Important message to all Factsandarts.com users

Factsandarts.com will permanently close down on Monday March 31, 2025. For any enquiries please email to “Write to the Editor”.

May 20th 2014

How Much Freedom of Speech is Too Much?

by William D. Cohan

William D. Cohan, a former senior Wall Street M&A investment banker for 17 years at Lazard Frères & Co., Merrill Lynch and JPMorganChase, is the New York Times  bestselling author of three non-fiction narratives about Wall Street: Money and Power: How Goldman Sachs Came to Rule the World; House of Cards: A Tale of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street; and, The Last Tycoons: The Secret History of Lazard Frères & Co., the winner of the 2007 FT/Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award. His new book, The Price of Silence, about the Duke lacrosse scandal was published in April 2014 and is also a New York Times bestseller. He is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair. He also writes for The Financial Times, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, The Atlantic, ArtNews, the Irish Times, the New York Times and theNew York Times Magazine. He previously wrote a bi-weekly opinion column for The New York Times, an opinion column for BloombergView and features for Fortune. He also appears regularly on MSNBC, on Bloomberg TV, where he is a contributing editor, and on CNN and the BBC-TV. He has also appeared as a guest on the Daily Show, with Jon Stewart, The NewsHour, The Charlie Rose Show, The Tavis Smiley Show, and CBS This Morning as well as on numerous NPR, BBC and Bloomberg radio programs. He is a graduate of Duke University, Columbia University School of Journalism and the Columbia University Graduate School of Business.

While we all rightly celebrate the protections afforded free speech by the First Amendment and are thankful, as President Obama said recently at the annual White House Correspondents Dinner, "We really are lucky to live in a country where reporters get to give a head of state a hard time on a daily basis -- and then, once a year, give him or her the chance, at least, to try to return the favor," an increasing number of ordinary Americans are wondering if there should be limits to saying or writing whatever you please in online forums that can sully someone's reputation with impunity and impair his or her ability to make a living.

To help sort out how much free speech is too much free speech, offended parties are turning to the courts, where so far the message seems to be one of ambiguity. For instance, earlier this year a jury in Fairfax County, Virginia heard a case brought by Christopher Dietz, a local contractor, against Jane Perez, who in 2011 had hired Dietz, her high school classmate, to do some renovation work in her home. It turned out Perez was dissatisfied by the work Dietz performed, locked him off the job site, failed to pay him and had to spend thousands of dollars more to fix what she claimed Dietz had done wrong. She also took to Angie's List and to Yelp, which has around 132 million unique visitors a month to its website, to complain about her experience working with Dietz. Her considered opinion: a one-star review and the admonition, "Bottom line do not put yourself through this nightmare of a contractor."

Dietz responded by filing a lawsuit against Perez, claiming her review was not only inaccurate but also sent customers fleeing -- five of 10 potential contracts disappeared, he testified at the trial -- and cost him $300,000 in lost business and up to another $500,000 from "harm to and loss of business reputation, insult and anxiety." He demanded $750,000. He also wrote about Perez, on Angie's List, "If theft was made, it was her stealing money and services from me. A very sad way to treat a former classmate who did $13K worth of work for free and was never paid a penny for his time or material."

In January, after a five-day trial and eight hours of deliberation, the jury declared the matter a draw, deciding that both parties had defamed each other but awarding neither of them any damages. Dietz told the Washington Post that while he was "shocked" by the verdict, he took comfort from the fact that the jury found that Perez had defamed him. For her part, Perez saw the verdict as a clear victory. "I think freedom of speech won in this case, and that's a good message to send," she said.

But if a similar case wending its way through the Oregon courts provides any additional insight, there remains hesitancy to protect such defamatory commentary. According to an Oregon court case, Christopher Liles attended a 2011 wedding held at Dancing Deer Mountain, a party venue located in Junction City, Oregon. During the event, "tensions arose" between the guests and the staff after the staff observed the guests "consuming alcohol" in a "manner" that violated the venue's "alcohol policy." Liles also was offended that the owners -- Carol and Tim Neumann -- and the staff began urging people to leave the event as early as 8:30 at night. Two days later, Liles took to Google Reviews and wrote scathingly of Dancing Deer Mountain under the headline "Disaster!!!!! Find a different wedding Venue." Liles continued, "There are many other great places to get married, this is not that place! The worst wedding experience of my life!" He complained that the "bridal suite" was nothing more than "a tool shed that was painted pretty" and he worried that the Neumanns were going to keep his $500 security deposit and figure out a way to charge him additional fees.

Carol Neumann sued Liles, claiming that the review was defamatory and was "an invasion of privacy by false light." She claimed that Liles' one-star review cost her thousands of dollars in lost business. Her attorney argued that there should be limitations to free speech without repercussions. Liles' attorney argued that his client's ranting was simply his protected opinion. A Lane County, Oregon judge sided with Liles, citing a 2001 Oregon law -- the anti-Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (known as anti-SLAPP laws, which exist in 26 states) -- that protects Liles' right to write what he pleases in public forums.

