Max Mosley Continues His Quixotic And Misguided Quest: Sues Google For Still Finding Photos He Doesn't Like
from the not-him-again dept
Oh Max Mosley. The guy who’s basically guaranteed that the press keeps writing about the “sex party” pictures involving him and five sex workers that were leaked to the press years ago. Mosley has basically dedicated his life to reminding the public about those pictures by fighting a ridiculous war to blame everyone for those pictures existing on the internet. He’s actually won a few lawsuits against Google, in which the company has been told to do the impossible: make the photos of him disappear. Now he’s decided to sue the company yet again, this time in the UK (he’s already sued in France and Germany). Mosley’s really big win over the original newspaper, News of the World, was mostly over the fact that they called it a “Nazi sex party” and he insists that the party wasn’t Nazi-themed (an area of some sensitivity, as Max’s father was friends with Hitler).
This case is not directly related to the recent “right to be forgotten” situation in the EU, but might be considered a close cousin of it. It’s still based on the ridiculous assertion that the fact that some of these pictures are still online can be blamed on Google. Mosley, apparently, is not big on understanding how the internet works. And he’s not above stretching the rulings in the courts:
His lawyers said the case concerned “the ability of individuals within the UK to enforce their rights against the large corporations that control access to the internet”. The statement added: “It seeks to compel Google to stop gathering and publishing images that the English high court decided in 2008 were unlawful in the landmark privacy case Mosley v News Group Newspapers.”
Except that Google is not the one “gathering and publishing” the images. And the images were not determined to be “unlawful” as a whole, just in the context of the situation in which they were published. But, still, Mosley has decided that Google is the clear enemy:
“Adherence to the rule of law is essential to any society. This must include compliance with the decisions of the courts. As the gateway to the internet, Google makes enormous profits and has great influence, so I have not taken this action lightly. But Google should operate within the law rather than according to rules it makes itself. It cannot be allowed to ignore judgments in our courts.”
Except, of course, Google is not “ignoring” the law. It is doing what it does: searching the internet and helping people find what they’re looking for that is on the internet. Still, Mosley has tons of money and appears to want to spend it all making sure that the sex party keeps popping up in the news over and over again. If he’d just let this story die, it basically would have disappeared years ago. But through his own actions he keeps making it news again and again and again. Even the BBC appears to be trying to explain to Mosley pretty directly how the Streisand Effect works…
Filed Under: max mosley, search engines, secondary liability, streisand effect, uk
Companies: google
Comments on “Max Mosley Continues His Quixotic And Misguided Quest: Sues Google For Still Finding Photos He Doesn't Like”
To think that I would never known or cared about Max mosley before these lawsuits and yet here I am reading about him again. If he really wanted these forgotten he would shut up and let the internet do what it does best, move on to the next thing.
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Same. The only reason I even know this guy’s name is because of the lawsuit he filed.
Soon as I saw the headline, I was like, “Isn’t Max Mosley that guy who had that Nazi sex party thing and sued over it?” (BTW, +1 google index search rating linking his name with such.) Then I read down a paragraph and – yep I was right. Given another year or two and I wouldn’t have made the connection – there’s only so much RAM in my brain for useless trivia. Unfortunately for him, he just refreshed it, so its stuck in the buffer for awhile longer.
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I wonder if it is deliberate – it distracts people from his formerly better-known father, and maintains his relevance as a public figure, albeit one of mockery.
Actually, they are. Google spiders the web, and downloads text and image thumbnails to its internal servers. It Publishes those gathered images when you do an image search.
Now, I think it is fair use and the lawsuit is an other example of BS, censorious legal thuggery, but let’s not misrepresent what Google does or how it does. It does gather and publish images. It does so to accurately reflect the content of the internet as hosted on other sites, sites who’s content it is not responsible for and has no control over.
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No google is not publishing. It’s not google putting the images on the net. What google is doing is making them findable. And that is what he wants to stop. Of course even if he does succeed in making the pictures magically dissapear from google there are always other search engines. (baidu anyone?)
Re: Re: Google does publish thumnails
Do an image search on Google. You’ll get a page of thumnails. Those thumnails are hosted and published by Google. So, again, yes Google collects and publishes text and images. That’s how a search engine works – it uses “spider” bots to download (“gathers”) the internet to internal servers.
And, again, I think this lawsuit is BS. But you have to base your statement on how the technology actually works.
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Yahoo, Bing, Dogpile, DuckDuckGo… The list goes ever on.
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Not really, though.
Yahoo and DuckDuckGo just repackage Bing results (I use DDG).
Never heard about Dogpile, but unless it covers some specialized area, more likely than not it’s also repackaging something.
And I don’t know if it’s true or not, but Bing is often accused of repackaging Google 🙂
The actual list would be something like:
Google, Bing (?), Baidu, Yandex, and… is that it?
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“Repackaging” really doesn’t matter. The **AAs have tried pretending that linking and embedding are the same as making a pirate copy. They’ll try the same here given half the chance – and the smaller guys will likely fold rather than fight because they don’t have the budget to argue semantics in court.
“Never heard about Dogpile, but unless it covers some specialized area, more likely than not it’s also repackaging something.”
