What Is Ron Paul Thinking? Sues To Unmask Anonymous Internet Users

from the perhaps-he-doesn't-get-the-internet-so-much... dept

One of the key points behind Ron Paul’s success in this Presidential campaign (as well as in 2008) was his reputation for actually “getting the internet” and making good use of it to promote his message and motivate and activate his supporters. But it appears that perhaps he doesn’t quite get the internet that well. That’s all I can think after reading the details of a dreadfully short-sighted lawsuit that he filed to try to unmask some anonymous internet users. Basically, some random internet users created a pretty dumb, racist and offensive anti-John Huntsman attack video, essentially questioning his “values” because he speaks Chinese.

However, it was posted by a user under the name NHLiberty4Paul. And, at the end it briefly says “Vote Ron Paul.” Still, there’s absolutely nothing to indicate this was created by the Paul campaign. The video has received some attention on the campaign trail, with both Paul and Huntsman speaking out against the video. Huntsman said he doesn’t mind people making fun of him for speaking Chinese, but was upset about bringing his family into it with some pictures and videos of his adopted daughters. Paul disavowed the video and the creators of the video, saying: “Nobody who actually supports Dr. Paul’s principles would put together something like that.” Separately, they called it disgusting.

And really, that should be it. However, for whatever reason, the Paul campaign has now filed a lawsuit in the federal courts, in the Northern California district, seeking to identify whoever created and uploaded the video — alleging trademark infringement and defamation. Even more ridiculous is that he’s filed for expedited discovery to try to unmask those uploaders quickly. This is all sorts of bizarre and not particularly smart. It also seems to go against a bunch of Paul’s main points — including his belief in state’s rights over federal (he’s suing in federal court, not state court, using some questionable theories) and his support of the First Amendment — which, many courts have pointed out, includes the right to speak anonymously.

Even more specifically, on the actual details of the lawsuit it’s difficult to see how this is a trademark claim in any way, since it’s questionable how this is a “use in commerce” (necessary for trademark law). Second, the defamation claim is just bizarre. As a public figure, the bar for defamation is crazy high — and he’d likely have to prove that the video was made maliciously to make him look bad. That seems like a massively high hurdle, since it’s just as likely that some clueless/ignorant people made the video thinking it would help him. But, on top of that, is just putting his name on a dumb and offensive video — without ever suggesting he was directly associated with it — even defamation in the first place? Hell, if anyone has a defamation claim here (and I don’t think anyone does) it would be Huntsman.

Finally, what good does filing this lawsuit do? I can’t figure out any conceivable argument under which filing the lawsuit makes sense. Not only is it on questionable legal theories and contrary to his core statements on Constitutional support, but it also simply calls more attention to the offensive video and brings the story back into the news cycle, after he’s been trying to distance himself from it. No doubt, the video is stupid, but this lawsuit may be even dumber.

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Comments on “What Is Ron Paul Thinking? Sues To Unmask Anonymous Internet Users”

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96 Comments
Daniel (user link) says:

Re: It's Simple

Youre totally missing the point, apparently it isn’t that simple for you. If an anonymous person were to create a video suggesting that you were racist because Huntsman was ambassador to the Chinese and/or had Chinese children, then wrongly said the video was approved by you, you would take legal action to that kind of slander, too.

“It’s a simple” defamation attempt.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: It's Simple

Not to the same degree, no. So the knee-jerk reaction is definitely related to the letters that came out earlier.

The article did not mention “approved by” only endorsing Ron Paul while attacking Huntsman.

create a video suggesting that you were a racist because Huntsman was ambassador… I think you mean the UPLOADER was displaying a racist view of THEIR OWN against Huntsman and later endorsing Ron Paul.

Slightly different from your translation, implying that somehow Ron Paul was racist because some anonymous person said racist comments and then said “vote for Ron Paul.”

It’s not a defamation attempt against Paul. It’s a racist comment against Huntsman given his ability to speak Chinese (Mandarin, good luck with Cantonese) and political connection with China.

