The Daily Planet, a Mississippi online news site, made the mistake of hiring an immature person and giving that person authority to post directly to The Daily Planet website. One day, when she was bored, she typed a fictional story about a girl she disliked who was a kindergarten teacher. It had the headline, "Kindergarten teacher arrested for drugging children." In the body of the story, she typed the name of her non-friend and even had fake quotes from the police chief including, "We understand she didn't like children and she made those who refused to take naps breathe nitrous oxide she had stolen from her boyfriend, a dentist." Not a word of it was true, but by accident or on purpose it appeared as a real news story on The Daily Planet website. Of course, as soon as a responsible editor saw it the story was removed and the employee who wrote it was fired. In place of the story, the website read, "A fabricated story previously appeared in this space making false allegations about a local educator. The story has been removed and our employee has been terminated." It was too late, though, as several parents had already gone to the school to pick up their kindergarteners because they believed the story was true. If the kindergarten teacher sues The Daily Planet, what does media law say will happen?
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