March, 2009

What The Hell Is A Blog?


I was looking at an article on  Kevin O’Keefe’s Lexblog entitledThe Primary Reason For Lawyers To Blog Is Not To Advertise The Firm’s Web Site. It is a great article.  It never ceases to amaze me how “BigLaw “or even medium to large law firms have no idea what it means to have a blog.  They often can not distinguish between offering opinions related to what they do as a means of building a brand versus simply advertising what they do.  There is a big difference.  It is the difference between true word of mouth brand building and regurgitating crap available on legal aggregation sites or through a simple Google search.   A new case comes down the pipeline, throw it on the blog.  Just spoke at a legal seminar?   Throw it on the blog.  P.R department put out a nice press release on your big jury verdict?  Throw it on the blog.  Trying to generate business for a particular type of case you are after?  “We do not want to be too obvious“.  “We will create an “advertorial” Then what?   Throw it on the blog.   Promotion achieved through talking about what you have done will tend to only appeal to those who already know you.   Promotion achieved by talking about what you think appeals to a much wider audience.   If the audience likes what you have to say they will spread the word thereby building your brand.  Most BigLaw firms do not seem to get it.

While some firms are getting on bus, the legal profession is still way behind.  If it is a medium to large size firm forget it.   They for the most part  don’t have a clue.  They don’t want to have a clue.  Blogging is not politically correct and personal blogs are silently or openly discouraged. That is unless the attorney is writing about his/her workout at the gym or posting photos from their latest vacation trip.  If you want to see true blogging in the legal profession you almost without exception have to go to solo practitioners or small firms.  BigLaw firms want to protect what they have.  From their perspective blogging can only cost them business.  Small firms and solos want to go get what they don’t have and make and effort to understand what blogging can do to help that process.

If you want to talk to someone about the cost of Biglaw blogging inflexibility ask Denise Howell .  Her blog Bag and Baggage is one of the more popular legal blogs.  There is speculation over whether her blogging was a factor in her  2006 departure from Pittsburgh based law firm Reed Smith, an old guard, BigLaw firm.   Has Reed Smith seen the error of its ways and come into the 21st century  “blawgosphere” since this incident?   A review of their web site shows press releases, attorney publications and “media resources”.  The Big Law  “media robotic playbook” run to perfection.  I suspect the playbook for that firm has not changed since the internet was conceived.  That’s their comfort zone.  I do not know the age of the decision makers  in this area at Reed Smith but I do not think that I am going out on a limb in speculating that the internet is more a part of their children’s lives than theirs.

Are their large firms who have true blogs. Sure, but they are hard to find. Do your own survey of large firm web sites. You wont find much. You will find firms that call something a blog. What they end up doing is regurgitating cases, talking about their courtroom victories and the last legal seminar an attorney spoke at.

These firms  claim they want to be on the “cutting edge” and spend all this money to put a great looking site  up. They then realize you can not blog and be completely neutral unless you are going to blog on what you had for breakfast, how your workout was etc.  These firms become afraid of pissing potential or current clients off.   They then revert back to regurgitating case law and re-posting legal articles.

If you are a law firm and unless you feel your audience is going to find what you had for breakfast interesting, blogging should mean expressing opinions and ideas.   If your not going to do that, what’s the point.  If that in fact is the point, do not be shocked when the only traffic you get to the site is from your current clients and your mailing list.

Posted in Law and OrderComments (4)

Have You Been Tweet Dumped?


textdatingScanning the wall posts of my Facebook friends can be a pretty good gauge of what people are doing for fun.   It is also a daily soap opera of Days Of Our Lives proportions.  Relationship status updates that change faster than Lindsey Lohan’s sexual orientation.  People hook-up and break-up without ever logging off of their Facebook account.

Doesn’t this  pretty much sum up Generation Y relationships?   For much of my Baby Boomer dating  life we did not  have cell phones.  I had to ask for a home number.   I took the risk of nosy parents, brothers and sisters answering the phone. Had to be on my game from minute one.  How in the world did our parents get by without Facebook, texting and Twitter?   God forbid we should actually have to look someone in the eye when asking them out or even worse, breaking up.

Now we are not even asking for phone numbers. We are asking for Facebook pages and Twitter user names.  When we do ask for a number we do not call, we text.  We are texting and tweeting our way to love and heartbreak. We are sending “Dear John Tweets” in 140 characters or less.