Your argument is like saying someone wearing a Pepsi tshirt assaults a Coke drinker and somehow that defames Pepsi because they wore a Pepsi shirt Pepsi somehow approves of it. No, it is purely the action of some individual.

Ron Paul is smart to quickly speak out against it, but going as far as he has is simply a knee-jerk related to his lack of sufficient response when those letters surfaced from his campaign back in the day.

Totally different.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: It's Simple

If an anonymous person were to create a video suggesting that you were racist because Huntsman was ambassador to the Chinese and/or had Chinese children, then wrongly said the video was approved by you, you would take legal action to that kind of slander, too.

Why do you believe this? Has Mike sued someone for defamation for something similar in the past, or in any way indicated that he would do so? Or did you mean to say that you would take legal action? That’s a totally different statement of course.

el_segfaulto (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Begun, the SOPA wars have. I’ve downloaded a ton of things from megaupload and not a single one was an act of piracy. (And this is coming from somebody with zero ethical problem with non-commercial downloading). The custom ROMs for my various Android devices, precompiled binaries for Linux distributions, and a host of other perfectly legitimate files were hosted there.

GMacGuffin says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Also, one of the “procedural” issues relating to SOPA/PIPA is that private plaintiffs are out there right now getting judgments and injunctions against foreign sites (albeit mostly through judicial fiat), and obtaining the very relief they say SOPA/PIPA is needed for — without the widspread damaging effects those laws would wreak.

hegemon13 says:

Why? Perhaps because the media repeatedly claimed that the video was released by the Paul campaign, even AFTER it had been thoroughly debunked. Then, they used it to claim that Ron Paul attracted crazy supporters. Finally, what happened when it was demonstrated that the very first referrals to the video came from the Huntsman campaign? Nothing. No retractions, apologies, or corrections. That stupid still comes up in comments sections trying to prove that Paul is “racist” against Chinese.

So, will the lawsuit go anywhere? No. But it should put a nail in the coffin of the idea that Paul had anything whatsoever to do with it. It’s political theater in response to political theater, and I can’t think of any better way he could have declared, “This was not ours.” Especially since repeatedly saying, “This was not ours” didn’t work.

hegemon13 says:

Re: Re:

In addition, there is enough evidence pointing to the Huntsman campaign to be worth a lawsuit. If, indeed, the video was released by someone on the campaign, the anonymous lawsuit will go away, but a whole new lawsuit will be filed. While defamation law probably wasn’t broken, campaign law most definitely was, if it was indeed produced by someone on Huntman’s campaign.

Ninja (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Sun Tzu would be proud. Every politician must have a copy besides their pillows. It’s pretty common that when the elections draw closer all sorts of types of accusations and false information come and start being repeated ad nauseam by paid shills so it’ll sound like it’s the truth.

Clever but rotten tactics. Not really surprising in our current rotten, morally degraded world.

SandraF (profile) says:

I’m Canadian, so I don’t have a dog in the hunt, but I’ve always found Ron Paul honest and admirable. Still, it does seem out of character for him to sue. The only reason I can see to go ahead with this suit is to possibly unmask the uploaders as being connected with Jon Huntsman himself (there is some evidence).

Still might be unwise though.

Mea says:

Re: Ron Paul

He doesn’t want this to come back and bite him in the rear somewhere down the line. He`s just covering his ass by totally separating himself from the whole thing. If you listen to the first few seconds of the talking part……that is John Huntsmam. Sounds like a home recording……Hmmm…….wonder where that came from?

josh (user link) says:

Re: Response to: SandraF on Jan 19th, 2012 @ 12:18pm

Hi Sandra. Just wanted to reply that suing is perfectly consistent with the philosophy of Paul. 1 he thinks huntsman campaign itself may have been behind the video. 2 just like sopa or Megaupload raid, Paul thinks the industry is overstepping authority to go after such large public utility spaces. The reality is that a Judge’s signature on a warrant is a much more fair and constitutional method of preventing libel or prosecuting copyright infringement.

annon4whatever says:

Re: Are You Retarded?

