OPINION OF THE COURT
In this sрecial proceeding, petitioner seeks an order pursuant to CPLR 3102 (c) to compel pre-action disclosure directing respondents Google, Inc. and/or its subsidiary Blogger.com (hereinafter Google) to identify the person or persons (hereinafter the blogger or the anonymous blogger) who posted weblogs on Web sites under Google’s operation and control, which contained allegedly defamatory statements about petitioner (hereinafter the blog). Respondent Google essentially has no substantive opposition to the application.
Petitioner alleges that on August 21, 2008, five different web-logs entitled “Skanks of NYC” were posted on Blogger.com together under the uniform resource locator http:// skanksnyc.blogspot.com, which included photographs, captions to the photographs and commentary solely about petitioner.
In opposing petitioner’s application, the anonymous blogger contends that petitioner is not entitlеd to pre-action discovery because she cannot demonstrate a meritorious claim for defamation. The anonymous blogger asserts that the statements on the blog, which appear as captions to provocative photographs which the blogger alleges were posted by petitioner herself,
The determination of whether a statement expresses fact or opinion is a question of law for the court, to be resolved “on the basis of what the average person hearing or reading the communication would take it to mean.” (Steinhilber v Alphonse,
“(1) whеther the specific language in issue has a precise meaning which is readily understood; (2) whether the statements are capable of being proven*950 true or false; and (3) whether either the full context of the communication in which the statement appears or the broader social context and surrounding circumstances аre such as to ‘signal . . . readers or listeners that what is being read or heard is likely to be opinion, not fact.’ ” (Gross v New York Times Co.,82 NY2d 146 , 153 [1993], quoting Steinhilber v Alphonse, supra at 292.)
Analyzing these factors, this court concludes that contrary to the anonymous blogger’s contentions, the statements about petitioner on the blog maintained by Google contain assertions of objective fact that, if proved false, could form the predicate for a defamation claim. (Id.)
As to the first factor, petitioner challenges the use of the words “skank,” “skanky,” “ho” and “whoring,” which appear in captions describing or commenting on photographs of petitioner, many of which are sexually provocative. For example, the caption to a head shot of petitioner in partial profile contains references to petitioner as “a skank bitch,” and “acting like ho’s [sic].” The caption to two photographs depicting petitioner and a man in positions and postures suggesting sexual acts, describes petitioner as the “Skankiest in NYC” and a “psychotiс, lying, whoring . . . skank.” Another photograph depicts petitioner laughing with her mouth open, surrounded by other women and a man who is holding his crotch in a suggestive manner; the caption is written as a quote from petitioner, in which she refers to herself as “skanky” and ready to engage in oral sexual activity.
The dictionary defines “skank” as “one who is disgustingly foul or filthy and often considered sexually promiscuous. Used especially of a woman or girl.” (American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language [4th ed 2009], skank, available at http:// dictionary.reference.com/browse/skank.) “Ho” is defined as “slang” for a “prostitute,” (id., ho, available at http://dictionary. reference.com/browse/ho) and “whоring” is defined as “[t]o associate or have sexual relations with prostitutes” or “[t]o accept payment in exchange for sexual relations.” (Id., whoring, available at http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/whoring.) Based on these definitions, the use of those words on the blog can be understood to describe petitioner аs sexually promiscuous.
