruling, ‘Facebook has to inform its users within 15 days of this ruling by publishing a banner visible at the top of its home page for six months,’ court spokesman Jurgen Exner said.

‘Found guilty, it must immediately abstain from publishing photographs showing the plaintiff if the accompanying text’ insults her.

The Australian site’s homepage now contains a hyperlink (bottom right) which takes users to an explanation of the court ruling 

Glawischnig-Piesczek’s lawyer Maria Windhager welcomed what she said was ‘progress’ against hate speech, ‘because the platform had until now always refused to remove content’

‘Facebook did not appeal,’ he said.

Glawischnig-Piesczek’s lawyer Maria Windhager welcomed what she said was ‘progress’ against hate speech, ‘because the platform had until now always refused to remove content’.

The former lawmaker has been informed of the identity of a woman who set up a fictitious account that insulted her. She is now allowed to share this information publicly, or sue her.

Contacted by AFP, Facebook parent Meta said it would not ‘share any information beyond the publication of the judgement on our website at this point in time’.

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