...last week, Singh saw this ruling overturned in the Court of Appeal. The appeal judges rightly ruled that “scientific controversies must be settled by the methods of science rather than by the methods of litigation”.
The decision is an important victory for freedom of speech and scientific debate. Still, without substantial reform of England's archaic libel laws, which are being used to silence scientific opinions, cases such as Singh's are likely to continue. Already a British cardiologist is being sued by a heart-device manufacturer after he criticised their handling of clinical trial data. Academics abroad are also affected. A Swedish professor had his review of voice-risk analysis systems, a type of lie detector technology, removed from the website of a peer-reviewed journal by its English publisher after the manufacturer threatened legal action.
England's libel laws stifle scientific discourse, negatively affect scientific careers, and represent a threat to public health. Radical reform is urgently needed. Libel laws should be kept out of science.