I agree with Esther12's post #5 and #15. The whole Myhill-Jones situation has escalated into absurdity, but more generally, legal action vs academic debate is a complex issue. How many PACE Trial critics would like to be sued for claiming the trial was "fraudulent"? How many Wessely critics would like to be sued for calling him a quack or equivalent? Where are the lines drawn between legitimate scientific critique vs sincere speculations about motives and character vs personal attacks and outright libelous defamation (keep in mind that these lines became extremely blurry for news media coverage of the PACE Trial criticism). How can misleading claims in the scientific literature be better regulated and screened for spin (eg the Crawley/Knoop/Bleijenberg claim that PACE "recovered" 30%+ of patients). I wonder how Goudsmit & Stouten's case against Lloyd and van der Meer (2012) is panning out, where the latter two accused the authors of all 8 PACE-related letters to the editor (Lancet) of "unscientific and sometimes personal attacks" even though they contained no such thing?
Did Myhill have questionable or unfounded information on her website? Perhaps, I'm not a fan and I don't remember all the details, but that seems common on CFS websites, even from supposed authorities like the CDC and Kings' College London. Did Jones really need to complain directly to the GMC while posting what appears to be vitriolic rants about Myhills' character? That's when it all started going downhill. Was the so-called uberthread of 10,000 posts really mostly about Myhill? I imagine that would be unpleasant to be the subject of such a thread, but Jones cannot be directly held accountable for the actions of other posters who also chose to become part of the giant circle-jerk.
IIRC the GMC's response to Myhill increased into arguable excess and was later reversed back to "conditions", while Jones himself also received a 2 year caution from another council. I have doubts Myhill's law suit will succeed if it depends on Jonas' comment about doing it all on purpose to overwhelm Myhill and cause anxiety for her patients. I don't visit the Bad Science forums much but enough to know that this statement was intended sarcasm, in line with the prevailing attitude there that Myhill's supporters (and ME/CFS community in general) misinterpret the motivations of their detractors as causing patients' stress for amusement value. That said, won't Jones will have to prove it was sarcasm? I don't doubt that some self-professed skeptics do take glee in bringing down supposed quacks and stirring up their supporters, but that is different that making trouble for amusement purposes only, although I still agree with taniaaust1 that Jones' comments and actions went beyond just stating an opinion on a website.