Class action suit: Difference between revisions
de-rant
(grounds for such suits, which now seem inevitable) |
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*The claim that [[pollution]] released upstream does harm to people downstream could be advanced by a group of people seeking compensation for health harms. | *The claim that [[pollution]] released upstream does harm to people downstream could be advanced by a group of people seeking compensation for health harms. | ||
*The claim that [[Wikipedia violates GFDL]] could be advanced by a large group of [[GFDL contributor]]s | *The claim that [[Wikipedia violates GFDL]] could be advanced by a large group of [[GFDL contributor]]s who feel that they are deprived of [[attribution]], [[access to improvement]]s (as required by [[GFDL]] or indeed any [[sharealike]] license) | ||
*The claim that [[libel]] is propagated in the forums of [[Wikimedia]], | *The claim that [[libel]] is propagated in the forums of [[Wikimedia]], e.g. in the form of "[[outing]]" the real life identity of an individual otherwise known as [[142.177.X.X]], an alleged major troll on Wikipedia. | ||
Rules for filing such suits vary by jurisdiction. In general the [[United States]] makes it relatively easy to file such suits. However, even where they are harder to file, such as in [[India]] or [[Ontario]], there are sometimes rules favourable to [[plaintiff]]s: In [[Ontario]], plaintiffs can sell shares in the eventual judgement damages, to finance the case itself; In a famous case against broker [[w:Nesbitt Burns]], there were literally people lined up around the block to buy shares in the lawsuit against this infamous company which sold shares in [[w:Bre-X]]. Ontario also has quite lax [[libel]] and [[slander]] laws under which one can sue even when true things are being said - if they are out of context to the discussion or discourse and not relevant to the decisions being made. Which is the case for [[Wikipedia mailing list]] in most or all cases, it is simply a hate forum for the [[sysop power structure]]. | Rules for filing such suits vary by jurisdiction. In general the [[United States]] makes it relatively easy to file such suits. However, even where they are harder to file, such as in [[India]] or [[Ontario]], there are sometimes rules favourable to [[plaintiff]]s: In [[Ontario]], plaintiffs can sell shares in the eventual judgement damages, to finance the case itself; In a famous case against broker [[w:Nesbitt Burns]], there were literally people lined up around the block to buy shares in the lawsuit against this infamous company which sold shares in [[w:Bre-X]]. Ontario also has quite lax [[libel]] and [[slander]] laws under which one can sue even when true things are being said - if they are out of context to the discussion or discourse and not relevant to the decisions being made. Which is the case for [[Wikipedia mailing list]] in most or all cases, it is simply a hate forum for the [[sysop power structure]]. |