“…the ad was produced by the Huntsman campaign, which has already been proved numerous times.”

Aside from your grammatical ineptitude, I ask: Where has this been proven?

I’ve seen ONE “independent study” released by the Ron Paul campaign saying it was someone attached to the Huntsman campaign.

Lets see…

1. Independent study done by ardent Ron Paul supporter who has given money to his (and his son’s) campaign. Same supporter who openly voted for Ron Paul on Facebook straw poll and then posted about it. Same supporter who lists support on his Facebook for all kinds of Ron Paul stuff…

2. The main argument that it was someone connected to the Huntsman campaign is that there was a referral link from huntsman’s website or webmail servers. Ever use Twitter? If someone on the huntsman campaign got an email saying that @jonhuntsman had been mentioned in a Tweet and then clicked on the link, that means they were responsible for it? (I don’t know if that’s what happened, but that’s a possibility that accounts for the “independent” study’s view)

What I DID like about Ron Paul has gone out the window with this ridiculous lawsuit. Do I think he posted/knew about/privately endorsed the video? No, absolutely not. Do I think it was Huntsman or his people? No to that as well.

Rikuo (profile) says:

On Tuesday, here in Ireland, I walked into work and on the front page of the Daily Herald, a national newspaper, was a sorta similar lawsuit, filed by a kid against Facebook and Google and other companies, over a video that allegedly shows him evading taxi fare: except he says it isn’t him in the video. He says that the video will hurt his employment opportunities, because employers comb through Facebook accounts these days.
Kid, because you launched this lawsuit, it ended up on the FRONT PAGE of a NATIONAL NEWSPAPER. Employers now know who you are and how stupid you are. No-one had ever heard of him.

What I also found ridiculous were our judges were apparently seriously trying to order the internet to remove the video. Yeah, like that’s ever worked. Can anyone say super-injuction?
Now, gimme a minute and I’ll have a link.

I found two links, sadly none from the Herald, but they provide enough information

http://www.irishexaminer.com/text/ireland/kfidauojcwau/
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2012/0118/1224310398051.html

Trial says:

HuffingtonPost

“When The Huffington Post contacted the poster of the video through YouTube to ask why they created the video and whether they had any formal association with the Paul campaign, NHLiberty4Paul replied: “Sorry, campaign has asked me not to speak to reporters.”

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/06/huntsman-denounces-video-_n_1189285.html

Bengie says:

Re: Re:

The current “claims” are that MegaUpload not only made money via advertisment from the pirated movies, but they also paid other people to upload those types of movies.

So they’re claiming that Mega actively encouraged via monetary incentives to upload pirated movies.

These are the claims anyway. Not sure if “facts”.

Phillip (profile) says:

This is one of the few examples where I don’t think this approach is stupid. Given that it’s being talked about by both campaigns, this isn’t something they’re trying to hide so it doesn’t matter if he draws attention to it. But what does matter is looking like he’s only pretending to oppose it. The worst thing would be for people to think he’s against it because he has to be but is secretly hoping his supporters will do more like this. His response to the earlier letters didn’t go over very well.

In this case the lawsuit itself (and any publicity it can bring) is a bigger goal than actually uncovering the person.

Kevin says:

There is solid evidence that this came from Jon Huntsman’s campaign. Jon Huntsman and his wife came out and called the video disgusting and made a huge deal about it even though it was uploaded anonymously, the account was made that day, and it had only a couple hundred views when it started being aired by the media. If it turns out that Huntsman made it, his political career will be over and the media will look like shills. I hope Ron Paul issuccessful.

Erin (user link) says:

Re: Huntsman

There are screenshots around of the video originating from Huntsman’s daughters. Yes, they could have been doctored.

