Showing posts with label defamation on the internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label defamation on the internet. Show all posts

17/01/2013

Don't click on the link that contains defamation about you

Google page rank

Defamation on the internet - clicking on a defamatory link

Once you discover that your business is being defamed over the internet you might feel an unexplained urge  to continuously click on the link that contains the defamatory post.  Unfortunately, some victims of online defamation make the 'clicking' part of their daily routine as they check to see if the defamation is still there on the internet.

This habit of clicking on defamatory links can be very pricey.
A similar bad habit involves telling others about their defamation problems. Friends, family work colleagues and so on.
This almost compulsive action however must be controlled and preferably suspended altogether.

Unfortunately, with defamatory posts online, the more you click, the more powerful they become. Google gives priority to popularity. Learn more about why you must not click on defamatory links at the Internet Law Centre.


05/11/2012

How can I remove webpages from the internet?

How to remove unwanted web pages

This book, How to Remove Unwanted Web Pages, contains a practical summary, details of which  have been kept top secret until now, of specific techniques that have helped hundreds of people rid themselves of the humiliation, anxiety, stress, and embarrassment that unwanted web pages on the internet have caused—both to them and to their families and friends.

The book is the result of almost sixteen years of research of search engine behaviour, as well as relentless testing and re-testing, reading, listening to other professionals in the field, and continual trial and error to help us improve our grasp of what makes search engines tick.






Free Download Here

02/07/2012

9 Steps To Avoid Internet Defamation By Employees And Former Business Partners




Interenet defamation by employees and by business partners
Internet Defamation By Employees
How to describe that first shocking moment when you discover that the reputation of your business is being tarnished all over the internet? There’s really nothing else like it, and it is followed by sleepless nights and constant worry. For some business people whose reputation is attacked online, things will never be the same again.

Just imagine: As you lie awake wishing the problem would go away, instead, it is spreading throughout the internet. Within weeks, sometimes even days, there is more defamatory material every time you look. The complaints are anonymous, and they are in too many places for you to respond to, if the sites even allow for a response at all.

Learn more about defamation of business and the internet at the Internet Law Centre

The lightning speed of information flowing through the internet, the speed that seems so miraculous when you are seeking information, is now working against you. Soon, matters are completely out of your control.

Who creates these treacherous, career-wrecking posts? It turns out that former employees and former business partners are responsible for many of them. Experience tells us that this group of people is often motivated by a strong sense of injustice and powerful emotions of anger, pain, and fear. They are hurt emotionally and financially when they lose their position, without good cause, as they see it. In their view, their treatment by their former employer or business partner constitutes a breach of trust. Now that you’ve breached it, so will they. With a vengeance - literally. And they can do it in a way few others can.

During their employment, former employees and business partners are likely to have access to sensitive information about the company, and in some cases, evidence of minor wrongdoings by their employer or business partner. They might be in possession of vast amounts of information about you, your family, your personal life, your business practices and some of your past mistakes and errors. They may now use this information against you.

Learn more about business defamation and the internet at the Internet Law Centre

9 Steps To Avoid Defamation By Employees And Former Business Partners

While you can’t entirely eliminate the possibility of breach of trust by former employees or business partners, you can reduce the likelihood of becoming a victim to online defamation. Here are some important steps you should take as a precaution:

Step 1:
Always remember that employees and business partners come and go. Someday they will no longer be with your company, but their memories of you will not end with their employment.

Step 2:
Place a high value on personal integrity and trustworthiness when assessing a new business partner or employee. Skills may be acquired, but integrity cannot. It is gold, and value it as such.

Step 3:
Always look for signals of disgruntlement among your employees, listen to their concerns and act to fix matters quickly.

Step 4:
Restrict access to sensitive personal data and private information. Keep your customers’ mailing lists private as well. Maintain them in safe, preferably password-protected databases, and never make these databases freely available to your employees, especially in a downloadable format.

Step 5:
Make sure that your organisation complies with all the requirements of the Data Protection Act of 1998. If you neglect your legal obligations to protect your mailing lists from being stolen, you could find yourself liable for prosecution.

