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Legal Issues in Social Media With David Fraser

I spent this past Sunday in Dartmouth at the first Podcamp Halifax [1]. As an enthusiast of the Podcamp [2]movement of grassroots community-run events for the social media set (and an organizer of Podcamp Toronto [3]), I was there to help them kick off their first such event, as well as spend time meeting some fascinating people.

One such person is David Fraser [4], lawyer with McInnes Cooper [5] with whom I have been corresponding for a few years now, president of the Canadian Information Technology Law Association [6], and law blogger (see his posts here on Slaw [7] and also his stellar Canadian Privacy Law Blog [8]). It was terrific to finally meet him in person.

At Podcamp Halifax [9] he led a discussion about legal issues and social media. The discussion was fairly detailed, but I managed to make a few notes. Please note this is for general informational purposes, not legal advice, and there is always that slight possibility I may have written something down inaccurately. Please consult with a lawyer if you have questions or concerns. Here, then, are my notes from David’s session which was mostly question and answer format:

Q: All these people videotaping, photographing others at this event. Is that legal?
A: They can do it in a public place, with certain boundaries. These images cannot be used for business purposes without your permission. Best practice at an event like this, have disclaimers posted.

Q: How do you stop an online community from doing bad things as a group?
A: In Canada: you go after the service provider e.g. to have them shut them down, because difficult to find the ringleader. This is how the law deals with technology. It is a bit like banning pencils so that no one can write anything bad. But, what kind of role/responsibility should the service provider have? Once the service provider knows about it, they should take action. They don’t have to police it, however. Puts service providers in a difficult spot.

Q: Jurisdiction – can you enforce a Canadian judgment for a service provider based in another country?
A: For Facebook, doing business and with customers in Canada, they probably can, but for someone operating in Bosnia, for example, probably not. One of the challenges is that it is completely global. You can put something up perfectly fine in Canada and the U.S., but could be against the laws in Pakistan or Saudi Arabia. You could be liable in those countries. You can use software to limit their view of your content. Tends to be more in theory than what really happens, fortunately.

Content Licensing

Creative Commons

Contract

Privacy

Open Source

Human Resources

YouTube videos

It is evident the group had a lot of thoughts around legal issues. Some of it concerned personal issues such as privacy; I could see some were struggling with the cultural shift of being visible online. The other area of concern was from content creators who want to know how to make things available without giving everything away freely. So many of these are still grey areas, I hope a few of the lawyers here on Slaw [11]in addition to David Fraser will watch and help us understand.

It was a pleasure to meet David finally in person, and to attend the first Podcamp Halifax. Related events coming up later this year:

Northern Voice, Vancouver – Feb. 20 & 21, 2009 – http://2009.northernvoice.ca/ [12] [nominal registration fee]
Podcamp Toronto – Feb. 21 & 22, 2009 – http://podcamptoronto.pbwiki.com/ [13]
Podcamp London (ON) – April 25, 2009 – http://podcamplondon.com/ [14]
Podcamp Montreal – Sept. 2009 (tentative) – http://podcampmontreal.org/ [15]