Question
                What’s the difference between libel and slander? (1 point) Responses Libel refers to false statements made about ordinary citizens; slander refers to statements make about celebrities and public figures. Libel refers to false statements made about ordinary citizens; slander refers to statements make about celebrities and public figures. Libel refers to false statements that are written or broadcast; slander refers to statements made verbally. Libel refers to false statements that are written or broadcast; slander refers to statements made verbally. There is no difference. There is no difference. Slander refers to false statements that are written or broadcast; libel refers to statements made verbally. Slander refers to false statements that are written or broadcast; libel refers to statements made verbally.
            
            
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                    Answered by
            GPT-4o mini
            
    The correct response is: **Libel refers to false statements that are written or broadcast; slander refers to statements made verbally.** 
Libel typically involves defamation that occurs in a permanent medium, such as written articles, books, or broadcasts, while slander involves spoken false statements that can harm someone's reputation.
    
Libel typically involves defamation that occurs in a permanent medium, such as written articles, books, or broadcasts, while slander involves spoken false statements that can harm someone's reputation.
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