Step 6:
Ensure that your employees are constantly aware of your uncompromising approach towards breach of data protection laws.

Step 7:
Make data protection compliance part of all your employees' employment contracts.

Step 8:
In the event that you discover evidence of an employee misusing or unlawfully downloading your company’s customer database, deal with the issue immediately and without compromise. It is important that a stern approach towards any form of breach of trust is appropriately communicated to your entire workforce.

Step 9:
Always play it straight. Be fair in your dealings with employees and partners and listen to their concerns. It is the right thing to do. And it can also prevent internet-reputation nightmares down the road.
Learn more about business defamation and the internet at the Internet Law Centre

Author: Yair Cohen

27/06/2012

About The Work Of Yair Cohen

Yair Cohen Solicitor
Five years ago, I decided to put together the first "Internet law” department in the UK in my old law firm, Bains Cohen (now called Pinder Reaux). At the time, other lawyers that I met were struggling to understand what type of work we were actually doing.
This was because there wasn't  an official area of law which was called "Internet law". Today everyone understands what I do. Simply put, I get rid of bad or negative internet webpages.

As part of my work as an internet lawyer I regularly travel across the globe (virtually of course), from Russia to the United States from Uzbekistan to Mexico from Turkey to Canada and so on, in my quest for solutions to my clients’ reputational issues. There are servers and website hosts located all over the world, so along the way I have developed excellent working relationships with many other internet and defamation lawyers all over the world.

Together we fight the "Complaints Barons’, those who host defamatory complaints review websites, some of whom are so scrupulous that they use outright blackmail against business owners across the globe. The 'Barons' will remove defamatory comments and defamatory reviews about you from their website but only if you pay them to do so, and sometimes they ask for a very large sum of money (depending on how desperate their victim appears to them). They will  give you 'protection' against defamation on their website in return for protection money.
Internet defamation is used by some as a means of extorting money. Money transfers are normally done through PayPal payments, to make it difficult to trace. So occasionally we have to bring PayPal on board to suspend users who abuse their banking services.

Over the years,  internet defamation has become more common and dealing with it getting more urgent all the time, mainly because of the speed by which internet search engines are now delivering search results.

Internet lawyers are now becoming 'troubleshooters' and they carry less and less resemblance to  conventional lawyers.

You see, the law cannot solve all the problems in the world and internet defamation has gone far beyond being a simple legal issue. Defamation on the internet often results in an unexplained decline in business activities and it can ruin fragile companies very rapidly.

Solving internet defamation matters is now a specialist niche within the legal profession requiring lawyers to have sufficient legal, technical and commercial knowledge to enable them to understand some of the very basic issues that concern online defamation and business reputation management.

This is why my law firm, Internet Law Experts Solicitors, has its focus entirely on internet law and on online defamation issues. 

Each week we help dozens of business owners get rid of internet defamation and of the problems that defamation on the internet is causing them.

They can take advantage of same day consultations with a knowledgeable lawyer and of our unique experience in this area of law.

Visit our website for plenty of free information and advice on internet law.

http://www.internetlawcentre.co.uk

14/06/2012

Defamation on the Internet - Should I Respond To a Review On a Forum?

Negative review of business

Should I respond to a negative review on a forum?

Generally speaking, and contrary to advice which is commonly given by some customer services experts, you will need to consider the question whether to respond to a negative defamatory review very carefully.

First, your response, perhaps unintentionally, could further aggrieve the author of the review and unintentional usage of speech tone or unguarded language could easily prompt the author of the review to respond to your response. This could in turn attract internet search engine attention to the original bad review, making it visible to more people.

Second, it is best to deal with complaints privately even if it has already been posted on the internet.  Having customer service issues dealt with online, in front of the whole world could be entertaining to the readers but is not likely to improve your situation.

Sometimes, a response to a complaint on a review site could turn a short negative review turning into pages of unpleasant dialogue with you and strangers.

Read earlier post on Defamation on a complaints website

Author: Yair Cohen
Social media lawyer

12/10/2011

Defamation on the Internet: Google Is Ordered To Disclose Anonymous Account Information

INTERNET giant Google has lost a landmark legal battle that is expected to open the floodgates to online litigation against anonymous online commentators.


The Supreme Court in Australia ordered Google Australia to reveal details of the owner of a website which named an entrepreneur and self-help guru Jamie McIntyre a “thieving scumbag”.

In a statement which is encouraging to victims of online defamation around the world, including UK victims of online defamation, Google Inc confirmed that....Continue on Internet Law Expert blog

Google Must Disclose Anonymous User Information.

25/07/2011

Defamation on the internet and historic defamatory internet posts

Defamation on the Internet

Historic defamatory internet posts

Some internet posts are very old, perhaps they were first published on the internet 10-15 years ago. So why should you be bothered with the presence of historic postings on the internet, postings which you are told no one is likely to see anyway?

The answer is simple: internet content is being recycled all the time.

People who operate websites, the sole purpose of which is to display advertising, are very often too lazy to create their own original new content. So instead, they find old content on the internet and then use it to drive traffic to their own websites.

As their website becomes content rich, it attracts more traffic, which means that the historic postings about you or your business now start to be viewed by more and more web users and this in turn, increases the prominence of the negative historic posts.

So what if you could have your own full report which reveals all current and historic internet postings about you or about your company, going back up to 35 years and showing you everything which has ever been written in the past and everything that is currently published on the internet?

I know you would probably want one of these reports yourself because this information is like GOLD DUST and people in business can easily identify GOLD when they see it.

So we have developed the Under the Radar™ Reputation Report, to give you detailed research information on internet posts which are up to 35 years old!  The Report is even divided into different geographical areas to allow you to see what results people find about you from different locations in the country!

Find out more at the Internet Law Centre

28/06/2011

Online Defamation And Your Stolen Lists


Internet Defamation


It is very difficult to describe the moment where you first realise that your business reputation is being tarnished all over the internet. This unforgettable moment normally follows by many sleepless nights, tiredness, frustration and of course money problems.

You see, some of your employees are likely to possess impressive amounts of knowledge about you, your business, your practices, your procedures, your errors, mistakes and regrets, as well as about your true feelings about things that matter to your customers.

You get hit left, right and centre and with very little opportunity to defend yourself.

In the meantime, the online defamation attacks are starting to increase. Links are being shared between people and more defamatory material is now being.... Read more on Online Defamation

08/06/2011

Internet Defamation - Using Taggs to Spread Online Defamation

How To Destroy A Reputation In 5 Minutes. Don't Repeat At Home!!!

Defamation on the internet: Internet Defamation Case Study on How To Use Tagging To Spread Online Defamation.

How To Destroy A Reputation In 5 Minutes. Don't Repeat At Home!!!

defamation on the internet
Everyone has got their own soft spot. Depending on your profession, being called by a particular name in public, could cause you a lot of damage and harm your career. For a doctor, being commonly described as ‘negligent’, for a solicitor, being described as ‘incompetent’, for a builder, being described as ‘a cowboy’ or for a teacher, being described as ‘stupid’, would be regarded by any of these people as a personal attack on their reputation and integrity.

But not all insults are as harmful as the insults suffered by a top civil servant who worked as a social worker for the Children’s Service at a District Council in the North of the country. Having specialised for many years in children with learning difficulties and having achieved a tremendous professional respectability within his County Council and beyond, Stuart Granville (not his real name) was surprised to find out from a colleague that upon searching his name on the internet, the top three results that came out were news stories about social workers who had been jailed having been convicted of offences involving child pornography.

The news stories were not about Stuart Granville at all, but for one reason or another, they appeared at the top of the search pages against the search term ‘Stuart Granville’. The implications of this, as you can imagine were very serious for Stuart.

The association of his name, as someone who has been working with children, with articles about convicted child molesters were damaging to him beyond comprehension. Victim Of Online Defamation By Tagging Stuart immediately became concerned about his career and later on about his personal reputation and it was not long before he started to fear for his personal safety as well as for the wellbeing of his family. Stuart did not have his own website, in fact he was not allowed to have one because of the delicate position that he held within the Children’s Service, which meant that the vacuum which was on the internet against his name, was filled by someone who wanted to harm his career and who had the knowhow on how to associate a name with an article.

