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Defamation is a communication that injures a third party's reputation and causes a legally redressable injury. The precise legal definition of defamation varies from country to country.
(1) A person is guilty of criminal defamation if he knowingly communicates to any person orally or in writing any information which he knows to be false and knows will tend to expose any other living person to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule. (2) Criminal defamation is a class B misdemeanor.
He has launched a defamation suit to refute this. He won a defamation lawsuit over the slur. The legal position on social media defamation is unclear.
The tort of slander of title and the related tort of disparagement of property are based on an intentional interference with economic relations. They are not personal torts; unlike slander of the person, they do not protect a person's reputation.” Bass v. Planned Mgmt.
Overview. Defamation is any false information that harms the reputation of a person, business, or organization.
Defamation is any false information that harms the reputation of a person, business, or organization. Defamation includes both libel and slander. Libel generally refers to defamatory statements that are published or broadcast (more permanent) while slander refers to verbal defamatory statements (more fleeting).
: the act of communicating false statements about a person that injure the reputation of that person : the act of defaming another : calumny. defamation of character. a defamation lawsuit. defamatory.
Each state or jurisdiction within the United States, including Washington, DC, has its own set of statutory and common law standards that must be ascertained for any defamation claim. The First Amendment to the US Constitution imposes minimum standards on defamation claims that apply in all states or territories.
Definition: defamation from 28 USC § 4101(1) | LII / Legal Information Institute.
Injury. To succeed in a defamation lawsuit, the plaintiff must show the statement to have caused injury to the subject of the statement. This means that the statement must have hurt the reputation of the subject of the statement.