Reportedly, a private company was hired to track the IP, which seems to go back to Huntsman’s campaign hq.

The suit was filed about a week or so (maybe two) after the video aired, which means the Paul campaign probably did their research and verified these things before filing suit.

Paul Alan Levy (profile) says:

"use in commerce"

I agree with almost everything you say (and thanks for the link to my blog post about it), but I offer one technical correction. The problem is not lack of “use in commerce” but rather the fact that the video is entirely noncommercial, or, in the relevant language of the two sections of the Lanham Act invoked here, there is no “connection with any goods or services” and the video is plainly not a “commercial advertisement.” We used to make the “use in commerce” argument in our defense of Internet critics running gripe sites and the like, but when we won the Bosley Medical Institute v. Kremer, 403 F. 3d 672, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosley_Medical_Institute,_Inc._v._Kremer (and that is a Ninth Circuit case, which will be the controlling law here), that court indicated that it was the “in connection with goods or services” and not the “use in commerce” language on which it was relying. After doing several more cases like Bosley, I have come to conclude that this is, in fact, the better argument.

womanforpaul says:

Ron Paul, a patriot, who has honorably served his country, defends both the constitution and
civil liberties, and is for peace and prosperity. Dr. Paul has the wisdom, foresight,
honesty and integrity to be president.

Dr. Paul believes spending and deficits are destroying this country. Dr. Paul’s budget plan
would save $1 trillion in the first year. Besides the spending cuts, there are other issues
of importance to voters. For conservatives, Dr. Paul scores an A+ on all of them: Second
Amendment protection, pro-life record, right-to-work, pro-business, anti-tax, states’
rights, you name it.

Dr. Paul also believes America should have the strongest national defense on earth ? which
he believes begins with not trying to constantly police the earth. Right now, our
government puts our best and bravest in harm’s way on a regular basis for questionable
reasons and with no discernible notion of victory. This is not supporting the troops. It’s
abusing them. Dr. Paul wants an end to this absurd, costly policy.

The voters have declared Dr. Paul the alternative to the liberal, flip flopping Mitt Romney.
The other candidates are simply irrelevant. In the New Hampshire Primary, Dr. Paul received
more votes than all the supposed Anti-Romney (Santorum, Gingrich, and Perry) candidates
combined.

The question for Republican voters is not whether they can afford to vote for Dr. Paul –
it’s whether they can afford not to.

America Needs Ron Paul.

David (profile) says:

what if

Huntsman’s campaign was behind the Ad? Wouldn’t it be important to know this? The lawsuit is simply there to find out who was behind it and expose fraud. I do not care that he has dropped out. If this came from his campaign it needs to be publicized especially with how the media made it out to sound like Ron Paul was responsible for it. So now that he is being responsible and trying to pull it and find out who was behind it we attack him for that as well?

Louis Nardozi (user link) says:

So it's fine for the law to protect ANYONE else

But if Ron Paul seeks protection under the law, he’s somehow ‘betraying his principles’? I suppose you’ll deny Ron Paul has been the target of a massive campaign first to hide him, then to marginalize or discredit him by the media.

Why won’t people ask themselves, ‘Why is this happening?’
Could it possibly be the people who control society don’t want Ron Paul in office? Gee, I wonder why ?

I can’t even blame people like our illustrious author here because he knows his job relies on reporting the ‘right’ points of view.

submetropolis (profile) says:

Paul's motive

He did it so show that he’s not behind it nor does he support it. Just “saying” I don’t support this video doesn’t mean much these days. Maybe he knows there is no way in hell they’ll be able to track these asses down so its just a motion to separate himself from it. When questioned about the video he can hold a document up stating “That shit wasn’t mine!” Hopefully the lawsuit goes no where and he’ll drop the it after figuring that out.