So who did this and how was it possible for one individual to cause so much devastation to an innocent and a very respectable member of the public? We will come back to the question of who did this in a moment. But first, let me show you the incredibly simple technique that was used to inflict such damage on Mr Granville and his family.

The technique that was used in this instance to attempt and trash Stuart Granville's reputation is incredible in its simplicity and is one which any individual or company should be aware of. The trick that was used here is called Tagging. Think of Tagging as a description of an item. The purpose of Tagging is to make it easy for internet search engines to associate an article or a product with certain keywords.

The best way to understand Tagging is to forget for a moment about the internet and think instead about a can of Coca Cola. If you were asked to tag a can of Coca Cola with the most relevant words that come to mind, most people will say ‘red’' 'fizzy’ ‘cold’ ‘can’ ‘drink’ ‘refreshing’ and so on. Now, think about this article that you are currently reading.
Defamation on the internet


How would you tag it? Or in other words, what would be the best way to describe it in simple short words? I would say, the first words that come to mind are ‘internet law’ ‘tagging’ ‘social worker’ ‘online reputation’ ‘reputation attack’ and so on. In the internet world the Tagging helps the search engines to associate a word, or a phrase with a product or an article. A tag can be added to any article which is posted on the internet by its publisher and sometimes also by third parties, if they are given permission to do so by the publisher.

So tagging is simply a series of keywords, which aim to describe an online item, whether a product, a service, a news story or an educational material. The publisher of the webpages, which contained news articles about a social worker who had been convicted of sexual offences involving children, had tagged each of these articles with a ‘Stuart Granville’ tag and from this point onwards, whenever an internet search was being carried out (particularly using Bing and Yahoo), the search engine made an association between Stuart Granville and the news articles which were tagged with his name.

This process of copying a news article and publishing it on the internet with damaging tags could be done in less than 5 minutes. It can however devastate people’s careers, families and reputation permanently. Simple? Yes. Powerful? Most certainly. In any event, Tagging is something to be aware of and to keep at the back of your mind at all times.

As for the perpetrator of this reputation attack on Stuart, Stuart believed beyond doubt that this was a parent who had had her children taken away from her by Social Services following a serious allegation of abuse.

At the time, she promised Stuart, who had been in charge of the Social Services Team which intervened and took the child away from his abusive mother, that he will live to regret the event. Stuart however, has never been able to prove who this person actually was.

To be fair, he never even seriously attempted to do so because once the problem was taken care of by specialist internet lawyers, and in fact disappeared within days, Stuart, very understandably just wanted to get on with his life, which is exactly what he did.
Yair Cohen

07/02/2011

Defamation on the Internet: What is a Google Bomb?


Defamation on the internet

A Google Bomb. What a scary phrase. Surely you must have heard this term being used before and wondered what it actually meant.

So what does the term “Google Bomb” really mean and how can a Google Bomb affect you or your business?




In short, a Google Bomb is a way to promote a web page by associating it with a phrase, for example ‘Internet Lawyer’. By clicking on ‘Internet Lawyer’ and arriving directly at a web page, you are in effect telling Google that the phrase and the web page are related.

When someone carries out a search for the phrase ‘Internet Lawyer’ Google will take a note of how many web users linked the phrase to a webpage, and the webpage which comes out as the most popular in this contest will be ranked higher than other pages.

Phrases can be linked to webpages by internet links on a web page, or by email. What is important is the number of web users who arrive at a webpage, for example http://www.internetexpert.com through a click on the phrase ‘Internet Lawyer’.

So far so good. You can surely see how this simple technique could be utilised to promote your own website. But this is not where this ends. The problems start when people link completely artificial phrases to webpages. For example, if you link someone’s name to a webpage that you had created about them, using effective Google Bomb techniques, everyone who carries out a search on this person, is likely to arrive at the page that you had created, rather than at that person’s own website. This way, you could create devastating publicity to your victim and their business.

