Here’s the full letter, in case they come to their senses and take it down
Let’s look at this claim right here. Unless I read it wrong, @TheBabylonBee is saying that it is defamatory to claim that they are a “right wing misinformation site.”
I’m thinking that they might have a stronger claim if they didn’t make it expressly clear in their site’s terms and conditions that nothing they publish is remotely reliable
(They wouldn’t have a strong claim, or anything other than a pathetic one, because “misinformation” is almost certainly opinion. But while I’m not a lawyer, I am pretty sure that “no, it’s all bullshit, it’s just a different kind of bullshit than you think it is” is…not strong)
So now let’s go to “far-right,” which the Bee also seems to feel is defamatory
(It’s not. “Far-Right” is an opinion. People can, and do, disagree on what that term exactly comprises.)
Pursuant to that, let’s take a look at the Bee’s About Us page.
Young-Earth Christianity, the NRA, Russia, organized crime, labor-rights violations, homeschooling, the military, and “owning the libs.” Gosh, @TheBabylonBee, how could anyone possibly have reasonably come to the conclusion that your site is catering to a right-wing audience?
That was a rhetorical question, btw, @TheBabylonBee. Ordinarily I wouldn’t bother making that explicit, because it takes some of the starch out of the joke, but looking at the next part of your letter, I’m not convinced you understand “rhetorical hyperbole” that well.
Perhaps the situation with Snopes was a misunderstanding. Perhaps it was a disagreement. However, it’s indisputable that 1) there as some sort of back and forth between Snopes and the Bee and 2) the interaction was notable enough for the Bee to reference it on their About page.
It’s not defamatory to describe such a tit-for-tat spat as a feud, @TheBabylonBee. Trying to do so just makes you look like dummies.
As for the TI claims, I don’t know enough about New York law on the topic to hold forth here — for that, I would defer to @AkivaMCohen. But I’m guessing that “we have contracts and you said things we don’t like” does not precisely establish the merits of such a claim.
Last but certainly not least, this hoary cliche of the last line here takes on a bit more added hilarity when you consider New York’s brand new and quite robust anti-SLAPP law.
I wonder if that law firm has a Twitter account.
Oh well, back to my exams.
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LOL @CimphonyAI is definitely watching the thread -- where the text of the dark blue box below once read "AI law firm for startups," it now reads "Cimphony puts legal needs on auto-pilot," and what used to read "dedicated attorney and paralegal" now reads "dedicated team members"
So, hot on the heels of @DoNotPay being fined by the FTC and investigated by the state of California for the unauthorized practice of law, we have @CimphonyAI, which I'm sure is a completely different thing!
TOTALLY different thing, according to the CEO's post about it on LinkedIn! First of its kind! An AI law firm for startups!
At least they appear to have human lawyers, right? After all, they want you to think of it as "your own legal team."
“This reporter has been working on a story about me for two years. After two years of trying to get me to sit with him for an interview, he contacts LSU on Tuesday…”
She’s known this story is in the works for two years, and at no point does she say the questions are new.
“It was just an attempt to prevent me from commenting…”
She knows this story is coming, she knows what the story is about, she knew the answers to those questions. But she never says what the topic of the story is … while complaining that she is prevented from commenting.
It is kind of appalling how many people don’t realize that the Colorado District Court held an entire-ass five day trial on the disqualification issue. Much of the docket is even online! courts.state.co.us/Courts/County/…
I don’t even have it in me to snark. The plaintiff, Alice Bianco, was employed at the Trump National Gold Club as a server when her boss began sexually harassing her.
After learning that she wasn’t the only one, Alice joined in a complaint to management, and then hired an attorney.
So yes, I will obviously be talking about Elon’s dumbass lawsuit against Media Matters. Akiva and Mike have already done threads on Bluesky (hmu if you still need a way in) but I am gonna talk about it here.
But first, I want to talk about Up Goer Five. xkcd.com/1133/
Up Goer Five is an XKCD comic in which the author, Randall Munroe, describes the Saturn 5 rocket using only the thousand most commonly used words in the English language. Amusingly, “thousand” isn’t one of them, so he has to say “ten hundred.”
(He later expanded this concept into a book called Thing Explainer, which is amazing and which makes an outstanding gift for the precocious child on your holiday shopping list.) a.co/d/9XPkQv7