I don’t agree with the law suit and think it does go against most of his values. That said I don’t think the guy had much choice. It could turn into another BS witchhunt and boom he’s out of the race again.
He was criticized about the racist zine articles and criticized on how he reacted to them. Guess he should’ve sued then too. I don’t blame the guy for being a little reactionary. He’s under the magnify glass now and every thing he does is going to look bad.

Backfire says:

Re: Paul's motive

Well those newsletters that he PUBLISHED are not going to help him one bit in court. Whether he wrote them or not his image was already tarnished eons ago. Nothing in that video could have changed opinions of people who had already made up their minds regarding Ron Paul based on his role in PUBLISHING racist newsletters and PROFITING from them.

Leo says:

Wise move

Suing for discovery of the source makes sense on two fronts. First, there is a quite real possibility of an intentional smear tactic by an anonymous party. This action will discourage any further such attempts should that be the case. Second, if the video is indeed a genuine statement, this action will quell the nitpicking media attempts to portray him as lax when it comes to weirdness published by any old someone who nominally supports Paul but holds views contrary to Paul’s ideas.

All in all, a very wise move to cover a flank on which establishment statists will continue to attack, especially when lacking any other credible approach.

Barry Donegan (user link) says:

To clarify

The video was made by someone in an attempt to pain Ron Paul as racist. Since the actual venue of the upload wasn’t knowable, federal court would actually make sense in this case. It is hard to pin down a jurisdiction on random activity online. Granting jurisdiction to a state court requires knowing where the activity was carried out.

When filing a court case against a party who is unknown but knowable via discovery, then it is legally required to use expedited discovery or the case can’t move forward. None of this is contradictory. This is what Ron Paul should have done on the newsletters. Good to see he has that issue under control now.

Joe G says:

Hmmmm

1) could it be that the ad is still up and the users neglected to take it down (even if a ‘dumb paulbot’ put it up, they wouldn’t keep it up.)

2) Those are some mighty intimate pictures and footage of the huntsman family. I wonder what “random person” had access to them. I think you know what I am getting at. The probability is higher than just a longshot.

3) Defamation is not protected speech. Right to anonymity is not protected when defamation is involved.

Joe G says:

Hmmmm

1) could it be that the ad is still up and the users neglected to take it down (even if a ‘dumb paulbot’ put it up, they wouldn’t keep it up.)

2) Those are some mighty intimate pictures and footage of the huntsman family. I wonder what “random person” had access to them. I think you know what I am getting at. The probability is higher than just a longshot.

3) Defamation is not protected speech. Right to anonymity is not protected when defamation is involved.

Mick says:

Lack of intelligence

This whole article was written because you “can’t figure out any conceivable argument under which filing the lawsuit makes sense.”, which only indicates an appalling lack of imagination on your part. Imagination is the key to intelligence, and until you develop your mind, your journalistic venture will be of no use to anyone. I’ve never read any of your other articles that I know of, but I will refrain from doing so in future. I’m actually shocked that anyone who knows the facts of this case would ridicule the plaintiff. It’s a clear case of defamation, and the Huntsman campaign will likely end up paying for it.

Stephan Kinsella (profile) says:

constitution?

Agree, Mike, with your post, except not sure that suing for defamation and trademark is contrary to Paul’s Constitutionalism. Defamation is a state law. Federal trademark is arguably unconstitutional because it is not an enumerated power–this is my view, but most people don’t share it. But this is a horrible idea, and terrible. I have to assume some staffer did this but still…

Edward says:

***It also seems to go against a bunch of Paul’s main points — including his belief in state’s rights over federal (he’s suing in federal court, not state court, using some questionable theories) and his support of the First Amendment — which, many courts have pointed out, includes the right to speak anonymously.***

I’m not sure why there would be a problem suing in Federal court… this is clearly a trans-state conflict, and thus is clearly the jurisdiction of the Federal courts.

And while those courts have consistently ruled one can speak anonymously, they have never extended that privilege to slander or trademark infringement.