Neumann appealed the judge's decision and, in March, the three-member Oregon Court of Appeals reversed the lower court's ruling and decided that Neumann could proceed with her defamation suit against Liles because a "reasonable factfinder" might be able to discern that Liles had not only shared his opinion online but also had conveyed facts that Neumann could potentially disprove in court. The ultimate denouement of the Oregon case will be closely watched for what it could portend for the future of how far online commentators are allowed to go in pursuing their arch agendas, free of any accountability or repercussions.

Such a ruling -- whenever it comes -- will also be watched closely by authors whose books appear for sale on Amazon and then quickly get reviewed by an increasingly large army of people who seem to have nothing better to do with their time. Mostly these reviews are thoughtful - even in their negativity -- and show at least some evidence that the reviewer actually took the time to read the book he or she is reviewing.

But not always, as I discovered recently. Apparently, Amazon's rule for reviewers is that they must wait until a book goes on sale before posting a review. Fair enough. Within hours of my latest book, The Price of Silence -- about the 2006 Duke lacrosse scandal -- being publicly released on April 8, an extremely passionate group of reviewers began posting one-star reviews on the Amazon page devoted to the book. It was soon obvious that they were a well-organized group and there was no way any of them had read the book that quickly, if for no other reason than it is a tightly wound 621 pages devoted to a balanced assessment of a complex event. That did not stop the haters, who were determined to poison the well.

One of the reviewers -- a "FransSusan" from McDonough, Georgia -- at least had the decency to concede she had not read the book before writing in her one-star review, "This idiot author obviously has some kind of political agenda. There's no doubt about the innocence of the Duke students. You have to ask yourself what is Cohan up to to write such nonsense!" Another review, posted within hours of the book's release, stated, "Cohan is writing fiction" and wondered, "Where is the ZERO star option?" Of the 87 reviews of the book, 61 are of the one-star variety, while 24 of the remaining 26 are either five-stars or four-stars. (Only about three of the 61 one-star reviews were from people whose purchase Amazon had "verified," meaning they likely never bought (or read) the book.) Up at the top of the page, the market's verdict has been rendered: this is a two-star book, not worthy of a moment's consideration.

Apparently, all this is just fine with Amazon, which as we learned from George Packer's elucidating expose of the company in the New Yorker, doesn't much care how authors are treated. Nor do Amazon's customer service representatives worry particularly whether these thoughtless reviews hurt authors' ability to make a living. And unlike the lawsuits brought by the small business owners described above, there do not appear to be any defamation lawsuits brought in this country by authors against Amazon or the reviewers on its website claiming that slanderous reviews hurt book sales -- although such a lawsuit seems inevitable at this point. (In the UK, a self-published author lost a 2011 case against a man who had written negative reviews of his book on Amazon.)

In reply to my digital inquiry about the fairness of Amazon permitting such clearly biased reviews from people who had not taken the time to read the book, a Regina B., at Amazon, replied, "I understand your concerns, but the review doesn't violate our posted guidelines, so I'm unable to remove it in its current format...We try to encourage our customers to give their honest opinions on our products while staying within our guidelines. As a retailer we are interested in cultivating a diversity of opinion on our products. Part of that is allowing our customers to air their honest thoughts on items they have received."

If only that were true. What's clear is that we're are at a crucial moment where the ability of technology to permit instant, unvetted and unfiltered commentary is running head-first into the justified concerns of those whose reputations can be torn asunder unfairly by it. It's a conundrum for sure and one that needs some serious sorting out.




     

Browse articles by author

More Essays

Nov 28th 2024
EXTRACT: "Researchers analysed data from two major prostate cancer prevention trials, linking them with Medicare health records to track outcomes for over 29,000 participants. Among these, nearly 4,000 men were diagnosed with prostate cancer. Of this group, 655 underwent surgery to remove the prostate (prostatectomy), 1,056 received radiotherapy, and 2,235 did not receive treatment."
Nov 17th 2024
EXTRACT: "The weight-loss jab Wegovy made its debut on June 4 2021. It was the first new weight-loss drug to be approved by the US Food and Drug Administration since 2014. There has been a lot of excitement since the launch. Not only is the drug extremely effective (people lose about 15% of their body weight in a year), it also appears to have many benefits beyond just weight loss. It’s worth noting that the drug (generic name: semaglutide) was first used to treat diabetes, and indeed is still a blockbuster diabetes drug. So that’s two benefits already. Let’s look at some of the other potential benefits. Here are eight (and the list isn’t exhaustive)."
Oct 11th 2024
EXTRACTS: "Between 1939 and 1945, around 10% of concentration camp guards were women, yet these Aufseherinnen (overseers) as they were known, barely feature in Holocaust history or literature." ------ "One little Aufseherin, twenty years old, who had so little knowledge that she said 'excuse me' when walking in front of a prisoner, and who was visibly frightened by the first round of brutality she saw, needed exactly four days to adjust her tone and procedures, although it was totally new to her." ----- " 'The most frightening news brought about by the Holocaust and by what we learned of its perpetrators was not the likelihood that ‘this’ could be done to us, but the idea that we could do it.' ---- The true horror of genocide is found in the similarity between us and the perpetrators, not in the difference."
Oct 9th 2024
EXTRACT: "In 1928, Walt Disney's fledgling animation studio lost most of its staff to a rival company, his two latest cartoons had not found a buyer, and he had had to sell his car to meet payroll.  Disney's innovative response changed his industry, and American popular culture."
Sep 26th 2024
EXTRACT: "When it comes to economic policy, Carter is sometimes blamed for excessive regulation, government spending, and runaway inflation. His successor, Ronald Reagan, is often credited with ending the era of “big government.” But the conventional narrative fails to acknowledge that it was Carter who launched the deregulatory push that bore fruit during the Reagan years."
Sep 26th 2024
EXTRACT: "Buffett's status as the Oracle of Omaha stemmed from his ability to develop the wisdom and judgment that transformed him from a good conceptual investor into an exceptional experimental one."
Sep 26th 2024
EXTRACT: "Last year, a social-media trend featured women asking men how often they thought about the Roman Empire. The answer, it seemed, was “very”: many men claimed that the ancient empire crossed their minds weekly or even daily. That did not surprise Mike Duncan, the host of the popular 'History of Rome' podcast, and probably not Tom Holland, who has written multiple bestselling books on the topic. Mary Beard certainly understands the popular fascination, too. Her study of ancient Rome – together with her unpretentious style and brash charisma – has made her what one observer called 'a national treasure, and easily the world’s most famous classicist.' ” ----- "Beard challenges this mythology of whiteness, arguing in her 2016 book SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome that the story of the Roman Empire, which was necessarily ethnically diverse, is 'the history of people of color'. In fact, the book concludes with Emperor Caracalla’s grant of citizenship to all the empire’s subjects. The old Roman aristocracy lost its privileges, because it had not shared them."
Sep 22nd 2024
EXTRACTS: "Since the golden age of Athenian democracy, freedom of speech has been viewed as a defining feature of open societies, even as it remains under constant attack. The Athenians believed that the proper functioning of government depended on free and honest exchange of ideas, no matter how controversial or unpopular. In ancient Rome, by contrast, only senators enjoyed anything resembling free speech – and even then, as the statesman Marcus Tullius Cicero learned the hard way, speaking out could have deadly consequences." ----- "In our hyper-connected world, where mobile phones outnumber people and most of the global population has internet access, the decline of traditional news outlets has deepened our dependence on social media. As opaque algorithms shape the news we consume and our perception of reality, the corporations and oligarchs controlling these platforms pose a growing threat to free speech. Although they claim to be its ultimate defenders, their business model, by amplifying disinformation and identity-based grievances for profit, renounces the responsibility that sustains it."
Jul 27th 2024
EXTRACT: "Some conservative intellectuals think the west has already adopted Christianity-lite. Many point to the book Dominion: The Making of the Western Mind (2019), by historian Tom Holland. Holland argues that despite declining religious belief, Christian ideas remain central to western civilisation. He views liberalism – our dominant political philosophy – as secularised Christianity. For him, core western ideas, like universal human rights, equality and dignity, stem from Christianity."
Jul 26th 2024
EXTRACTS: "We often hear about the importance of the human microbiome – the vast collection of bacteria and fungi that live on and inside us – when it comes to our health. But there’s another, equally important part of this microbial community that remains far less known: the virome." ----- "Viruses are the most abundant biological entities on Earth, with an estimated 10³¹ viral particles globally and about 10¹³ in each human being." ----- "Understanding the virome could revolutionise medicine and public health."
Jul 16th 2024
