A person who wishes to take legal action for defamation must be able to prove that they have suffered, or could suffer, 'serious harm'. If a corporation is suing for defamation, it needs to prove that it has suffered 'serious financial loss' as a result of the publication of the allegedly defamatory matter.
Yes, you can sue someone for violating POPIA in South Africa.
These requirements are: publication of a statement (verbal and/or written); the defamer must intend to defame a person; there must be harm or injury; and. the publication must violate a person's right to his/her good name, reputation and dignity.
Truth, or substantial truth, is a complete defense to a claim of defamation.
Abstract. ing to some South African delict scholars, the South African law of defamation makes the wrong fulness of a defamatory statement turn on two conditions: first, that the statement caused reputational damage; and, secondly, that the damage caused was not outweighed by the achievement of some greater good.
All statements, written or spoken about you, which diminish your reputation in the eyes of right-thinking people, and which were made with that intention, will give you grounds for an action for damages for defamation.
I am writing because you recently made defamatory statements about me my company my company and me. I ask that you immediately retract these statements. On date, you summarize what recipient did that is defamatory.
What does a defamed person need to prove in court? publication of a statement (verbal and/or written); the defamer must intend to defame a person; there must be harm or injury; and. the publication must violate a person's right to his/her good name, reputation and dignity.
If you decide to do it alone, your letter should state the specific defamatory statements made, confirm that they are defamatory, indicate the reputational harm caused, demand an apology and retraction of those statements, and demand that they cease making further statements failing which you will sue them.