Italy whips Google over bullying video
Italy whips Google over bullying video
Two Google Italy reps are under the scanner for a video of teenagers harassing an autistic classmate on the site.

Rome: Italian prosecutors have put two Google Italy representatives under investigation as part of an inquiry into how a video of teenagers harassing an autistic classmate surfaced on its video site, a judicial source said.

The two are accused of failing to check on the content of the video posted on the Internet search engine's website.

The video, which sparked outrage in the country, showed four teenagers beating and poking fun at a 17-year-old disabled boy in a classroom in the northern Italian city of Turin.

Prosecutors have already put the four students and a teacher under investigation. The students have also been suspended until the end of the school year.

A spokeswoman for Google in Europe said the Internet search engine was sorry for the distress caused by the video and had acted swiftly when it was informed of its content.

''There was this very disturbing video which was posted on Google Video a couple of weeks ago and we promptly took it down when we were notified,'' Google's Rachel Whetstone said on Friday.

''We've been helping Italian police with the investigation and we're happy to cooperate," she added.

In Europe, Google is facing a growing number of legal challenges by plaintiffs seeking to enforce local laws that seek to rein in the free flow of information on which the Internet relies.

US law generally treats Google as a distributor of information rather than having editorial responsibility for the content that appears on its automated websites.

Italy's Education Minister Giuseppe Fioroni said the prosecutors had been right to apply to the Internet the same legislation that in Italy regulates what can be published in newspapers or broadcast on television.

''I've said repeatedly that there can't be double standards, one for the press and television and another for the Internet,'' Fioroni told ANSA news agency.

The Internet search engine shared the same duty as other forms of media in distributing ''responsible'' content, he said.

Google's policy bans the uploading of violent content, but with thousands of videos posted every day on the Internet the search engine relies largely on users to ensure that is adhered to, Whetstone said.

In a separate case in Brussels, a Belgian copyright group has challenged Google News for copyright infringement.

Earlier this month, Google faced a copyright infringement suit by filmmakers over a pirated documentary that was temporarily posted on the Google video site.

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