Combatting Online Reputation Attacks: A Business Guide

The Internet, and user-generated review sites such as Yelp! and others, make it easy to engage in online attacks to the reputation of both individuals and companies. Unfortunately, pervasive online reviews and review sites,  can, and do, cause serious damage to businesses. 

While “attacks” come from a variety of sources, most originate from disgruntled employees, competitors, disillusioned investors, professional extortionists (e.g. “mug shot” web sites) or just regular people upset with a company (or its managers).   

Attacks come in many forms.  Some are legitimate concerns on consumer-protection websites. But some are customers and competitors who post false information on social media or false reviews.

This article provides multiple approaches and practices for dealing with online attacks on personal and business reputations. 

  • Understand online risks. Online reviews and social media make it easy for disgruntled employees, competitors, and others to publish damaging or false information that can quickly harm a business’s reputation.
  • Form a response team. When attacks occur, assemble a coordinated team (legal, PR, marketing, tech, and an internal lead) to assess the threat, plan strategy, and decide how to counter or dilute the negative message.
  • Evaluate harm and when to sue. Analyze financial data, traffic, and business trends to decide whether the attack is actually hurting profits and whether litigation is worth the cost, risk, and potential extra publicity.
  • Investigate the attacker. Gather information about whether the attacker is anonymous or known, a one‑time complainer or a persistent campaigner, and how large and influential their online audience is.
  • Unmask anonymous posters carefully. Use investigators, subpoenas to platforms and ISPs, forensic exams of suspected devices, and (in some cases) affidavits to identify anonymous attackers, while staying within ethical and procedural limits.
  • Use platform rules to remove content. Rely on website terms of service and reporting tools (for sites like Yelp or Wikipedia) to argue that content violates their rules and should be taken down or edited.
  • Pursue quiet, practical fixes. Consider confidential negotiations or settlements with the author, asking traditional media to update or remove outdated stories, and using ORM or SEO tactics to push harmful links lower in search results.
  • Leverage courts and de‑indexing. In serious cases, obtain court orders against attackers and then present those orders to search engines (like Google) to have harmful links de‑indexed from search results, even if the content remains online.
  • Litigate strategically and beware anti‑SLAPP. If filing suit (often as a John Doe case initially), ensure solid legal grounds, proof of falsity and damages, and an ability to withstand anti‑SLAPP motions so the case does not backfire publicly.
  • Prove and recover damages. Use lost‑profit evidence and expert estimates of ORM/cleanup costs to quantify harm, invoke defamation per se where available, and in competitor‑fake‑review cases seek remedies under the Lanham Act for false advertising.

Fashion Law: Legal News Roundup

Israel’s Ban on Ultra-Thin Models

FASHION-SAFRICA-NIGERIA-BAKARE
FASHION-SAFRICA-NIGERIA-BAKARE (Photo credit: Bohan Shen_沈伯韩)

 

The Atlantic

By Talya Minsberg A new Israeli law prohibits fashion media and advertising from using Photoshop or models who fall below the World Health Organization’s standard for malnutrition. When a 14-year-old girl delivered a 25,000-signature petition this week to Seventeen asking them to curb their use of Photoshop, the magazine issued a press statement that congratulated the girl on her ambition but was conspicuously silent on changing their editorial practices.

An Impossible Conversation About the Met’s Spring 2012 Costume Institute Exhibit

Huffington Post (satire)

So, culturally and historically, the reason women care so much about fashion is that until very recently, we weren’t allowed professional, legal or vocal ways of expressing ourselves. Fashion was a way of articulating our feelings about ourselves.

Small Aussie fashion label turns George Lucas legal threat into ‘Star 
Dallas News Small Aussie fashion label turns George Lucas legal threat into ‘Star Wars‘ clothing deal.

AsianFashionLaw | Page 5
Fashion lawyers are legal experts too. Sometimes I feel as though people think I am in design studios all day twiddling my thumbs as I look at models wearing 
www.asianfashionlaw.com/page/5/

Adidas-India’s ex-MD slaps legal notice on company – Fashion United
The Adidas-saga in India seems to be taking a different turn. – Fashion India News, Network, Business Community, fashion industry, international, platform for 
www.fashionunited.in/…/adidas-indias-ex-md-slaps-legal-notic…

Social Media World Legal News Roundup

The legal and regulatory environment impacting social media is constantly evolving. Here is a collection of recent articles impacting everything from law enforcement use of social media to new legislation.

A social media tip line for police
Boston.com
“Use of social media has provided an additional outlet for people to interact with law enforcement” says Lauri Stevens – founder of LAwS Communications, a consulting company that helps law enforcement agencies expand into social media.

Social media limits and the law
Monterey County Herald
Leland Yee, a San Francisco Democrat, introduced a bill that would prohibit employers, public or private, from requiring or requesting in writing a prospective employee to disclose user names or passwords for personal social media accounts.

Ariz. bill says unlawful to ‘annoy’ others online
BusinessWeek
“Speaking to annoy or offend is not a crime,” Media Coalition Executive Director David Horowitz said. Horowitz said if the proposal becomes law, speech done in satire, political debate or even sports trash talking could get people in unnecessary legal trouble.

Social Media in China, Innovation
Washington Post
Apr. 2, 2012 – April 2 (Bloomberg) — Vivek Wadhwa, fellow at Stanford Law School and head of academics at Singularity University, talks about social media in China and innovation.

UAE legal experts want libel to apply to social networking sites
GMA News
Claiming that Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites can be used to spread rumors and false information, the legal community in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is seeking that libel laws be applied to offenders on the Internet.

Is Your Facebook Password Like Your Mail, House Key, or Drug Test?
The Atlantic
A day after it was proposed, the amendment was voted down — almost entirely along party lines — thus closing one door to social media privacy legislation, at least on the national level. (There are similar social media privacy laws — full bills, …

Sponsor: Arizona bill isn’t aimed at Internet trolls
CNN
The fear is that the bill would prohibit hateful comments on news and social-media sites, amounting to a ban on so-called Internet trolling. The problem: The bill won’t do any of that, its sponsor told CNN on Wednesday. “I think they’re absolutely …

How Family Law Attorneys Use Social Media Evidence [Infographic]
PR Web (press release)
Family Law Attorneys Dishon & Block formally released today an infographic that illustrates how attorneys use social media to collect “smoking gun” evidence for divorce and child custody cases. With the advancement in technology and modernizing of laws …
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PR Web (press release)