This article assesses how the European Court of Human Rights has responded to the argument that holding online news media liable for reader comments has a chilling effect on freedom of expression. The article demonstrates how the Court first responded by dismissing the argument, and focused on the apparent lack of evidence for any such chilling effect. The article then argues that the Court has moved away from its initial rejection, and now accepts that a potential chilling effect, even without evidence, is integral to deciding whether online news media should be liable for reader comments. Finally, the article argues that this latter view is consistent with the Court’s precedent in other areas of freedom of expression law where a similar c...
Internet regulation in the European Union (EU) is receiving significant attention and criticism in t...
Social-media libel cases require courts to map existing defamation doctrines onto social-media fact ...
It is common knowledge that the internet has profoundly affected the manner in which people communic...
In few of the many cases where the European Court of Human Rights has found a violation of Article 1...
Over the last two decades, the European Court of Human Rights has been increasingly finding that cer...
Open and free internet-based platforms are seen as an enabler of global free expression, releasing w...
The European Court of Human Rights has, in three recent findings, dealt with intermediary liability ...
The democratic world has invested much effort to achieve the conditions for full freedom of expressi...
First published online: 13 December 2020Social media arose as a way to communicate with friends, but...
This Comment explores the conflict between state-described freedom of expression and the autonomy of...
This blog post, nearly five years after the final Delfi judgment (ECtHR Grand Chamber 16 June 2015),...
Social media has become a breeding ground for malicious, abusive, and offensive communications. Thes...
In Eker v. Turkey, the European Court of Human Rights held that a court-ordered publication of a rep...
While the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) over the past years has dealt with many aspects of ...
This chapter analyzes the jurisprudence of the ECtHR on the right to freedom of expression (Article ...
Internet regulation in the European Union (EU) is receiving significant attention and criticism in t...
Social-media libel cases require courts to map existing defamation doctrines onto social-media fact ...
It is common knowledge that the internet has profoundly affected the manner in which people communic...
In few of the many cases where the European Court of Human Rights has found a violation of Article 1...
Over the last two decades, the European Court of Human Rights has been increasingly finding that cer...
Open and free internet-based platforms are seen as an enabler of global free expression, releasing w...
The European Court of Human Rights has, in three recent findings, dealt with intermediary liability ...
The democratic world has invested much effort to achieve the conditions for full freedom of expressi...
First published online: 13 December 2020Social media arose as a way to communicate with friends, but...
This Comment explores the conflict between state-described freedom of expression and the autonomy of...
This blog post, nearly five years after the final Delfi judgment (ECtHR Grand Chamber 16 June 2015),...
Social media has become a breeding ground for malicious, abusive, and offensive communications. Thes...
In Eker v. Turkey, the European Court of Human Rights held that a court-ordered publication of a rep...
While the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) over the past years has dealt with many aspects of ...
This chapter analyzes the jurisprudence of the ECtHR on the right to freedom of expression (Article ...
Internet regulation in the European Union (EU) is receiving significant attention and criticism in t...
Social-media libel cases require courts to map existing defamation doctrines onto social-media fact ...
It is common knowledge that the internet has profoundly affected the manner in which people communic...