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Hot Attorney Website Takes A Cold Shower

HotAttorney Hot Attorney.jpgAs noted in an update to our prior post, the Hot Attorney website was taken down yesterday, shortly after we linked to it.

Now we know a little bit more, although not much, about what happened. From a piece by Leigh Jones in the National Law Journal:

A Web site featuring “hot” young female associates at several prominent law firms quickly pulled the plug Monday after some of the women on the site discovered that their photos and profiles were posted.

Nice scare-quotes around the word “hot,” Leigh. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Following attention the site received from the law gossip blog Above The Law Monday and from at least one reporter inquiring about its content, HotAttorney.com closed the site.

“On our own initiative, we decided to take the site down earlier today,” said an unidentified source responding to an e-mail requesting an interview.

The person writing the e-mail did not respond to a request to reveal his or her identity. The Web site did not include the name of a contact.

Some of the featured hotties were all hot ‘n bothered:

Some of the women who were featured on the site were unaware that their photos and profiles were posted and were angry when they found out.

“It’s demeaning and sexist,” said Abby L. Sacunas, an associate at Cozen O’Connor who said Monday that she did not know that she was included on Hot Attorney until contacted by a reporter from The National Law Journal. “I think we should sue them.”

Hmm… What would the cause of action be? Not defamation, since a declaration of hotness is a compliment (and non-actionable opinion, too). Not public disclosure of private facts, since the hotness determinations were made based on publicly available firm website photos. Not any type of harassment, if you’re merely putting up a comely attorney’s photo and expressing admiration.

Read more, after the jump.

Could the site operators be sued for copyright infringement with respect to posted photos? Maybe, but it seems weak. The Hot Attorney crew could raise a defense of de minimis and/or fair use. There might be a question over who could assert the copyright claim (unless the plaintiff hotties purchased the rights to their firm website headshots, a la the AutoAdmit plaintiffs). And the Hot Attorney site operators could also simply link to the hotties’ firm photos, instead of posting them on Hot Attorney directly.

If you have a theory of liability, feel free to share it in the comments.

The site claimed it would take down the profiles of any featured hottie who objected. But it’s not clear that the policy was followed:

Erin Foster, an associate in Andrews Kurth’s Houston office, said she knew “for awhile” that she was included on the Web site. She has requested “at least three times” to have her name and biographical information deleted from the Web site, but it had remained until Monday afternoon when the site shut down.

Not everyone was offended, however:

“I have no reason to take it down,” said Denise Gitsham, an associate in K&L Gates’s Washington office. She previously was a contestant on “The Bachelor,” a reality TV show. “I’m glad there’s a lighter side to the law.”

Good for her. In the internet age, it’s wise to accept that you might be thrust into the public spotlight at any moment — and to develop a thicker skin.

‘Hot Attorney’ Web Site Gets Chilly Reception, Then Gets Iced [National Law Journal]
Hot Today, Gone Tomorrow [Legal Blog Watch]
HotAttorney - The Web’s Hottest Attorneys [defunct website]

Earlier: Hot Lawyer of the Day? Welcome a New Website

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