DMCA Abuse Widespread 224
Doc Ruby writes "Via TechDirt, the news that despite the intent of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, it's very popular to abuse the law by using it merely to compete, without legal basis: 'Supporters of the DMCA claim that only an occasional improper takedown notice gets through. Some new research suggests otherwise. Over 30% of DMCA takedown notices have been deemed improper and potentially illegal.'"
Power to abuse? (Score:5, Informative)
Their legal threats [thepiratebay.org] page is a hoot.
On a more serious note, laws like the DMCA that put (arguably) too much power at the hands of copyright holders were always going to be susceptible to abuse. Remaining on the subject of torrent search engines, lokitorrent.com pulled its site down after threats from the MPAA who cited the DMCA, without even going to court. (They later went to court, where it was ruled that the domain owner release all visitor data to the MPAA.) With power like that, where's the incentive not to abuse it?
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:5, Insightful)
Agreed. To use a phrase I heard some time ago; it's how we ended up with a legal system instead of a justice system.
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not certain that's quite what happened. The Animalist Revolution was corrupted not by power per se but by Napoleon. Had the Revolution remained under Snowball's leadership it would probably have been rather more successful; however, Napoleon and Squealer (who were already complete stinkers) took every opportunity that came their way.
It wasn't so much that power corrupted, as that power attracted the corrupt and gave them even greater scope within whi
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:2)
That may or may not be what Orwell was trying to say; I think the Snowball/Lenin conflict was just a retelling of the Trotsky/Lenin conflict. However, my personal belief about power is that power itself corrupts, no matter how wonderful the possessor. Sometimes the corruption leads to the possessor's downfall before it leads to public harm (Carter, Clinton
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:4, Insightful)
There is two problems with argument.
First, it is inevitable that a laissez-faire system of any sort is taken over by someone wishing to establish a dictatorship. A laissez-faire system, by definition, means a system that is not overseen by anyone; it is simply a state of anarchy, and anarchy always ends with someone taking the reins of power - after all, there's people who want power and no one to stop them.
Second, for a wicked man, the ability to do evil and make others suffer is in itself a reward. It is insufficient to consider only selfish evil - the willingness to harm others to benefit yourself - to understand human psyche. You also have to consider malicious evil, the willingness to do harm to others even when it doesn't benefit you in any way, and in extreme cases, even when it does you harm too.
In short, no kind of system can possibly remove the reward for gaining power, since the one in power can make his own rewards, and some sick bastards get their kicks from the abuse of power itself rather than any benefit for themselfs gained from said abuse.
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:2, Funny)
"Power attracts the corruptible"
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:2)
Evidence mounts and mounts (no pun intended), but I'm still waiting patiently for the scales to tip.
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:2)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:5, Insightful)
I am an engineer, scientist and hacker at heart. and because of the DMCA and patent laws I am forced to be a criminal to continue to invent, engineer and think.
when you make laws that overnight put a wide swath of the populace into the criminal segment then you know that the corruption that is leading towards complete opression is nearing completion.
Personally I cant wait for all of you to look suprised when they mandate that every american is required to have a passport and use it for interstate travel. and I'm betting that it will be here before 2008.
So I simply acknowlege that I must break laws to continue and therefore move myself into the underground. Release the information on webboards in free countries like the Former soviet union under a untraceable psyudonym.
Thanks American Government! The past 8 years have taken all of the countries brightest and made them criminals of the state.
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:5, Insightful)
At first I thought this was kind of stupid since the federal gevernment doesn't have that power. Then I remembered that the federal goverment has ruled that marijuana grown in California, sold in California, and consumed in California constitutes interstate commerce and can therefore be regulated or banned by the federal gov't.
Yeah, we're screwed.
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is (and the thrust of the article was) that the process is being subverted by the use of legal threats - many of which are unfounded.
For all the cases that the RIAA has initiated, I don't know of a single one that actually was decided at trial
A helpful guideline: (Score:5, Interesting)
cf: DMCA, Patriot Act, Prevention of Terrorism Act (UK), Enabling Act (Weimar Germany)...
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes the police deliberately push the envelope on what they consider to be bad laws in order to provoke reconsideration of the law. There's a possibility that this is one such example, by a policeman who doesn't like the totalitarian direction that we are taking. Not all police support the creation of a police state, it gives them more work to do for one thing.
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:4, Insightful)
You are correct - the bouncers ejected (read: assaulted) him and then the police "detained" him under the anti-terrorism laws.
Then to add insult to injury, Blair still tried to push through a law that would allow the police to detain anyone for 90 days without charge, defending it by saying the police were very responsible and would never abuse a law.
This is a prime example of why excessively broad laws are always a bad idea - whilest it may improve the ability to legitimately target people doing wrong it will always be abused by someone as well.
Through all the IRA attacks whilest I was young the constant message delivered by the UK government was that if we changed the way we lived because of terrorism then the terrorists have won... well I guess we know who's won now then don't we? (Amazingly enough, Blair used the "if terrorism changes the way we live then they've won" speech in a justification of curtailing civil liberties in the name of anti-terrorism!)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:5, Interesting)
That was funny, but the most entertaining piece of hypocrisy on this issue is this:
On the 90-day internment law: Blair says that the police want to be able to imprison people without charge for three months for investigation and interrogation. He says that on this matter the police know best and we should listen to them and give them what they need to make us safe.
On the late opening law for pubs: police representatives say that it will be a disaster and lead to even greater alcohol-fuelled public disorder and random violence. Blair completely ignores them and goes right ahead with changing the law so that (starting today) we British people are free to drink all night if we see fit to do so.
I'm not sure quite how these two Mr Blairs manage to live together in the same skull. Libertarian and fascist in one. Or maybe he's hoping that we'll all be to pissed in the pub to get pissed at him...
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not so sure that there is a conflict between the two. Think about it. Fascists want to merge the corporations and the government into one single entity. Libertarians (at least based on their Slashdot posts) want to abolish government power completely, leaving corporations the only entities with any power - which, of course, will lead to them merging into cartels and ultimately a singl
A New Kind of Moderate (Score:3, Insightful)
On the traditional political-spectrum chart as taught in political science classes, you have two axis - one of economic freedom and one of interpersonal freedom. Turning the chart on its corner, the "left" is liberalism, high interpersonal and low economic freedom, culminating in a purely socialist direct democracy; on the "right" is conservativism, high economic freedom and low interpersonal freedom, culminating in a purely capit
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2, Insightful)
Semantics. Attempting to count non-voters as votes against is utterly moronic.
You keep using those words. They don't mean what you think they mean. This government certainly does not have an absolute majority of support.
However, it has both authority (a position of power; in possession of power over others. -- OED) and legitimacy (conformant to law or rule; sanctioned or authorize
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2, Troll)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:5, Funny)
Bushian reasoning:
1) This is the War On Terrorism.
2) You are either for us or against us.
3) If you are against us in the War On Terrorism, then that makes you
4) A Terrorist.
Blairian reasoning:
1) I'm doing the Right Thing, because I'm a pretty straight kind of guy, ok?
2) And I think Jack has the right to make his speech without impolite interruptions.
3) And we really shouldn't get sidetracked by theoretical arguments about civil liberties, because terrorism is really a very serious threat.
4) And I should point out that I had absolutely nothing to do with the incident itself.
5) And I don't think that a blame culture is very productive at all, just ask Peter or David, so it really isn't helpful to go talking about whether anyone should resign.
5) It's in the past now, so we should all move on and deal with the new problems that are ahead of us, going forward into a better and fairer Britain in the 21st century.
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2, Funny)
But I think you missed point 5 for Bush:
(5) Profit!!!
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A helpful guideline: (Score:2)
No, But jean Schmidt called him a coward. Here's a video from C-SPAN [thinkprogress.org]
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:3, Insightful)
"However, in the recent case of ALS Scan, Inc. v. Remarq Communities, Inc., the court found that the copyright owner did not have to point out all of the infringing material, but only substantially all of the material. The relaxation of this specificity requirement shifts the burden of identifying the material to the service provider, raising the
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:3, Insightful)
I personally do not feel like attitudes like this will do anything but make things worse for us in the long run.
I'm glad someone is standing up for our rights, but this is NOT going to sway popular opinion in a good way.
Can we maybe find some examples of people that are fighting
Re:Power to abuse? (Score:2)
I like the new graphic. (Score:2)
Re:I like the new graphic. (Score:2)
There are now a bunch of "subcategories" for YRO. The "gerneric man being gagged" is still there as the icon for the Censorship subcategory. This article is in the CDA subcategory.
But I feel a little stupid at the moment... What does "CDA" stand for? Constitutional Dummy Association?
I am SHOCKED (Score:2, Funny)
Definition of occasional as used by DMCA enforcers (Score:5, Interesting)
Article 2b:
Wrongful notices.
An notice is considered wrongful if the party who send the notice is sued for this notice, and the highest court willing to hear the case decides that the notice has been send wrongful.
Article 2c:
Allowed wrongful notice percentage.
If not more than 60% of the notices gets rejected by a court, the sending of these notices will be considered as an occasional mistake due to the murky nature of the person or company who got the notice initially.
Re:Definition of occasional as used by DMCA enforc (Score:2)
There is a lot of uh... loosely written stuff there that can be interpreted by whatever billion dollar budget company sees fit. I think they just wrote the same stuff over and over again using different synonyms to make it look long, while in fact it's just saying, "HEY! Use us however you want *insert a Captain Plan... err Pollution the power is your's*!
The DMCA is only a symptom. (Score:5, Insightful)
Unlimited legal campaign contributions, indeed!
Re:The DMCA is only a symptom. (Score:2)
Where do I send the invoice? (Score:3, Funny)
I demand my unfair share, right now or I'm going back to voting ethically and intelligently.
No (Score:4, Insightful)
If a woman wears provocative clothing in a bad part of town late at night and gets raped, maybe she was foolish for attracting attention, but she is not to blame for the rape. The rapist is.
If you leave your home unlocked and you get robbed, you will probably feel angry at yourself for leaving the house unlocked. The blame for the robbery, however, is purely the robber's.
If the American electorate is overly susceptible to media influences, call them gullible. That does not make the shark-like actions of the corporations any more acceptable. Even using the metaphor of a shark (they shouldn't be blamed; it's in their nature) is a better reason to take precautions against them, not a worse one.
If you're still reading this, I had a previous discussion on slashdot where we talked about some of this:
http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=167485&ci
Re:No (Score:2)
The difference is that as long as corporations are acting within the law and take advantage of laws, or even get laws created - even if these actions are immoral - they have done nothing illegal. The mandate of a corporation is to maximise return for shareholders. If they can get a law passed that forces every househol
Law and Money (Score:2)
I accept that what they are doing is legal. I do. Really. The problem is that it is bad for us (people), and they (corporations) get to dec
Re:The DMCA is only a symptom. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The DMCA is only a symptom. (Score:2)
honestly, as an american I am utterly disguested at the rampant idiocy that governs the American Government. The problem is the morons that keep re-electing these idiots.
If we had an upper age limit I think things would change. If the House of Represenatives was full of 21-40 year olds that actually worked for a living instead of having their entire life spoon fed to them t
"the industry" (Score:3, Insightful)
Thats the beauty of being an attorney, the more stupid laws like this, the more money to go around.
And remember, you get paid even if you lose.
Re:The DMCA is only a symptom. (Score:2)
In all fairness, we have the power to kill the DMCA right now without any help from the congress. The real prop that's holding up the DMCA is societies own belief in the copyright system, kill that and the DMCA will follow.
Highly disturbing (Score:3, Insightful)
What I find most disturbing about that statement is that it implies that something a bit less than 70% of DMCA takedown notices are not improper and not illegal. That is a law that is far over-reaching, draconian, and designed for abuse. I guess that's what happens when one lives in the good 'old U.C.A (United Corporations of America).
-S
Re:Highly disturbing (Score:2)
Sure, the 30ish% abuse rate is disturbing... but there's nothing to see here talking about the other 70ish%.
Re:Highly disturbing (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, that's a standard logical fallacy; it doesn't imply any such thing. Even if the 30% figure were accurate, it can only be a minimum estimate until the cases are settled in court. But most are settled out of court, mostly for financial reasons (the cost of an individual fighting a corporation), so their legal status can never be known. If you want to make an inference like this, you should read it as "at least 30% of takedown notices are invalid".
But note that that 30% only applies to the specific sample studied, and it wasn't at all a scientifically-chosen random sample. The sample was what statisticians call "self selected", so as a statistic, the number is rather bogus.
This isn't a criticism of the people who did the study. If you read TFA, you'll find that they didn't claim that 30% of DMCA notices are improper; they stated clearly that about 30% of the cases they studied were improper.
So that 30% isn't a statistic; it's merely an example of the DMCA's effect on a small sample of people who are willing to go public with their story. TFA doesn't actually teach us much about the overall impact of the DMCA.
But I suppose that's a bit too precise for a
Re:Highly disturbing (Score:2)
But what do you expect? Socialism?
Isn't capitalism all about the capital and who controls it? It is a democracy one day every four years or so, but the rest of the time, capitalism rules the roost.
The ESA vs HoTU (Score:5, Interesting)
IDSA is providing this letter of notification pursuant to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and 17 USC =A7 512 (c) to make you aware of material on your network or system that infringes the exclusive copyright rights of one or more IDSA members.
IDSA has a good faith belief that the Internet site found at theunderdogs.org infringes the rights of one or more IDSA members by offering for illegal sale one or more unauthorized copies of one or more game products protected by copyright...
Anyone who has seen this website knows that they do not sell games at all and never have. They provide abandonware downloads - games that have been out of print and not for sale for many years - in the interest of the preservation of culture.
Just another example of clueless bullies hiding behind the DMCA, seemingly for financial gain, but for properties not even for sale! Read the full letter and the webmaster's commentary for full details. http://www.the-underdogs.org/partdeux.php [the-underdogs.org]
Re:The ESA vs HoTU (Score:2)
The property is still for sale, even though you might not like the price.
Re:The ESA vs HoTU (Score:2)
HOWEVER:
Abandonware, however reasonable and ethical it may seem, is not a legal concept, and copyright law doesn't care if you can't find the original author. There really isn't any wiggle room here at all. Now, that is at least partially a failing of our copyright system - requiring registration, for example, helps prevent this sort of thing - but as it currently stands, abandonware
Re:The ESA vs HoTU (Score:2)
Most of them are games companies that went out of business and their assets got purchased by a competing company, even if it only got shelved. It would not be very hard to track down the copyright holders of these games, if you really wanted to. The whole concept of abandonware is basicly to test if the copyrights are still being enforced, even though copyright doesn't expire by lack o
Re:The ESA vs HoTU (Score:2)
And exactly how much of the profits of an Ebay sale do you think publishers and designers see?
Still infringment, but it shouldn't be (Score:2)
No, it is still infringement to have a copyrighted game on the web. Those notices are correct.
The problem is that copyright lasts far too long, not that they are being told to take down copyright games. It should be that those downloads would be legal, even if the company was trying to sell them retail.
Accused until proven innocent (Score:4, Funny)
Why is this surprising? (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, keep in mind, this is coming from a registered N.Y. State Conservative Party member, who listens to Rush Limbaugh every day, and voted for W. TWICE.
The amount of Individual Freedoms this law steals from people is abhorrent. It offends every Freedom loving, Patriotic bone in my body. Unfortunately, Most people don't see this as a priority. Like many of our laws, it's a "Creeping Freedom Stealer". Much like the old story of the frog in the frying pan, most people won't notice it taking thier Freedom until it's too late.
Re:Why is this surprising? (Score:2)
This is strange. I suppose that a twice dubya-voting NY conservative rush-limaugh listener would lose no opportunity to trumpet that the DMCA was passed by a cigar-sucking democrat...
Re:Why is this surprising? (Score:2)
Of course it's going to be abused, for the same reason that centrally-planned economic systems are always abused. The participants decide that economic rent-seeking through legal games and political manipulation is a lot less work than actually producing good products or services for a competitive market. Adam Smit
DMCA is a Good Thing (Score:4, Funny)
Congress passed the DMCA a long while back (a few years now, IIRC). It's obviously withstood the test of time; if there was something illegal about it, the Supreme Court would have already overturned it. So, I don't see where anyone can complain. Obviously the only people who have problems with it are the software/movie pirates, and piracy is bad, right?
We should all just try to get along with the DMCA instead of constantly badmouthing it. It's obviously a valuable and appropriate used piece of legislation.
Re:DMCA is a Good Thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:DMCA is a Good Thing (Score:2, Funny)
Fallical (odds are that isn't a word, but whatever) reasoning... I know this is a bad example for copyright issues, but Jim Crow laws enforcing segregation were around for almost 100 years before it was ended, and there was a lot wrong with it... just because there is something wrong does not mean that som
I used to think Republican = Limited Government (Score:2, Offtopic)
And now they are in power, they want a more and more powerful government in all areas - the only thing they are willing to downsize are social programs.
Don't get me wrong, the Democrats suck too.
George Washington was right when he told the American people to avoid a two party system at all costs.
Re:I used to think Republican = Limited Government (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not an American, so this may not be accurate, but it is my understanding that Washington opposed the idea of political parties altogether - not just the situation that exists when you have only two. He believed that all candidates should stand on their own beliefs, not on a platform that is only a lose fit for their opinions but popular with a large, unthinking, group of the electorate.
Re:I used to think Republican = Limited Government (Score:2)
Face it. If they're IN government, they're for government. The problem is there are still a lot of people who believe the lie.
Re:I used to think Republican = Limited Government (Score:2)
It's not that we can't create a new party (we have many but close to 0 representation in congress) - but our winner rules in many areas create an imbalanced representation compared to the parliaments based more closely on the purely English system.
Certain positions require winner-takes-all but some should be more flexible.
The other problem is Gerrymandering. Representatives of congress literally create the borders to their own districts, protecting against newcomers.
The last problem has been the domin
Mountain and Molehill (Score:2, Insightful)
However, let's put things in perspective. What is *really* the bigger problem right now - a few (even a few thousand), bad yes, abuses of the DMCA or the completely out of control wanton disregard for copyright law that exists in many internet corners? The defenders of P2P for LEGITIMATE use lose their credibility if they are not equally realistic and aggressive in condemning and thinking of ways to stop
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
The defenders of P2P for LEGITIMATE use lose their credibility if they are not equally realistic and aggressive in condemning and thinking of ways to stop illegitimate use.
We already did - but for some strange reason, telling the music & movie industry "Stop pricing discs to earn a dollar profit for every cent you spend and you'll remove the incentive for piracy" didn't get greeted with much enthusiasm! :o)
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
The lesson from that adventure was basically that there are a lot of people here with convenient ethics.
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
Abuses of DMCA. Wanton disregard for copyright law doesn't seem to be harming anyone - or at least I haven't heard of any entertainment company going under from them - whereas abuses of DMCA harm real human beings.
Also, one must wonder: Why are Elvis's songs still under copyright, when the man h
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
There's only about a million thing wrong with this line of thinking. One REALLY, REALLY obvious one being that there are internet site outside of the US.
The defenders of P2P for LEGITIMATE use lose their credibility if they are not equally realistic and aggressive in condemning and thinking of w
Not illegal until the 1997 NET Act (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't try to paint it as something new enabled by P2P. What IS new is the idea that sharing files without making a profit is the domain of hardened criminals. What you are witnessing is the same thing lawmakers witnessed during prohibition. Copyright law has
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
Re:Mountain and Molehill (Score:2)
You mean something like the slashdot mod system? Surely you can't be serious!
Partisan tactics (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's the quote about boxes if I remember it right:
There are four boxes to defend liberty with: the soap box, the jury box, the voter box and the ammo box. Use in that order.
Re:Partisan tactics (Score:2)
Re:Partisan tactics (Score:2)
I think "they" got hold of the same list. (Score:3, Funny)
There are four boxes to defend liberty with: the soap box, the jury box, the voter box and the ammo box. Use in that order.
I think "they" got hold of the same list, and their response plan went something like this:
Self Sustaining Argument (Score:4, Insightful)
This story just served to remind me how pointless it is to try and enforce law on the internet.
Perhaps the various copyright enforcement agencies would do better if they changed themselves into education agencies.
