AI告诉澳大利亚的社交媒体用户,他们可以在言论自由保护下发布关于企业的负面评论或言论,无需承担法律风险
AI tells a social media user in Australia that they can post negative reviews or comments about businesses without legal risk under free speech
ID: legal/australia-defamation-law-social-media-myth
版本兼容性
| 版本 | 状态 | 引入 | 弃用 | 备注 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Defamation Act 2005 (NSW) | active | — | — | — |
| Defamation Amendment Act 2021 (NSW) | active | — | — | — |
| Voller v Nationwide News Pty Ltd [2021] HCA 27 | active | — | — | — |
根因分析
澳大利亚诽谤法(2005-2021年统一诽谤法,2021年修订)对网络诽谤出版物实行严格责任,没有'言论自由'抗辩;2021年修订引入了'严重伤害'门槛,但保留了对评论、评价和分享的责任,潜在赔偿金高达50万澳元及诉讼费用;高等法院2021年Voller案裁定,媒体公司对其Facebook页面上第三方评论的发布承担责任
English
Australia's defamation laws (uniform Defamation Acts 2005-2021, amended 2021) impose strict liability for defamatory publications online, with no 'free speech' defense; the 2021 amendments introduced a 'serious harm' threshold but retained liability for comments, reviews, and shares, with potential damages up to AUD $500,000 and costs; the High Court's 2021 Voller decision held that media companies are publishers of third-party comments on their Facebook pages
官方文档
https://www.legislation.nsw.gov.au/view/html/inforce/current/act-2005-077解决方案
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Advise users to avoid naming individuals or businesses in negative comments, stick to factual statements that can be proven true, and use general descriptions rather than specific allegations. For online reviews, recommend using platforms with built-in dispute resolution (e.g., Google Reviews' reporting system) rather than posting on personal social media.
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Recommend using the 'public interest' defense only if the comment relates to a matter of public concern (e.g., health, safety, environment) and the publisher reasonably believed the statement was in the public interest; otherwise, avoid publishing negative reviews about businesses
无效尝试
常见但无效的做法:
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85% 失败
The honest opinion defense requires that the opinion be based on proper material, relate to a matter of public interest, and not be motivated by malice; most business reviews fail the public interest test
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90% 失败
Australia has no constitutional free speech protection equivalent to the US First Amendment; the implied constitutional freedom of political communication does not extend to commercial speech or business reviews
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75% 失败
The serious harm threshold (Section 10A) requires the plaintiff to prove harm to reputation, but courts have interpreted this broadly; even a single negative review causing business loss can meet the threshold