Here is a potentially horrific example of a particularly nasty Google Bomb.

A similar Google Bomb to the one described below was created by the ex-wife of once a successful and perfectly respected local businessman, let’s call him John Smith, who made the mistake of trying to swap his wife of 15 years for a younger woman.

Once the divorce process was over, John’s ex-wife went on a mission to completely destroy her former husband.

She sent hundreds of emails in the name of her ex-husband:

Dear xxx,
it’s John Smith. I want you to do me a big favour and have a look at this website for me. Please let me know what you think. The link is
John Smith. It will only take you a minute and I really want to know what you think about this.
Thanks,
John SmithI will say nothing more. When you click on John Smith you will see why. When you've finished reading the webpage, come back and we will talk about how to avoid becoming a Google Bomb Victim.



How To Avoid Becoming a Google Bomb Victim
Well, there are a lot of things that you should definitely do. To start, make a point of being more involved with your marketing. Whether you like it or not, and whatever you think about internet marketing, an effective Google Bomb has the potential of ruining your business big time, regardless of whether you use the internet to attract new customers.

You must therefore give high priority to some positive web presence. Try to get something posted on the internet about you or your company as often as you can in order to stop somebody else from ‘hijacking’ your name and associating it with their own webpages. I would say you should aim to post something which carries your name with a link to your own website at least once a week.

Then, you might want to consider using email marketing. Don’t use it necessarily with the intention to sell anything and certainly don’t use it to create spam, but rather try and use email marketing as an informative educational tool. Within your email, prompt the recipients to click on a link, which contains your company’s name.

Depending on the quality of your mailing list and the quality of the information, which you provide in your email marketing, the clicks from the emails that you send could result in a friendly Google Bomb, which will promote your own website and will make it difficult for an external, harmful Google Bombs to be effective, when directed against you.

Author: Yair Cohen
Social media lawyer

20/08/2010

Business Defamation Solicitors

The Internet Law Centre - lawyers that specialise only in internet law.
"Great benefits for small businesses"
FULL STORY

“We have developed a unique legal practice with clear focus on internet law issues that businesses face on a daily basis. Our clients are intelligent people who want to know what options, including what legal proceedings are available to them. They want to be able to take a commercial view on their social media or defamation issue, taking account of social media trends, PR and marketing implications."  

via Internet Law Experts Solicitors

02/08/2010

Internet defamation legal advice

Internet Lawyer  - defamation on the internet"If you have found yourself being the subject of an online reputation attack, with lies being spread about you over the internet, you will find that the most effective way of dealing with such menace is to simply ask that the website owner or the Internet Service Provider remove the libellous statements. Normally website owners and internet service providers are not willing to tolerate online abuse or risk getting involved in litigation which has probably got nothing to do with them anyway. You can normally obtain very useful information from the website owner because websites routinely require visitors and bloggers to register before posting content and sites usually can pinpoint the IP address where the defamatory posting originated.
More internet law tips on Social media lawyers website

Affordable defamation lawyers

Affordable defamation laywerWhen I suggested the idea that as a firm of defamation lawyers we should offer a Money Back Guarantee to each and every new client, I was told by those who love me to stick to practising law.

I was assured that this was a bad idea. We would be bankrupt within a year, we will end up having constant arguments with clients, and people looking for free advice will take us for a ride.

This was two years ago. Since then, we have given advice on a Money Back Guarantee basis to hundreds of new clients – we advise at least one new client a day – and the number of clients who have asked for their money back is still ZERO.

 It’s not as if we discourage them from asking for their money back either. On the contrary, we always need to be satisfied that our clients are 100% happy with the advice we give them otherwise we offer them their money back ourselves.

This Money Back Guarantee offer has done us a power of good. We go out of our way to make sure that every single client we see is 100% happy, otherwise we don’t get paid. It’s that simple. This is a classic form of ‘self inflicting’ discipline that actually works.

Many people like you with internet law issues similar to yours have chosen to speak to us over other defamation lawyers because we guaranteed that we will add value to them with our advice.

Visit the Internet Law Centre and see how we can help you and your business solve your internet law issue.