Model forces Google to unveil 'skank' blogger
BY ASHER MOSES
Relevant offers
Digital living
A former Vogue cover girl has won a landmark court battle to reveal the identity of an anonymous blogger who called her a "skank" and an "old hag".
Model Liskula Cohen sued Google in January in the hope of forcing the company to reveal the person responsible for allegedly defamatory comments on a blog called Skanks in NYC, which was hosted by Google's Blogger service.
"I would have to say the first-place award for 'Skankiest in NYC' would have to go to Liskula Gentile Cohen," the anonymous blogger wrote.
"How old is this skank? 40 something? She's a psychotic, lying, whoring, still going to clubs at her age, skank."
Cohen, who is actually 37, believed the posts were defamatory but was forced to take action against Google in order to unmask the blogger's identity before she could take further action.
On Monday in the US, Judge Joan Madden ruled that Cohen was entitled to sue the blogger for defamation and, in an unprecedented move, forced Google to provide the blogger's name.
The name will presumably be revealed in court. It is unclear when the matter will return to court.
The tall, blonde Canadian, who is based in New York, has modelled for Giorgio Armani and Versace and appeared on the cover of the Australian edition of Vogue.
But Cohen's modelling career ground to a halt in January 2007 when a man stabbed her in the face with a broken glass, requiring her to get 46 stitches, the New York Post reported.
The man, who was sent to jail, became angry after she objected to him stealing a bottle of vodka from her table.
Judge Madden rejected the claims by the blogger's lawyer that the comments were mere opinion or "trash talk", and that only factual assertions could be considered libellous.
"The thrust of the blog is that the petitioner is a sexually promiscuous woman," Judge Madden wrote in her judgment, noting that the comments were run alongside photos of Cohen in suggestive poses.
The blog, which was shut down in March, was almost entirely devoted to slagging off Cohen. It contained just five entries, all of which were published on August 21 last year.
"I really hope it's not somebody I know," Cohen told the New York Post.
"I'm a human being. I bleed. I have feelings. When I saw that blog, it was awful. All I can say for this person is, I really truly hope that they have more in their life than this."
Cohen's lawyer, Steven Wagner, told reporters that he hoped the decision would send a message that the internet was "not a free-for-all".
Anne Salisbury, the lawyer for the blogger, warned that the ruling would open the "floodgates" for anyone who has been the subject of a nasty comment online to take legal action.
A Google spokeswoman said: "We sympathise with anyone who may be the victim of cyber bullying. We also take great care to respect privacy concerns and will only provide information about a user in response to a subpoena or other court order."
In July, a landlord filed a lawsuit against a Chicago woman for writing on Twitter that her apartment was "moldy".
The landlord claimed the tweet damaged the company's reputation, even though the woman had only 20 Twitter followers at the time.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
NZ police access Facebook evidence
Facebook can alienate people further - study
Brazil files injunction against Twitter
Review: Catherine for Xbox 360
Top selling games in New Zealand
Apple factory hacked amid global activist stunt
Megaupload co-accused speaks out
Direct-to-fans sport still 'years away'
The Artist dog wins 'spokesdog' role
Kiwi game industry worth more than $179.6m
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
Victim was holding bat, says witness
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
One dead after Hawke's Bay crash
Uzbek pleads guilty to Obama kill plot
Gardener's paradise planned for Chch
Danny Lee drops back at Pebble Beach
Obama tries to defuse birth control fight
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Will bill make food safer or be a form of control?
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
Earthquakes shake north and south of NZ
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Author, 12, gives proceeds to cancer research
Baby murder-accused sobs, sniffles in court
Plucky mother intent on recovery
NZ police access Facebook evidence
A burning issue: When coffins get too big
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
Top selling games in New Zealand
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi