[identity profile] brrm.livejournal.com 2008-04-09 10:39 am (UTC)(link)
Is it still extreme pornography if it has large black bars added? (So I'm told...)
gerald_duck: (pineapple)

[personal profile] gerald_duck 2008-04-09 10:59 am (UTC)(link)
Well, why not? If I can broadcast porn on the net, I don't see why the News of the World shouldn't have the same right.

Putting it in the paper itself would be a different matter, of course…
ext_8103: (Default)

[identity profile] ewx.livejournal.com 2008-04-09 11:08 am (UTC)(link)

I'm deliberately conflating two different things, actually. Firstly, what they've actually done is make granting an injunction protecting Moseley's privacy pointless, by spreading the offending material widely.

Secondly (as a friend pointed out; the observation is not original to me) the nature of the material (as described; I've not seen it myself) is not a million miles from that proposed to be prohibited as “extreme pornography”.

(Anonymous) 2008-04-09 11:11 am (UTC)(link)
This comment from the judge suggests that it might become straightforward for newspapers to get round privacy law:
Mr Justice Eady said that Mr Mosley no longer had a reasonable expectation of privacy because the content of the video was now "widely familiar".
So all you have to do is "leak" something on the Internet, and a few days later your target's privacy is sufficiently ruined that you can legitimately invade it some more.

(I feel no particular sympathy for Max Mosley, though.)

[identity profile] gareth-rees.livejournal.com 2008-04-09 11:11 am (UTC)(link)
That was me.
toothycat: (Default)

Only in Britain...

[personal profile] toothycat 2008-04-09 11:22 am (UTC)(link)
The judge said that the footage was "very brief, containing shots of Mr Mosley taking part in sexual activities with five prostitutes, and it also covers the tea break".