As to the second factor, when the statements on the blog are viewed in context, as captions to sexually provocative photo
Finally, with respect to the third factor, in the context of the blog as a whole, the explicit use of the words “skank,” “skanky,” “ho” and “whoring” are reasonably susceptible to a defamatory connotation, since a “communication that states or implies that a person is promiscuous is defamatory.” (Ava v NYP Holdings, Inc.,
Notably, in the context of this specific blog, such words cannot be reasonably viewed as comparable in meaning and usage to the word “jerk” or any other loose and vague insult, as the anonymous blogger urges. The сourt also rejects the anonymous blogger’s argument that this court should find as a matter of law that Internet blogs serve as a modern day forum for conveying personal opinions, including invective and ranting, and that the statements in this action when considered in that context, cannot be reasonably understood as factual assertions. To the contrary, as one court in Virginia has articulated:
“In that the Internet provides a virtually unlimited, inexpensive, and almost immediate means of communication with tens, if not hundreds, of millions of people, the dangers of its misuse cannot be ignored. The protection of the right to communicate anonymously must be balanced against the neеd to assure that those persons who choose to abuse the op*952 portunities presented by this medium can be made to answer for such transgressions. Those who suffer damages as a result of tortious or other actionable communications on the Internet should be able to seek appropriate redress by preventing the wrongdoers from hiding behind an illusory shield of purported First Amendment rights.” (In re Subpoena Duces Tecum to America Online, Inc., 52 Va Cir 26 [2000], revd on other grounds 261 Va 350,542 SE2d 377 [Sup Ct 2001], quoted in Public Relations Socy. of Am., Inc. v Road Runner High Speed Online,8 Misc 3d at 826 .)
Thus, in light of the merits of petitioner’s proposed cause of action for defamation, and the materiality and necessity of the requested information, petitioner is entitled to an order pursuant to CPLR 3102 (c) directing respоndent Google to disclose the information as to the identity of the anonymous blogger. (See Matter of Uddin v New York City Tr. Auth., supra; Matter of Stewart v New York City Tr. Auth., supra.)
Accordingly, it is hereby ordered and adjudged that the petition is granted and respondent Google, Inc. and/or its subsidiary Blogger.com, shall forthwith provide petitioner with information as to the idеntity of the anonymous blogger(s), specifically that person’s or persons’ name(s), address (es), e-mail address (es), IP address (es), telephone number (s), and all other information that would assist in ascertaining the identity of that person or persons.
Notes
. Google merely objects that petitioner’s request for relief is overbroad, vague and ambiguously worded, and unduly burdensome. Google also acknowledges that it “has refused to provide Petitioner with any information or documents with respect to the Blog unless it is required to do so pursuant to applicable law, regulation, legal process or enforceable governmental! request.”
. As a result of settlement discussions with this court, сounsel for the anonymous blogger offered to remove the blog. By letter dated March 19, 2009, counsel for the anonymous blogger informed the court that as of 3:47 P.M. on March 17, 2009, the blog was “deleted and removed from the Internet,” noting that “neither this letter nor the deletion of the Blog is an admission on the part of Anonymous Blogger.” Petitioner has not consented to withdraw her application for pre-action disclosure of information identifying the anonymous blogger.
. According to petitioner, not all of the photographs are in fact of her.
. The anonymous blogger submits an attorney’s affirmation alleging that Google’s “electronic archives” will show that petitioner is personally responsible for posting on “certain social networking websites, including . . . www.facebook.com and www.friendster.com,” the six photographs on the blog, as well as other Web pages annexed as “Exhibit B.” Petitioner responds through a reply affidavit addressing the additional Web pages annexed as exhibit B to the anonymous blogger’s paрers. Petitioner definitively states that she never had an account with www.friendster.com, that she did not author the “Friendster webpages” or any of the other Web pages, that those Web pages were not on her personal Facebook page or any personal Web page of hers, and that some of those Web pages are “fraudulent postings.”
. The anonymous blogger notes that the New Jersey appellate court has adopted specific guidelines for trial courts determining when the identity of an anonymous Internet speaker should be disclosed to a potential plaintiff seeking to assert a defamation claim, and those guidelines incorporate a “heightened” summary judgment standard which requires plaintiff to “produce sufficient evidence supporting each element of its cause of action, on a prima facie basis.” (Dendrite Intl., Inc. v Doe No. 3, 342 NJ Super 134, 141,
The law in New York generally applicable to a CPLR 3102 (c) application for pre-action disclosure which requires a prima facie showing of a meritorious cause of action, and the legal requirements for establishing a meritorious cause of action for defamation, appear to address the constitutional concerns raised in this context. (See e.g. Matter of Stump v 209 E. 56th St. Corp.,
