The Owner Of A Site That Tracks Reports Of Bedbug Infestations Threatened By Upset Hotel Owners
from the let-me-introduce-you-to-section-230 dept
Rose M. Welch points us to a report from Poynter about the site Bedbugregistry.com. As you might have heard, there’s been a lot of attention paid to bedbug infestations lately, and that site is often cited by journalists covering the story. According to the Poynter report, hotel owners have often threatened to sue the site because they don’t like seeing their hotels on the list. I’m sure they don’t, but it’s disappointing that the Poynter article doesn’t point out that the operator of the site, Maciej Ceglowski, is protected by Section 230. That seems like an important element of the story. As it is, it kind of suggests that a hotel owner could have a lawsuit. While they could file one, it’s unlikely that it would get very far, due to the clear safe harbors in Section 230.
Filed Under: bedbugs, infestations, liability, safe harbors
Comments on “The Owner Of A Site That Tracks Reports Of Bedbug Infestations Threatened By Upset Hotel Owners”
These Hotel Owners
should have no difficulty determining if their establishments are infested with bed bugs. All they have to do is check every room and if they see little bitty ladders propped up against the sides of all the beds they have a problem.
Re: These Hotel Owners
Sounds like those hotel owners….
*Puts on glasses*
….could use a vacation.
YYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAaaaaahhhhhhhh!
Re: Re: These Hotel Owners
::face palm:: ::passes beer::
Re: Re: These Hotel Owners
or…
I guess you can say that the site really
*puts on glasses*
BUGS them.
YYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAaaaaahhhhhhhh!
Re: Re: Re: These Hotel Owners
Did you just copy/paste my “YYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAaaaaahhhhhhhh!”?
Re: Re: Re:2 These Hotel Owners
YYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAaaaaahhhhhhhh, he did.
Re: Re: Re:3 These Hotel Owners
Damnit Anonymous, you beat me to it!
Yes DH, I’m a lazy bastard.
Re: Re: Re:4 These Hotel Owners
YYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAaaaaahhhhhhhh! i smell a trademark case coming up…or copyright…or perhaps RIAA will want some royalties
Re: Re: Re:5 These Hotel Owners
That’ll be….a million space bucks….
Re: Re: Re:6 These Hotel Owners
I have two Space Babes and a rocket ship.
Re: Re: Re:6 These Hotel Owners
A million!? That’s unfair!
Re: Re: Re:7 These Hotel Owners
Unfair to the payor, but not to the payee. But you’re going to pay it…or else….
(okay seriously, this has to end, because I could do the whole movie….)
Re: Re: Re:6 These Hotel Owners
A million!? That’s unfair!
Re: Re: Re:7 These Hotel Owners
Oops! Sorry for the duplicate! Hit the refresh button on the wrong screen. my bad!
The thing I don’t get is why reports things that matter to people are being treated by the law, if it is true get a report that says so from someone credible and send it to the website.
The website should put not only the reports of bed bugs but the legal threats send by some stabilishments so people can think about what kind of place is that, that don’t want to deal with bad knews.
I feel that people are trying to destroy quality control.
Re: Re:
Good point. Personally, I am more pissed that the hotels are not taking issue with the ACCURACY of these reports, which means that they must be true.
This is actually kind of important
I live in Ohio. #1 in the country for bed bugs (we’re #1! Go Ohio! Yay!!) And I travel overnight once a week within the state. I’ve been very fortunate not to have experienced any infestations yet, although my partner, who also travels out at least one night a week, has. I can tell you that exterminating bed bugs is intrusive, expensive, long, and arduous.
Even if you are not in Ohio, check out that site if you are going to stay at a hotel. Even if it seems stupid to you, it is a lot less stupid than trying to get rid of the damn things.
Re: This is actually kind of important
“I can tell you that exterminating bed bugs is intrusive, expensive, long, and arduous.”
Yes it is, they are very persistent and hard to get rid of. One thing that helps tremendously is a product called diatomaceous earth. Its a fine powder that, once the bugs walk through it (the only drawback, they HAVE to traverse it at some point) it cuts up their exoskeletons and kills them within 48 hours. Use a paint brush to spread it thinly around your bed area especially, and any other area you see signs. Also, if you are able, wrap your mattresses in plastic and seal them. That cuts 90% of the infestation right there, as they tend to try to breed and feed within the mattress. Good luck, they are disgusting creatures and more than just pests.
Do they really need safe harbor protection...
for stating a fact? The only way the hotels could win anything is if bedbugregistry.com is spreading lies. Telling someone that the hotel is infested with bedbugs, when in fact it is, is not against the law and there is nothing the hotels can do about it.
Something like this shouldn’t even get to the judge, much less the courtroom. And threatening to sue just for the sake of scare tactics should be just as illegal as threatening bodily harm.
Re: Do they really need safe harbor protection...
The web site only publishes reports by other people. The owner of the site cannot check all posts for veracity, that’s why they need safe harbor protection. The responsibility for the veracity of a report is with the author, not with the site owner, that’s what section 230 is about.
Re: Do they really need safe harbor protection...
Nope.
Actually, bedbugregistry.com could be full of posting that are complete lies added just because patrons were not happy – or even postings from competing hotel owners and they would still have no case.
Since bedbugregistry.com does not post anything, it is the users that would have to be the targets of any lawsuit – that is the point of section 230 – to place the blame on the person that writes the comment rather than the website that that are writing the comment on.
Lawyers that bring lawsuits against the wrong party should be disbarred.
New York has always been an armpit of a place. The right armpit of America. The only city with cockroaches bigger than rats.
Safe Harbor?
Safe harbor protection applies to service providers who cannot be expected to have any control over the content posted or exchanged by others. The service that they provide is sufficiently large and diverse as to warrant safe-harbor protection.
The bedbug registry site has established itself as an authority on bedbug infestations and the owners have invited contributors without any oversight. Given that the site is small and focussed on only one subject, the safe-harbor defense may not apply.
Re: Safe Harbor?
[Citation Needed]
Re: Safe Harbor?
Is safe harbor protection really that specific? If so anyone could argue it doesn’t apply to anyone……
I am now off to research safe harbor provisions in law.
Re: Safe Harbor?
Safe harbor protection applies to service providers who cannot be expected to have any control over the content posted or exchanged by others. The service that they provide is sufficiently large and diverse as to warrant safe-harbor protection.
That is simply not true. Section 230 (and the associated case law) says absolutely nothing about the size of the service, or even whether or not it is possible to control the content. In fact, it says the opposite.
The bedbug registry site has established itself as an authority on bedbug infestations and the owners have invited contributors without any oversight. Given that the site is small and focussed on only one subject, the safe-harbor defense may not apply.
Can you point to a single bit of caselaw that supports that claim? There is none.
It's all a Matter of Degree
infestation
1. To inhabit or overrun in numbers or quantities large enough to be harmful, threatening, or obnoxious.
I would say one bed bug bite would be obnoxious.
Who here is old enough to remember bed legs put in kerosene so as a mote was created to keep them off the beds?
Bedbugs are Here
My neighbor runs a pest control company and told me that practically every hotel in North America has bedbugs. Most hotels regularly spray and eliminate the pests, but hotel guests continuously bring them back in.
I’m guessing the complaining hotels are the ones that do not spend much on exterminators.
Re: Bedbugs are Here
Hotel guests bringing them in? I think not. I have looked in my home, and I haven’t been able to find these pests. I’m also NOWHERE NEAR what you would call a ‘neat freak’ either.