Jbla says:

Vengeance

Seeing as the second referral (and second view!) to the video was from the jon2012.com website, it would seem that someone was using webmail to view their own handiwork, or a friends (the first couple views are usually someone looking at their own video). I have looked at stats on other vids with the name of huntsman uploaded around the same time and none had any referrals from the jon2012 web site. Add that to the fact that the profile nhliberty4paul was created the same day the video was uploaded, and that the huntsman campaign was all over it before even a few had seen it… Stinks. If I were Paul’s team, I too would be furious to the point of being unreasonable. If a candidate such as huntsman can do this, then he would have no prob fabricating intelligence or a “gulf of Tonkin incident” to lead us to war.

Jeffrey TG says:

Most jurisdictions allow legal actions, civil and/or criminal, to deter various kinds of defamation and retaliate against groundless criticism.

I don’t see how this contradicts Ron Paul’s message. They’re free to express themselves and he’s free to sue them for harming his campaign and fundraising. The fact that he believes in freedom doesn’t mean he’s going to roll over when he’s attacked.

annon4whatever says:

People keep saying its been proven that this ad was produced by Huntsman. I ask: Where has this been proven?

I’ve seen ONE “independent study” released by the Ron Paul campaign saying it was someone attached to the Huntsman campaign.

Lets see…

1. Independent study done by ardent Ron Paul supporter who has given money to his (and his son’s) campaign. Same supporter who openly voted for Ron Paul on Facebook straw poll and then posted about it. Same supporter who lists support on his Facebook for all kinds of Ron Paul stuff…

Here is where I’ll mention that if Huntsman had made it to my state, I may have supported him. I liked him. That said, I liked Ron Paul too.

2. The main argument that it was someone connected to the Huntsman campaign is that there was a referral link from huntsman’s website or webmail servers. Ever use Twitter? If someone on the huntsman campaign got an email saying that @jonhuntsman had been mentioned in a Tweet and then clicked on the link, that means they were responsible for it? (I don’t know if that’s what happened, but that’s a possibility that accounts for the “independent” study’s view)

What I DID like about Ron Paul has gone out the window with this ridiculous lawsuit. Basically he is showing willingness to use the federal courts to trample on anonymous free speech. Do I think he posted/knew about/privately endorsed the video? No, absolutely not. Do I think it was Huntsman or his people? No to that as well.

hegemon13 says:

Re: Re:

Agreed – it’s not proven, and it’s ridiculous to say it is. However, the lawsuit will allow it to become proven, if, in fact the Huntsman campaign was involved.

There is not currently enough evidence to prove Huntsman’s campaign is involved. There is enough evidence, however, to move forward with a lawsuit to attempt to uncover additional evidence.

edgar poems says:

ron paul

honestly really why why why why are we talking bout racist in 2012 man it feels like mainstream just want drama we all know ellections are bs look at buch vs gore in 2000 gore won he really did on the popular vote most people of the usa wanted gore yet in the ellectora votes where our representatives or each state mostly voted for buch agents the advice our the people or ther own state and county the paople that voted them in why did paul only get 1:49 of free talk in the gop yet randmy (sorry cant spell)got a womping 7:38 and in that time ron paul waz aploded 3 times romny for his time only 5 ask your self why did the media only show one oplase for ron and like 7 dif aplose for romny

PS im not 100% sure on the times n how long they waz given each but i know that ron waz the lowest talk time and allways cute short in his answers what real reporter with nothing no facts real ones to seggest that ron is crazy no docters no counseling no substance abouse lol how can fox n cnn say in public on natinal TV ron is crazy next time if and when they do say such statemts im posting them but if anyone calls ramny a religius freak ohhh they would fire who ever said it anf maybe end up in terriorst wach fbi will come nocking if u post any truth bout the fed its corupt you knw it obama knws it the world knws it who owns it i begg this site or fbi to take this post down i dare you to put me in consitration camps randomb dui check points seem a lot like nazi papers check points to make sure we not driven drunks hmm seems like to make sure your not a jew

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