You would think the following text message exchange is right out of a Sex In The City episode.  It is a real life exchange between two people I tried to hook up on a blind date.  She lives in Manhattan and he is a very well known Hollywood actor.   The back story to this exchange is that Monica and Alan had been having a torrid “text romance” but were  unsuccessful in trying to hook up for dinner. They agreed to meet for a late coffee at Starbucks in Mid-Town.twitterdating2

Monica arrives on time but Trent is running late.  Monica is waiting anxiously in anticipation of their first Starbucks meet.  Trent finally texts her (some texts have been combined to save space).

(Trent)   Give me Ten Minutes

(Monica) So, I gave you 20 mins. Haven’t heard from you. Guess your not going to show, good night.

(Trent) I’m in a cab NOW heading to the financial district just tell me the cross streets.

(Monica) You are too late, going home.

(Trent) OK but lets discuss it further when I get there.

(Monica) No. I am meeting a friend for a bite. Sorry. You should have communicated better. Next time.

(Trent) I ‘m almost there, I’ll join you and u’r friend, in fact I’ll buy you both dinner:o)

(Monica) No thank you

(Trent) Great! Which restaurant are we meeting at?

(Monica) Trent, I don’t need your charity.  I need you to be on time. You missed that window and I have made other plans.  We will have to get together another time.

(Trent) I took a cab all the way down here. It cost me a fortune.  Can you recommend a nice restaurant I can have a meal at by myself?  With all due respect there will not be another time.

(Monica) You are being ridiculous. You were 45 minutes late and I made plans.  Its your own fault. Don’t take it out on me!  Plus we were supposed to meet in  your neighborhood not mine.

(Monica)  If anything you should have apologized.  I have had one hell of a day and do not deserve to be treated that  way!

(Trent)  Ur nuts. If we were going to meet in my neighborhood you would hadda traveled up here it would have taken at least a half hour, i was coming to u to make it easy.  now I’m walking all  the way back from wall street I’m at canal, again no disrespect , and in an apologetic tone, LOSE MY NUMBER!

(Trent)  I left my wallet at my meeting and I used all my cash for the cab

(Monica) We talked about me coming to you. I am sorry you left your wallet at the restaurant. I’m not sure how all this is my fault. Why are you being so nasty to me?   I didn’t do anything to you. Do you need me to bring you some money?  I’m no sure what you want me to do here.  By the way, if you don’t have your wallet how were you planning on buying my friend and me dinner?

(Trent) I’m not being nasty, just straightforward.  I thought it would be better for u and considerate of me to come meet you downtown.  Anyway Ive taken off my coat and tie, rolled up my suit  jacket  and am going to try to panhandle-i’m at the union sq. park. I just need to raise 2 bux for the train

(Trent) This is embarrassing.  I hope ur satisfied!

(Trent) No.  Please don’t bring any money. I’ve already gotten 30 cents-i’ll raise two bux in less than 20 minutes but thank for the gesture. :o )

(Monica)  Your choice.  Stay away from the crack dealers.

(Trent) I need to put the Blackberry away or else they’ll think I as at one of those giant evil banks, and they won’t pity me.-they’ll spit on me! So I can’t continue to communicate with u…..

(Trent) No hard feelings-just not meant to be.tweetheart

Love found, lost, texted and tweeted  without ever putting the phone done.  The epitome of a Dating 2.0 world.  We are advertising to the entire social networking world that we are on the market. We have started and ended and relationships on these same sites and our iPhone Twitter applications. We used to break up in restaurants so there would not be a scene.  Now we find out for the first time when we see our boyfriend or girlfriend’s Facebook relationship status suddenly set to “single and looking”  We try to contact them(on Facebook of course) and find we are now “blocked”.   In my day, if you met a girl in a bar and she thought you were a douchebag  the  number she gave you was actually the Rejection Hotline or Dominos Pizza.(I ate a lot of pizza)

It will not be long before we will be creating our twitter networks for the sole purpose of finding a mate.  We will see tweets like ads we now see on billboard or the billboards themselves will tweet our message to the local masses.

Millionaire Tweetgeek” user name bcuban seeks SATM(Single Attractive Tweet Mate).  Tweet me your vitals and lets Tweetup!

