Saturday, December 1, 2007
A Well-Deserved Court Loss for Facebook
It should come as no surprise, of course, given it was essentially a legal temper tantrum on the part of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg.
But a judge in Massachusetts wisely denied an inane request by the Palo Alto, Calif.-based social-networking start-up to take down confidential court documents that 02138 magazine had made available for downloading on its Web site.

The documents were part of a hard-hitting piece called “Poking Facebook” by free-lancer Luke O’Brien, which 02138 recently published, about the origins of Facebook at Harvard University.
“This is a victory not only for 02138, but for the First Amendment as well. We felt we had an important responsibility to report the story and we hope that we were able to promote greater public understanding of the origins of a powerful and influential Web site,” said 02138 President and Founder Bom Kim in a statement. “The judge concluded that the article was an example of ‘core journalism’ and that the original documents on 02138mag.com increased transparency, offering readers unfiltered access to more information on which to evaluate the story.”
Facebook had no comment.
But how could its execs, really, given the appalling nature of their efforts to quash documents that should not have been, especially because they were already loose on the Web?






