“Can being mentioned on the net turn an ordinary citizen into a public figure with severely limited abilities to fight libel and defamation lawsuits? According to a Florida judge’s ruling — perhaps the first of its kind in the United States — the answer is yes.”
The story is about a woman, Eliza Thomas, who claimed that two TV stations defamed her.
“Judges often will look at media coverage to see if someone fits the criteria to be a public figure. But in the Thomas case, there hadn’t been any traditional media coverage; only internet denizens had been involved.”
But according to a law professor and media law specialist it was a bad decision “because Thomas didn’t act to inject herself into a public controversy — one of the criteria for determining a public figure”.
Question is how this applies to bloggers who actively participate in the online debate.