Any takers?datelance

©2009 Brian Cuban

Posted in humorComments (5)

Are You Dirty?


thedirty3I received a very disturbing phone call.   A friend asked me if I knew that a photograph of me was up on the gossip site theDirty.com.  Anyone  familiar with “theDirty” knows  that not all publicity is good publicity. It is a site where people put up unflattering photos of other people and make for the most part almost always unflattering, sometimes hostile and often defamatory comments about the people in the photos.  I went to the web site and found a photo of me in their “Dallas” section that had been pulled off my Facebook page.  Below it was the following caption:

Date Raper in Dallas”

THE DIRTY ARMY: This trout is named Brian Cuban and there isn’t a girl in Dallas who hasn’t felt “dizzy” after he buys them a drink..I know 2 girls that woke up the next day asked what happened and he said “you were screaming all night baby”..I believe it..screaming like a surgery patient that’s awake!! This clown has to lead the world in Rohyphinol(sic) use. Put him on blast and see how many UNDERAGE girls comment on their soapy tasting drinks he has given them!

Beneath it was an additional caption by theDirty chief dirty dog  “Nik Ritchie” stating:

“If I was a girl, I would not do Cuban with your Rohyphenol”

Ironically just 3 weeks later, I received a call from my sister.  She is a local radio personality and was horrified to find a publicity still of herself on theDirty web site.  Under it was the following caption:

This is Stella. She makes a living getting her groove on with anyone she can. She is a band groupie but she never gets to “the band”… She merely f*cks managers, roadies, and guitar techs. Two-faced as they come she is constantly talking sh*t about her friends, going after other people’s boyfriends and spreading around the latest and greatest STD.  To make matters worse she looks like she fell out of the ugly tree and got pummelled with a sack of nickels when she hit the bottom. Don’t even get me started on that trailer park hair. I guess it begs the questions, Nik…. Would you?

Beneath it was an additional caption by “Nik Ritchie” stating:

If she has a STD she must really like to “ride the stick”

What a thing to say about my sister!  I am just kidding of course.  Much to my girlfriend’s relief, this did NOT  happen to me and I do not have a sister. Similar “testimonials” however were posted with photos about two friends of mine.  What should I tell them?   Can they prevail in a lawsuit against theDirty?  What about the poster of the  photo and commentary if he/she can be identified?(often no easy task)nik_richie_www_thedirty_com_tshirt-p2359851152019861494eec_400

There are four common denominators between the two cases.  The first is that the  photos were taken without permission from their social networking pages.  You don’t have to be a brain surgeon to figure that lesson out.  Watch what photos you put up on your social networking site!  There is no real security from having your photos grabbed. Once on the internet they are there forever to be “dirtied” about at the whim of whoever takes them for time immemorial.  The second is that both have content put up by the end  user called “user generated content” which consists of the photos and the caption.  The third is that there is the content added by “Nik Ritche” on behalf of the theDirty in the form  of his witty one-liners.  This is can be an important distinction. Whether the content on the site is “user generated” or provided in part by the site itself can possibly have an effect on the site operator’s legal immunity from suit under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act depending on the nature of the content contributed by the web site operator.  The fourth is that each contained statements that, if untrue  are arguably “defamation per se” under Texas law.

With the advent of section 230 of the Communications Decency Act and the safe harbor provisions of  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act passive gossip web content sites such as theDirty as well as business rating sites such as The Ripp Off Report and sites that rate doctors, lawyers(rateaPartner) and other professionals are becoming more  prevalent due to the almost absolute immunity of the site owners  if they are not deemed “content providers”.  Simply meaning, as long as the site consists entirely of “user generated content” they are for the most part immune from liability for nature of the posted content even if tortious in nature.  You will probably not prevail in a lawsuit against them for the tortious content although you can certainly go after the almost always  anonymous person who posted the content.  That person has no immunity from suit.thedirty2

The Communications Decency Act (CDA)provides protection against liability for torts (including libel, slander and other forms of defamation) for website operators for third-party content posted on their site.

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act(DMCA) provides protection against copyright infringement claims for the user-generated content, if the site owner observes certain “safe harbor” provisions set out by the law.  These provisions provide that web site operators such as “theDirty”  must take down claimed copyrighted content if the following notice is provided to them:

  • The name, address, and electronic signature of the complaining party
  • The infringing materials and their Internet location
  • Sufficient information to identify the copyrighted works
  • A statement by the owner that it has a good faith belief that there is no legal basis for the use of the materials complained of
  • A statement of the accuracy of the notice and, under penalty of perjury, that the complaining party is authorized to act on the behalf of the owner

What is the gist of this legal mumbo jumbo?  Once notice is given to the  theDirty  or similar site, it is required to expeditiously(within 72 hours) remove, or disable access to, the infringing/copyrighted material. There are also provisions for the site to notify the person who put up the content, giving them the opportunity to prove that the images do not infringe anyone’s copyright and have the images put back up.  You can be subject to damages for making a false claim of copyright infringement.  In the case of a site like theDirty and other anonymous rating sites, it seems unlikely that anyone would go to those lengths with the end result that the material would simply come down.

While the protection afforded sites such as TheDirty and TheRippOff Report are broad, some courts have begun to  chip away at those protections.  The most interesting and talked about case in the 230 immunity area is  Fair Housing Council of San Fernando Valley v. Roommates.com,

Roommates.com operates a website designed to match individuals who were seeking housing. The website required users to state their own sex and sexual orientation among other facts about themselves. The site also allowed users to post their own content in an “additional comments” section.  The Fair Housing Councils of San Fernando Valley and San Diego sued Roomates claiming  that its website violated federal and state fair housing laws by soliciting and distributing information based on protected categories—sex, sexual orientation, and family status.

The lower District Court found Roommates to be immune from suit under Section 230. On appeal the 9th Circuit on appeal found them partially liable. The court found that by asking illegal questions  they became a partial content provider” under 230 therefore losing their immunity from suit on that particular issue but not as to others such as user generated comments.

The court in my opinion made an  interesting distinction that arguably has opened up the door to lawsuits against sites like theDirty that are not completely passive, adding their own content that arguably furthers or encourages the posting of content prohibited by law . The court stated:

“A website operator can be both a service provider and a content provider: If it passively displays content that is created entirely by third parties, then it is only a service provider with respect to that content. But as to content that it creates itself, or is “responsible, in whole or in part” for creating or developing, the website is also a content provider. Thus, a website may be immune from liability for some of the content it displays to the public but be subject to liability for other content”

Importantly the court also states that it was not enough that the website simply “augments” the content in question.  The court stated:

A website helps to develop unlawful content, and thus falls within the exception to Section 230, if it contributes materially to the alleged illegality of the conduct.”

Does  adding Nik Ritchie “one liners” to the posted content “contribute materially to the alleged tortious conduct” if  a caption under a photo posted on the site is  deemed “defamatory?

I would argue that at a minimum it create an issue of fact for a jury.  While the Nik Ritchie blurbs themselves are never defamatory, they go beyond minor edits to content, such as by correcting spelling and the like which would not affect their immunity.  The comments are an integral part of the content posting process designed to encourage further postings. They are often  part of the overall alleged “defamatory feel” of the posted content.

The practice and pattern of the comments added by Ritchie arguably evidence a pattern of conduct designed to specifically encourage posting of user content even if that content is tortious.  To put it simply, people post outrageous, often defamatory captions with photos on theDirty with the specific intent to elicit the expected  zinger from Nik Ritchie. The owners of the site undoubtedly know this. It is part of the site’s draw.  Will this argument win the day?  I really do not know. The courts lean over backwards to protect site owners.

In order to get the perspective of the web site, I went straight to the source.  theDirty.com was gracious in allowing me to interview their attorney. David S. Gingras with the firm of Jaburg & Wilk, P.C. in Phoenix, Arizona. He represents both theDirty and The RippOff Report. His experience in these matters is substantial. He does not agree with my assessment.

In my view, there’s nothing controversial about that(Roommates.com) holding.  Look at it this way — if someone posted a comment on The Dirty which said: “Brian Cuban is a convicted child molester,” that author would be liable for his statements but The Dirty would be protected by the CDA”

On the other hand, if Nik created a section which said: “What do you think about the fact that Brian Cuban is a convicted child molester?  Post your comments here…” then clearly he is the information content provider of that ‘question’ and he would be liable for it regardless of the CDA.  This isn’t exactly what Roommates says, but that’s the basic idea

“We have dealt with probably 4-5 new cases for Ripoff Report since Roommates was decided, and none of the courts involved have accepted the idea that Roommates has changed the law in any significant way.  Also, it’s important to keep in mind that right around the time Roommates was decided, the 6th Circuit reached nearly the opposite result in the Craigslist case (though I think both cases were correctly decided, and there’s nothing inconsistent about them; they just had different facts)

“Likewise, I have gotten several demand letters directed to The Dirty which mention Roommates, but each time the person making the demand is angry about something said in a user’s comment, not about anything that Nik did or said.  Those kinds of claims are just pure CDA cases, so I don’t feel like Nik has much to worry about”

There you have it.  What was the fate of my two friends?  Upon request the site removed both photos and captions. While I would argue they were required to remove the publicity shot under the DMCA, they would argue that they had no obligation to remove anything else and it was purely at their accommodating discretion that they did so.

It does however drive home the point that the first avenue is simply to ask nicely. If there are photos involved, make your DMCA request pursuant to the procedure set out on the offending site.  They are required to post the DMCA challenge pocedures on their site.   Odds are good that the photo will come down without challenge by the poster. Without the photo whatever nasty caption is up has no context so that will probably come down as well.   A DMCA request to remove the photo  if applicable should always be part of any objection to a defamatory caption.

When all else fails, just ask nicely.  If that fails and you feel there is enough at stake to justify further action, get your attorney to  at a minmum supeona the sites user records to identify the poster who is probably your recently dumped  ex-boyfriend.  It is not an inexpensive process.  Does he have any money to pay a judgment?  Probably not.  That’s why you dumped him in the first place right?  Now go get Dirty!

Posted in Law and Order, politicsComments (5)

Sexting Your Way To Prison


childtextingWhat images are stored on your child’s cell phone?  It may be more than you think.  It may be a lot “less” than you think. It could impact your child’s life in the worst imaginable way.

Phillip Alpert, found out the hard way.  He got pissed at his  16 year old former girlfriend.  He took out his anger  by e-mailing naked photos  of her  to more than 70 people, including her parents, grandparents and teachers. She had taken the photos voluntarily.  Alpert, then 18, was charged with transmitting child pornography. He plead “nolo contendere” to the charges.  Today Alpert is serving five years of probation for the crime. He is also registered as a sex offender.  He must stay registered until he is 43 years old.  He recently appeared on Fox News and blamed his attorney for not making clear to him what his  plea would mean with regards to being required to register as a sex offender.  What Phillip does not say in the interview that if he tried the case the jury probably would have had no choice but to convict.  This may have resulted in mandatory prison time.

If you do not think this can happen head on down to Georgia and speak with Genarlow Wilson.  In his case teen sex at a party turned into a statutory rape conviction with a sex offender tag and mandatory 10 year prison sentence.  He was 17 and the girl was 15.  His conviction was eventually overturned by the Georgia Supreme Court but not before he spent two years of  the 10 behind bars.  A young life changed forever after what was really nothing more than poor teen judgment.  Genarlow also faced a similar choice. He was offered a much lighter sentence but would have still had to register as a sex offender. A conviction meant a mandatory 10 year sentence.  He chose to try the case.  He lost in the short term but is now free of the sex offender tag and moving on with his life. genarlow-wilson

Alpert is not an isolated case.” Sexting” is becoming the  “mainstream norm”  It has apparently lost all context among teens as to what it really means to “hit send. It has become so ingrained within the “play zone”  between generations Y and Z  that an almost complete disconnect has evolved between act of hitting send  and content being transmitted and stored on the other end when it comes to our cell phones.  In the teen mind  if it is transmitted by cell phone it “isn’t real” and not covered by any definition of moral responsibility or man made law much the same way a dollar bill in Las Vegas loses all context when converted into a gaming chip.  Much the same way two consenting teens hook up for a quickie at a high school house party.  Judgment that is flawed as a pure matter of age becomes even more so with consequences never envisioned until an indictment is handed down and a jury says guilty.

You may cry foul and exclaim that the images were not obscene. You may argue that  this was not the intent of child pornography laws. You may go on Bill O”Reilly and rant that the laws your child is being prosecuted under laws meant to deter pedophiles and perverts  and instead are being used “in loco parentis” when punishment for such indiscretions should be left to the parents.  You may very well be doing all these things as the process takes on a life of its own.  You may be doing these things as  your child is indicted,  convicted and his/her appeal winds its way slowly through the justice system while he serves his mandatory minimum sentence  at the nearest state or federal penitentiary with real perverts and child molesters or at some “gladiator” juvenile facility.

Moral of story?  Have the talk…

©2009 Brian Cuban

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Posted in featured, Law and OrderComments (25)

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