EXTRACTS: "Trump joins tens of thousands of Americans treated for non-fatal gunshot wounds each year. Such experiences can shatter people’s assumptions that they are living in a safe, understandable and controllable world, leaving them feeling unworthy, unsafe and unsure. As a result, survivors of non-fatal gun violence face increased risks of depression, anxiety, substance use and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). PTSD can feel overwhelming." ---- ".... some trauma survivors experience post-traumatic growth. They may develop greater empathy, stronger relationships, deeper spirituality and find new meaning in life. After being shot in 1981, the then president Ronald Reagan’s trauma seemed to deepen his sense of empathy and humility. He felt God had spared him for a reason, spurring him to reduce nuclear tensions with the Soviet Union."
Jul 15th 2024
EXTRACTS: "Artificial sweeteners such as sucralose are not metabolised by the human body so they are excreted – this is what makes them low-calorie sugar alternatives. And that’s where the environmental problem begins. Current wastewater treatment plants are unable to remove these sugar mimics, meaning they end up in our environment – in our water, rivers and soil." --- "Forever chemicals are increasingly present in our streams, rivers and oceans – most notably per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) that don’t degrade. PFAS are synthetic chemicals found in many consumer products, including skincare products, cosmetics and waterproof clothing. PFAS can remain in the human body for many years, and some present significant risks to our health – potentially causing liver damage, thyroid disease, obesity, infertility and cancer."
Jul 3rd 2024
EXTRACTS: "Psychologist, James Hillman had concerns about what I like to call the 'loneliness-as-pathology' "---- "....Hillman went on to argue...: 'If loneliness is an archetypal sense built into us all from the very beginning, then, to be alive is also to be lonely. Loneliness, therefore, will come and go as it chooses in the course of a lifetime, quite apart from our efforts to deny or avoid this reality.' "
Jul 3rd 2024
EXTRACT: "How can we be at least 15 times richer than our pre-industrial Agrarian Age predecessors, and yet so unhappy? One explanation is that we are not wired for it: nothing in our heritage or evolutionary past prepared us to deal with a society of more than 150 people. To operate our increasingly complex technologies and advance our prosperity, we somehow must coordinate among more than eight billion people."
Jun 25th 2024
EXTRACTS: "What’s interesting about the entire Russia-North Korea showy display of camaraderie is China’s response: silence. China has misgivings about how things are unfolding, which reports suggest prompted Chinese president Xi Jinping’s call to Putin to call off the latter’s visit to Pyongyang. Obviously, Putin didn’t heed Xi’s request." ----- "The Sino-Korean animosity dates back centuries and took shape when Korea was a vassal state of imperial China. Unfortunately, this animosity extended to modern times when Mao Zedong decided to station Chinese troops in North Korea even after the conclusion of the Korean war, and when Beijing did not aid Pyongyang in its nuclear ambitions. It didn’t help either that the founding leader of North Korea, Kim Il-sung, was suspected of espionage and was nearly executed by the Chinese Communist party in the 1930s."
Jun 19th 2024
EXTRACT: "Ultra-processed foods (such as packaged snacks, sugary drinks, instant noodles and ready-to-eat meals) often contain emulsifiers, microparticles (such as titanium dioxide), thickeners, stabilisers, flavours and colourants. While research on humans is limited, studies on mice have shown that these ingredients alter the gut microbiome (the community of microorganisms living in the intestines) in several ways. These many microbiome changes can in turn affect the way the immune system functions."
Jun 9th 2024
EXTRACT: "Alzheimer’s disease can be split in two subgroups, familial and sporadic. Only 5% of patients with Alzheimer’s are familial, inherited, and 95% of Alzheimer’s patients are sporadic, due to environmental, lifestyle and genetic risk factors. Consequently, the most effective tactic for tackling Alzheimer’s is preventative and living a healthy lifestyle. This has led researchers to study risk factors associated with Alzheimer’s."
Mar 8th 2024
EXTRACT: "This study suggests that around 10% of people diagnosed with dementia may instead have underlying silent liver disease with HE causing or contributing to the symptoms – an important diagnosis to make as HE is treatable."
Jan 28th 2024
EXTRACT: "Health disparity is a powerful weapon in the savage class warfare otherwise known as neoliberalism. (In 2020, the RAND Corporation did a study of the transfer of wealth over the last several decades from the working-class and the middle-class to the top one percent. Their estimate is a staggering $47 trillion – that is how much the “upward redistribution of income” cost American workers between 1975 and 2018.) Neoliberalism is a brutal form of labor suppression, which uses health as a means of maintaining and reproducing a condition in which wealth is constantly being redistributed upwards, and the middle-class is kept in a constant state of fear of sinking into the ranks of the poor. Medical expenses are the leading cause of bankruptcies in America – and that’s according to the American Bankruptcy Institute. The ballooning costs of healthcare serve to maintain a system marked by morally unacceptable health inequity and injustice."
Jan 28th 2024
EXTRACT. "But living longer has also come at a price. We’re now seeing higher rates of chronic and degenerative diseases – with heart disease consistently topping the list. So while we’re fascinated by what may help us live longer, maybe we should be more interested in being healthier for longer. Improving our “healthy life expectancy” remains a global challenge. Interestingly, certain locations around the world have been discovered where there are a high proportion of centenarians who display remarkable physical and mental health. The AKEA study of Sardinia, Italy, as example, identified a “blue zone” (named because it was marked with blue pen),....."