Home
Saturday, 31 July 2010
Main Menu
Home
News
Blog
Links
Contact Us
Search
News Feeds
FAQs
Wrapper
---
Oratoria
Oratoria
Oratoria
What is my IP
You are connecting to this site from: 38.107.191.109
TAG Cloud

music network iphone internet file sony sharing company device content riaa google server data networks social industry copyright blackberry software nintendo media games peer movie information security torrent apple gaming download digital computer legal infringement sites bittorrent systems memory attacks mobile piracy applications public images connection rights

Syndicate
Popular
Beat the Viacom Dragnet PDF Print E-mail
(1 vote)
Written by Admin   
Tuesday, 13 February 2007
"As an RIAA spokesperson famously put it when asked about the spectacle of file-sharing lawsuits against innocent grandparents, 'when you go fishing with a driftnet, sometimes you catch a dolphin'," says Fred von Lohmann in an EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) Deep Links post.

He goes on:

Well, with its 100,000 DMCA takedown notices aimed at YouTube users, now it's Viacom that is netting its share of dolphins. Among the 100,000 videos targeted for takedowns was a home movie shot in a BBQ joint, a film trailer by a documentarian, and a music video (previously here) about karaoke in Singapore. None of these contained anything owned by Viacom. For its part, Viacom has admitted to "no more than" 60 mistakes, so far. Yet each mistake impacts free speech, both of the author of the video and of the viewing public.

If they are making these kinds of blatant mistakes, who can tell how many fair uses of Viacom content they also targeted in their 100,000 takedowns? Hundreds? Thousands? If Viacom made a clear mistake and your clip contains no content from Viacom-owned copyrighted works, sending a simple DMCA counter-notice to YouTube may be enough to do the job. But if you're attempting to make a fair use of Viacom's works, it may make more sense to go to court to assert your rights. More information about your options is available at the Fair Use Network.

Has your video been removed from YouTube based on a bogus Viacom takedown? If so, contact This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it - we may be able to help you directly or help find another lawyer who can. In this situation, as in so many others, EFF will work to make sure that copyright claims don't squelch free speech.

Recommend this article...

 
< Prev   Next >
Polls
Is P2P a crime against property?
 
www.p2p-online.com - all rigths reserved