Okay, I guess it's how this is going to be dealt with. Certainly, there are legal tools, and maybe legal tools are not strong enough. In cases of revenge porn, sexual harassment, anything to do with minors, law enforcement needs the ability to deal with those immediately, so we need to know that those tools can be put in place for that kind of online bullying—there's a clear risk, and it's an obvious risk.
In the case where, if I make a tweet about my dear friend, Mr. Erskine-Smith, if I make some kind of outrageous comment, and he says, “That's not true”, he could threaten me with legal action for my tweet, and then I would have to decide whether to continue or to pull it down. So we have legal tools there.
I am concerned about issues of accuracy and being out of date, because the Internet is not a book; it's not an article. It is an ongoing, messy expression of discussion and debate. People write all kinds of crazy stuff about me online that's out of date and incorrect. Maybe they just don't like me.
But I'm worried about those tools being applied. I'm also worried about whether or not corporate reputation could be used, because we see SLAPP suits used against organizations all the time. To say, “This has hurt our online reputation, our corporate reputation, and we want this thing shut down”, to me, it's a very powerful tool to take something down off the Internet.
Is it your office that would adjudicate these various scenarios?