If any of the attorneys that frequent this board would be willing to answer a non-domain legal question pro bono, I would be very appreciative. Its an internet related question, so its not entirely out of the scope of this forum.
I recently won an auction on Ebay for a video game system and several dozen games. After the auction, the seller sent me an email that said "by the way, you know that these games are pirated, right?". I hadn't known that, and therefore I refused to pay him for the goods. So he got angry and posted some mean and untrue things about me in the 'feedback' section of the site. This feedback section is very important, as it allows future buyers to evaluate my reliability as a seller.
Under current federal law, do I have the right to demand that Ebay immediately remove the libelous comments? Or is there some obscure law that says that each writer is responsible for his own comments, and ebay must be held immune?
I will of course *ask* that ebay removes the comments, but if they refuse to, I was wondering if i could require them to.
I recently won an auction on Ebay for a video game system and several dozen games. After the auction, the seller sent me an email that said "by the way, you know that these games are pirated, right?". I hadn't known that, and therefore I refused to pay him for the goods. So he got angry and posted some mean and untrue things about me in the 'feedback' section of the site. This feedback section is very important, as it allows future buyers to evaluate my reliability as a seller.
Under current federal law, do I have the right to demand that Ebay immediately remove the libelous comments? Or is there some obscure law that says that each writer is responsible for his own comments, and ebay must be held immune?
I will of course *ask* that ebay removes the comments, but if they refuse to, I was wondering if i could require them to.