It doesn't take a genius to understand that piracy kills the product being pirated. Most people like the own the "genuine" article too though (so you make your money in the long run).
Oh hell... this is a big old can of worms. They invent an anarchic network topology (the internet) that is self sustaining and deliberately uncontrollable - then they try to control it.
How stupid is that.
Will never happen (Score:2)
Perhaps the various copyright enforcement agencies would do better if they changed themselves into education agencies.
They would never do that, because educated people would learn that just as the industrial revolution forced the commoditisation of the labor force and the ugly death of the slavery system, the information age is forcing the commoditisation of information and the ugly death of the copyright system ... and would realise those arguments about "property" rights are completely bogus.
An educa
Chilling Effects (Score:5, Informative)
I hate the DMCA as much as anyone (Score:2)
And second, and MUCH worse, is where the notices were obtained. "900 notices collected by the Chilling Effects project."
The sample is NOT an average sample thus the results are flawed. Of course the notices submitted to the Chilling Effect project are going to be egregious. Why else would anyone submit them?!
Re:I hate the DMCA as much as anyone (Score:2, Informative)
The data set falls into two halves -- self-reported takedown notices and takedown notices sent to Google. The Google part of the set is a complete record of all the notices they have received over the last 3 years or so.
One would expect the self-reported notices to have a bias, but it turns out that Google notices shows the same proportion of flawed notice
Vile Criminals (Score:2, Funny)
Don't atack the DMCA, attack the root (Score:5, Interesting)
The root of the problem here is societies own belief in copyrights. The DMCA is simply taking it to it's logical conclusion, along with the continuious extensions, and all the other abuses associated with copyright. People need to stop looking at copyrights as ever being a benefit, but rather as a burdon that was bearable 25 years ago when the biggest issue was copy machines and copyrights only lasted a few years. Not anymore. The burden copyrights require is too much to bear in the information age. Contrary to the hype, copyrights don't help many artists, and are anti free market. They are moral sewage that has robbed our culture and given it to hollywood, and they make it so that software companies who would otherwise strive to serve us - strive to controll us. The copyright system needs to die and take it's place on the trash heap of history.
Re:Don't atack the DMCA, attack the root (Score:2)
You don't get it. When you assert the right to controll how other people use information at their disposal, than these kinds of problems are predestined to grow out of controll (like they have today).
It's like freedom of speech, once people start trying to controll what people can talk about a little bit - it always grows out of controll till there is no free speech. Which BTW there is no technology that can distinguish between copyright content and free speech content.
Re:Don't atack the DMCA, attack the root (Score:3, Insightful)
But if you write or create something, then you, as the creator, have the right to determine how you want your work to be used.
That's not true. People create things all the time that are used in way's they didn't intend to. Did the creator of TNT desire it to be used in killing millions? Did the creator of the phone intend for it to be used in stalking? Creators rights are not controll rights.
Now, Does the creator have a right not to share this creation with the world if they don't want to, sure -
The Solution: Report the Attorneys! (Score:2, Interesting)
The solution to this is actually pretty straightforward; Report the attorney to their state bar association for a ethics breach. In sending out as takedown notice the signing attorney needs to sign the statement stating that there is a good faith belief that there is copyrighted content on the website. If it's patently obvious that there isn't such work then the signed statement is false. Realize that while attorneys repres
"Safe Harbour" conflict with Anti-Spam/Virus! (Score:4, Interesting)
(e) The service provider must not modify the communication selected by the Internet user [512(a)(5)];
so, if you "modify" the email to put "X-Spam" tags in it, you no longer qualify for the "safe harbor" provisions.
in fact, if you put ANY headers with the message, then the communication is "modified".
DMCA victim (Score:3, Interesting)
Especialy if the content of the site is somewhat questionable and the company issuing the take down notice is big (like microsucks)
Re:DMCAish things (Score:2)
Copyright infringement and facilitating crimes were already illegal before the DMCA. Before the DMCA, only 'criminals' infringed on copyright and wrote software to facilitate it... and after the DMCA, only 'criminals' infringe on copyright.
The only truly new thing with DMCA its unprecedented potential for abuse... and DMCA abuses account for the majority of DMCA case I have read about. As someone else pointed out and as I also have