How it Works0 min ago
Deleting information from a "Forum"
15 Answers
A friend has recently been banned from being a member of a internet based forum for a certain car manufacturer. He was a great contributor to the rest of the forum members in resolving car problems on this specialist site. As he has now been banned he wants all his public threads associated with his knowledgable contributions to be erased. Can he demand for this to be done by the Forum Administrator, or as he posted voluntarily the ownership of his contributions remain with the forum .
Any advice on the legal position?
Any advice on the legal position?
Answers
Most forums have something like the following in their T&Cs
"If you make any posting or contribution to The AnswerBank you hereby assign by way of future assignment any copyright in your posting to AnswerBank and you also waive any moral right in such posting or contribution ."
So check the forums terms and conditions.
"If you make any posting or contribution to The AnswerBank you hereby assign by way of future assignment any copyright in your posting to AnswerBank and you also waive any moral right in such posting or contribution
So check the forums terms and conditions.
13:17 Thu 11th Nov 2010
In practice it may be hard to do; Google for instance may well have cached the pages he wants removed. Anyone could have takena copy.
As to whether the forum holds the right to the contributions, is there anything in its Site Rules on the subject?
As to whether the forum holds the right to the contributions, is there anything in its Site Rules on the subject?
Most forums have something like the following in their T&Cs
"If you make any posting or contribution to The AnswerBank you hereby assign by way of future assignment any copyright in your posting to AnswerBank and you also waive any moral right in such posting or contribution."
So check the forums terms and conditions.
"If you make any posting or contribution to The AnswerBank you hereby assign by way of future assignment any copyright in your posting to AnswerBank and you also waive any moral right in such posting or contribution."
So check the forums terms and conditions.
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