Laurence Godfrey (physicist)
Laurence Godfrey | |
---|---|
Laurence Godfrey, in January 2000 (year of the Demon case): "the only photo of me that is remotely passable" | |
Born |
London, England | November 21, 1952
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Physicist and Consultant |
Children | two |
Dr. Laurence Godfrey (born 21 November 1952, London, England) was educated at the independent The Haberdashers' Aske's Boys' School, at Westfield College, University of London (BSc Physics, first class honours, 1975) and at University College London (PhD, High Energy Nuclear Physics, 1982). He established a legal precedent for libel on Usenet, in the landmark Godfrey v Demon Internet Service case.[1] He lives in London, England with his son Waylan and is unmarried. He is self-employed as an expert witness, consultant and technical adviser in internet-related litigation.
History
In 1993 he and CERN colleague Phillip Hallam-Baker became immersed in a very public dispute on Usenet, which culminated in a libel action (settled out of court in Godfrey's favour).
Godfrey was a regular and controversial presence to the Usenet newsgroups soc.culture.british, soc.culture.canada, soc.culture.german and soc.culture.thai. His main topics of discourse there were the perceived and real shortcomings of the inhabitants of those countries.
He launched a series of court cases including Godfrey v Demon Internet Service. Godfrey has used Britain's strict libel laws to bring successful libel actions, suing in British courts a number of organizations based in other countries, including Cornell University and the University of Minnesota.[2]
Libel Cases
- 1995, Godfrey v. Hallam-Baker
- 1997, Godfrey v. Demon Internet
- 1998, Godfrey v. Cornell University/Dolenga
- 1998, Godfrey v. University of Minnesota/Starnet/Quanchairut
- 1998, Godfrey v. Melbourne PC Users Group
- (unknown) Godfrey v. New Zealand TeleCom
- (unknown) Godfrey v. Toronto Star
References
- ↑ Observer
- ↑ Jill Priluck (1998-06-07). "Free Speech, But Whose?". Wired. Retrieved 2007-10-23.
External links
- Cornell University & Minnesota cases story from 1998
- New Scientist article freelance writing from 1992
- Recent case in which Laurence Godfrey acted as expert/ technical consultant, his main occupation since 2001.