The Rise of the Copyright Trolls 169
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "In the new mass filesharing suit brought in Washington, DC, on behalf of a filmmaker, Achte/Neunte v. Does 1-2094, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Public Citizen, and two ACLU organizations have filed an amicus curiae brief supporting a motion by Time Warner to quash the subpoena. EFF commented: 'We've long been concerned that some attorneys would attempt to create a business by cutting corners in mass copyright lawsuits against fans, shaking settlements out of people who aren't in a position to raise legitimate defenses and becoming a category of 'copyright trolls' to rival those seen in patent law.'" And reader ericgoldman notes a case that arguably falls under the same umbrella: "Sherman Frederick, publisher of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, wrote a blog post declaring 'Copyright theft: We're not taking it anymore.' Apparently upset that third-party websites are republishing its stories in full, the newspaper 'grubstaked and contracted with a company called Righthaven ... a local technology company whose only job is to protect copyrighted content.' Righthaven has brought 'about 22' lawsuits on behalf of the newspaper, including lawsuits against marijuana- and gambling-related websites. Frederick hopes 'if Righthaven shows continued success, that it will find other clients looking for a solution to the theft of copyrighted material' and ends his 'editorial' (or is it an ad?) inviting other newspapers to become Righthaven customers. A couple of months back Wendy Davis of MediaPost deconstructed some of Frederick's logic gaps."
Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:2, Insightful)
If one equates copyright infringement with theft, he or she is either trolling of ignorant. The same goes for "think of the poor starving artists, homeless in their nansions", "I don't just have a monopoly, I own the work itself", etc.
Of course, many of these aren't trolls but astroturfing. Sadly, the trolls seem to be winning on all fronts -- copyright trolls, patent trolls, and slashdot trolls.
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Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:4, Informative)
For the sake of argument, consider that search engines aren't perfect, and people often click based on SE captions of hits.
You're a newspaper that uses GoogleAds. You're also the original author and copyright holder of an article. Some other site with a name that suits someone better-- for whatever reason-- has the same article and that person clicks on that third party site-hosted article, instead of the 'original'. The newspaper loses the revenue associated with GoogleAds or whatever clicks that add to their advertiser demographics. They were robbed of the click. Clicks==revenue.
The other site has no license or authority to reproduce an article in whole. Fair use portions are perfectly acceptable. In the case where articles are lifted wholesale, attributed or not, in lieu of an authorization to do so, that site is misappropriating the copyrighted content.
The proof is in the dilution of money-producing clicks. Do you understand it now?
Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:4, Insightful)
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No, it is not. Say I follow a blogger and they repost something from the Dallas Morning News' website. I'll probably read it on the blogger's site and may click on an advertisement on that blogger's site.
I don't regularly visit the Dallas Morning News' website, so if that blogger had never reposted that article, I would have had no idea of its existence, and I would not have visited the Dallas Morning News' website and they would not have gotten any ad revenue.
So:
Blogger re-posts?
Blogger: $0.10
Dallas Mornin
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That is perfectly true and I don't dispute that. What the blogger did in my example was wrong and illegal, but it is certainly not a black and white case of theft as some of the ancestors in this thread would have you believe.
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Granted, if you follow a blogger and don't follow a newspaper, then the newspaper's website would gain nothing if the blogger hadn't existed. but is that 100% of the way people find news articles? Let's say I live in dallas, and I google "bloke who got shot on main street" and click the reposted article in the blog and not on the newspapers website, then what? Personally, I think this approach to finding news is more likely from the technologically impaired. So if a blogger ends up higher in a search re
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Well said.
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Or the blogger could have posted a small quote (1 paragraph) and a link to the rest of the article. The blogger, if they're running their own site, could also include a complete copy of the article in a searchable database. but NOT show the cached copy - only use it for searches so that when a person gets a "hit", they are still directed to the original source.
Yes, this is more work, but if you use geeklog, you can do that by disabling the "Links" menu in the configuration. Your links database is still
Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:5, Informative)
Well actually the newspapers have been losing money from the loss of ad sells. This has been very well documented and the primary reason being that advertisers will not spend money when readership is in decline. The reason readership is down is because the articles can be read elsewhere for free.
The reason newspapers are going to the "pay wall" system is that the only ones that benefit from banner ads is Google and bloggers with very little expenses. After all, how much does it cost to cut and paste? Google is like a casino. They don't care who wins or loses because they always get a share of the money. Bloggers are happy with the small amount of money they get because they don't have the expense. Newspapers are screwed because they spend money for the articles, and watch other people benefit from their work.
The problem is not the lack of proof.
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But you see, this isn't the point. A news article is copyrighted work. You may not reproduce it in whole on your site without permission. It doesn't matter whether they lost money because of your act or not. It doesn't matter if the copyright laws are an outdated business model or not (BTW, since we are talking about news sites, I guess the whole extended copyright terms issue will not be brought up this time).
The article is the writer's/site's own work and they decide what to do with it. I decide that this
Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:4, Interesting)
How about the "information wants to be free" trolls, who insist that just because something can be digitized, it has to be freely available to the masses?
