Scientologists loses copyright case - 2003-09-08

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F28.png Scientologists loses copyright case September 8, 2003, Jan Libbenga, The Register

The Court of Appeal in The Hague last week rejected all of the Church of Scientology's claims its action against the Dutch ISP Xs4all, writer Karin Spaink and ten other internet providers for publishing copyrighted material on the web.

As a result, Spaink's website which Scientologists had sought to remove, is entirely legal.

The court also overturned two lower court rulings, one of which stated that linking to material that infringed a copyright was itself actionable. The victory for Xs4all represents a significant narrowing in the ability of copyright claimants to harass ISPs, observers believe.

The case started about nine years ago, when former Scientologist Steven Fishman was brought to court because he had committed several crimes in order to get the money to pay for his courses. When Fishman in Time magazine blamed the Church of Scientology for his crimes, the sect sued him for slander.

Wikipedia cite:
{{cite news | first = Jan | last = Libbenga | title = Scientologists loses copyright case | url = https://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/09/08/scientologists_loses_copyright_case/ | work = The Register | date = September 8, 2003 | accessdate = February 7, 2019 }}