You know, there’s these search engine things you can use if you wish to look at what something is, might even have taken you less time than it took to write that sentence and you’d learn something at the same time 😉
Only half kidding – I’d never heard of Yandex before I read your comment, now I know something I didn’t when I got up this morning.
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The early versions of Dogpile searched other search engines, then searched their related results, and categorised the links found based on which of the related results thy were also found in.
Re: It Publishes those gathered images
No it doesn’t, because they are already public. If they were not public, it would not have found them. Ergo, Google is not the one publishing them. QED.
Re: Re: It Publishes those gathered images
That’s not how English libel law works, more’s the pity, and that definition of publishing gets reused in some other areas of law.
I had never heard of this guy before, but this article prompted me to look him up. If not for Max Mosley and is inability to understand the Streisand Effect, I would never have known that “F1 Boss has sick nazi orgy with 5 hookers”
The more you call attention to stuff on the internet, the longer it takes to die.
The real headline should be, “Rich asshole who likes hookers upset that internet search engine works”
“As the gateway to the internet, Google makes enormous profits and has great influence,”
That is pretty funny right there.
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Damn and I’ve been giving my my to Cox.net!
(pun intended)
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grr my money
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Probably one of those suckers who enter the domain they want to visit in Google’s search window.
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My girlfriend always types google into the google search box within firefox to get google so she can search (always reminds me of the scene in the IT Crowd).
She will not listen when I tell her its already a search box.
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I do this, too, because I HATE HATE HATE the all-in-one search/url combo and disable it.
oh snap, now everyone knows
i didnt even know before reading this article lol
Barbara Who?
http://blogs.computerworld.com/privacy/23436/max-mosley-pictures-with-prostitutes-google-streisand-effect-itbwcw
So you’re rich and famous and you want to have a little naughty fun but you don’t want anybody to know about it? Here’s a tip: Don’t allow cameras in your fucking dungeon.
Duh.
it seems to me that this whole ‘right to be forgotten’ law in the EU was done for people like him. he is one of the rich and famous who has done things that he is ashamed of, or at least ashamed of being called out on them. however, that doesn’t give him the right to continuously go back and blame everyone else that he can for allowing others to find out about what he did. in fact, if it were possible to find out, i wonder if he actually had something to do with the case in the EU courts? he is certainly making an enormous thing about it, so much so that no one is getting a chance to forget about him!
Google also doesn’t “control access to the internet”, nor is it “the gateway to the internet”, as the lawsuit claims.
POOR MAD MAX
sorry max all you are doing is causing people to look and see what you want hidden and oh boy they are good Maxie likes being whipped and spanked by a nazi dressed woman
Maybe this is subtle bragging. E.g., “I sure hope nobody finds out that I attended an awesome sex party!!!”
Think about it, what guy does not want to be associated with sex parties?! He’s not going to stop until everyone knows. Or until he gets invited to another one.
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I assumed that his embarrassment had more to do with the Nazi thing than the sex party as such.
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Or the fact that he had to pay women to sleep with him?
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I dunno. Some people hire prostitutes because they get off on that, not because they have no other choice.
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In his case the association with Nazism was an especially sore point, given his family connection to Fascism (Oswald Mosley spent much of WWII interned for being the leader of the British Union of Fascists).
It's not just him...
Actually, it’s most of Europe who don’t understand how the internet works… let alone Google…
“Those darn inter-tubes keep showing pictures of me in that Nazi Party! Darn that Google!”
Only… they say it with a German, French or Italian accent.
Luckily, the UK looks like SOME of them actually have more than two brain cells to rub together.
Re: It's not just him...
Actually the establishment and rich are clueless about how the net works. But you have to remember that this is the 1% you are talking about and it is the same in the US.
So, um … when does he sue Bing or Yahoo? I found as many pics relating to the er, Nazi party on those searches as I did on Google.
Sometimes people just suck at using their brain. Oh wait … which brain?
A minor correction
If anything it was the other way around; the newspaper’s only real defence was that it was Nazi-themed, and therefore in the public interest to report on. The court found (based on the evidence of Mosley and others involved) that it wasn’t really anything to do with the Nazis, and thus there was no public interest in reporting the story (never mind running it with pictures and videos).
One of the big things that was ‘interesting’ about the case (which wasn’t really a landmark one) was that he didn’t bother suing the newspaper for libel (over the ‘Nazi’ part) – which would have been very expensive and time consuming – instead he went for privacy (essentially saying ‘yes it happened, but it was none of your business’).
Working as intended?
I’m sure someone has brought the idea up before, but could he in fact be an exhibitionist, someone who enjoys the idea of people knowing what he did, and is intentionally making sure his actions make it into the news again, and again, and again?
I mean, exhibitionist or idiot who doesn’t understand how the internet actually works, it’s got to be one of the two.
Google may be ‘the gateway that most choose over Bing’ (to quote myself), but that doesn’t mean it’s the only one.
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Typo. That should read “As the gateway to the internet for people who don’t have a clue how the internet works, Google…”
Mosley’s probably one of those people who load Google to try searching for hotmail.com rather than typing it into the address bar.
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Not really a typo. I was quoting Mosley, not the article.