Google Autocomplete suggests Australian surgeon is 'bankrupt'
Occurred: December 2012
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Australian surgeon Guy Hingston sued Google for defamation over an Autocomplete search prediction that said he was 'bankrupt' and which he reckoned cost him customers.
Hingston was not bankrupt at the time of filing his legal complaint, but he had been declared bankrupt in August 2009 thanks to CoastJet, an aviation company he had invested in, having gone bust.
Even though Hingston's lawyers argued his bankruptcy had been annulled, the surgeon withdrew his action in June 2013 without explanation.
Operator: Alphabet/Google
Developer: Alphabet/Google
Country: Australia
Sector: Health
Purpose: Predict search results
Technology: NLP/text analysis
Issue: Accuracy/reliability; Mis/disinformation; Privacy; Legal - defamation/libel
Transparency: Governance; Black box
System
Legal, regulatory
Hingston v Google (2012)
Research, advocacy
Lewis S.C. (2018). Libel by Algorithm? Automated Journalism and the Threat of Legal Liability
Karapapa S., Borghi M. (2015). Search engine liability for autocomplete suggestions: personality, privacy and the power of the algorithm
News, commentary, analysis
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20121227/09011621498/another-lawsuit-filed-google-autocomplete-defamation.shtml
https://www.thedrum.com/news/2013/06/18/bankrupt-man-drops-google-autocomplete-legal-action
https://www.newcastleherald.com.au/story/1579970/australian-doctor-withdraws-lawsuit-against-google/
https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/lawreport/google-autocorrrect/4735188
Page info
Type: Incident
Published: March 2023