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by fiblye
2154 days ago
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Japan also has strong privacy laws, extending into excessive and absurd defamation laws. For example, if you have piles of proof of someone committing a crime like sexual assault and the cops refuse to take it seriously, you can reliably post it on Twitter these days and people will take it seriously. In Japan, the person who committed the crime can reliably sue you for ruining their reputation and win. Stating actual plain facts about a person that harms their image on any public platform will land you in trouble, unless it’s something that’s clearly in the public interest to know (like if a company is putting arsenic in their baby food). It’s likely one reason why incidents of work harassment and abuse only become public after someone kills themselves. |
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> In Japan, the person who committed the (sexual) crime can reliably sue you for ruining their reputation and win
Unfortunately, this is not an uncommon thing outside of Japan [1]. And to be fair, you can’t just put a blanket ban on defamation lawsuits because it’s not wrong to sue for defamation if the allegation of sexual misconduct is in fact false. I don’t believe the majority of them to be the case, but ultimately, it’s for the courts to decide.
[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/12/arts/defamation-me-too.ht...
> Stating actual plain facts about a person that harms their image on any public platform will land you in trouble, unless it’s something that’s clearly in the public interest to know
Whoa. This the whole point of having defamation laws. Would you rather live in a world where every embarrassing details about your life can be published online?