Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
The important thing is that Google will show the candidate's site when you search for his name, but will show the webmaster's site when other campaign related terms are searched for. You would hope G's algo would catch this, but you would hope at the least they would take some action when it is reported to them.
These were the violations reported.
1. Hidden text on the candidate's site, the webmaster's site, and an additional dozen clients for whom the webmaster provided the hidden text at no extra charge.
2. Duplicate sites (webmaster and candidate).
3. More duplicate sites. Some of the clients have duplicate sites on different URLs targeting different keywords.
I would have thought the sword would have been a bit swifter with this one.
The bad guys haven't been sitting still either. They purchased goodcandidatesname.com and have been putting libelous material there. They claimed she had been found by a grand jury to have taken bread money from seniors and linked to a pdf describing the grand jury's finding. Naturally, the pdf was another tidbit on one of the unsavory webmaster's domains that had nothing to do with the good candidate.
What are the legal options when someone buys your yourname.com to post defamatory material about yourname?
So far, Google has done nothing (besides sit there and look bad). If you do a search for both of the candidates names at one time you will get
1. badcandidate.com
-2. badcandidate.com (indented)
3. badwebmaster.com copy of badcandidate.com
-4. badwebmaster.com (indented) copy of badcandidate.com
5. unrelated
6. badwebmaster2.com copy of badcandidate.com
-7. badwebmaster2.com (indented) copy of badcandidate.com
8. My local forum posting
9. Local newspaper
-10. Local newspaper
You may be able to get goodcandidatesname.com through the .com/WIPO arbitration process - clause. c. (ii) of the ICANN UDRP would seem to give "Good Candidate" rights over the domain, and the bad faith element is obvious.
You may be able to get goodcandidatesname.com through the .com/WIPO arbitration process - clause. c. (ii) of the ICANN UDRP would seem to give "Good Candidate" rights over the domain, and the bad faith element is obvious.
goodcandidate.com has also removed any references to organized crime that could have been considered libelous as well as ridiculous. Their infractions were reported to their host and registrar. Although that couldn't have been the cause for the demise due to the timeline. We'll see what tomorrow brings.
But in the UK anyone keeping a copy of a libel in a place where it can be accessed is considered a "publisher" of that libel. My understanding is that Google's cache will do just fine. In UK law, Google would _HAVE_ to implement a "notice and take down" notification.
Action for libel is expensive. In the UK, you can reckon on the equivalent of at least $250,000 to get into court.