Seems everyone is in either one extreme or the other. Whatever happened to moderation?
Moderation? (Score:4, Insightful)
Whatever happened to moderation?
Moderate posts tend to go unmoderated on /. Where's the fun in that? :)
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By definition, there are no "moderate activists". So nobody is pushing the cause of moderation.
It's a vicious circle of mediocrity. ;)
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Oh, that's right, a group of people whose businesses are based on information not being available started suing people left and right.
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Paywalls don't restrict access to paying customers, just those who don't want to pull their weight.
Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:5, Insightful)
Information doesn't want to be free, but when it isn't, neither are you.
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What about you stop insulting people and start engaging in a real debate?
Then you might go back and read up on the intent behind copyright and the original copyright terms: 14 years with one renewal for living authors, explicit copyright notice and registration required. Those terms were thought up by some of the greatest minds in US history. Under those terms, tons of stuff ought to be freely available to the masses. The copyright term extensions that have happened since then have not been justified by
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Whatever happened to moderation?
Everything is best done in moderation... especially moderation.
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You mean the ones taking this quote out of context to further their own agenda?
Re:Different kind of copyright trolls on /. (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, "information wants to be free" trolls like Thomas Jefferson.
Jefferson supported copyright. Yes, he supported a shorter version of copyright than we currently see, but don't try to co-opt Jefferson into some extreme "information wants to be free" supporter - which, by definition, requires that Jefferson opposed any form of copyright.
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"The news" are also not copyright protected, particular write-ups, images and videos may be (and no one would agree to give up their copyright after a month, archives are in some ways more valuable), but the facts as such aren't.
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[[citation needed]]
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So you are saying if I disagree with you then I *must* be a troll because you are obviously right...
Republishing stories in full without crediting the original author is plagiarism. Basically taking someone else's work and passing them off as their own in order to garner hits, elevate the status of their blog, and possibly earn some revenue from Google advertising.
Even if they give proper credit to the original auth
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And yet you yourself don't use the word 'theft' to describe the same situation, but rather you chose to use 'plagiarism'.
"Republishing stories in full without crediting the original author is plagiarism. Basically taking someone else's work and passing them off as their own in order to garner hits, elevate the status of their blog, and possibly earn some revenue from Google advertising."
Copyright Infringement is NOT theft. The owner of said works can open up their hard drive, safe, or wherever they keep the
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You skipped over my quote in the same comment:
So what was your point?
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His point was that copyright infringement is a different crime from theft. Or if that wasn't his point then it's one I'd like to make.
The two things are both illegal, may well both result in financial damage to the victim, bear a certain sort of superficial resemblance, but they aren't the same crime. They don't carry the same punishment (bizarrely the less direct one tends to be punished more harshly, though less often) they aren't seen the same way in public opinion, they are not the same thing.
So it's
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YES it does make it less a crime since theft is a criminal offense but copyright infringement is a civil offense.
The "copyright infringement is theft" crowd seems to use the amusing logic that since they both are illegal they must be comparable. Yet they would not equate speeding with serial rape.
Please cite a copyright case where the defendant was accused of theft, then we can say they have been equated.
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From the Copyright Law FAQ, by Terry Carroll:
3.3) Is copyright infringement a crime, or a civil matter?
It's always at least a civil matter (a tort). 17 U.S.C. 501(b) details the mechanisms by which an owner of a copyright may file a civil suit, and 28 U.S.C. 1338 expressly refers to civil actions arising under the copyright act.
However, under certain circumstances, it may also be a federal
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That's like claiming that sex is a criminal offense, because some very specific instances of sex are criminal offenses. Copyright infringement is not a criminal offense, profiteering from copyright infringement is, just as sex is not a criminal offense, but rape is.
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GGGP is wrong. Copyright infringement is not a criminal offense. The GGGP did not state that the copyright infringement is willful and for private gain, I think they are just confused about whether it is a criminal offense. It isn't, apart from in those specific circumstances, which GGGP did not seem to be talking about.
Personally I believe copyright infringement for personal gain should be a criminal offense - it's just using someone else's copyright to make a quick buck. However, I'd guess that at lea
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Republishing stories in full without crediting the original author is plagiarism
Yes, and I hate plagiarism too; about ten years ago I wrote something that may have been the most plagiarized piece on the internet, but that's not what I was referring to.
And I'm for copyright, although against the extreme times copyrights are granted for these days, and think that non-plagiarising, non-commercial use should be noninfringing.
But copyright infringement is NOT theft. Nor is it rape, nor is it a red canary. Callin
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The fact that copyright infringement does not equate to what is traditionally thought of as theft does not make copyright infringement any less wrong or any less of a crime.
Ummm... I think you'll find it does. One necessarily deprives the owner of something, the other does not. One is a criminal offense, the other is not.
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Profiting off of someone else's work is a tiny percentage of copyright infringements that happen, and I agree it should be illegal. I'm not arguing about that. I was talking about copyright infringement in general, which is not a criminal offense. Bill_the_Engineer is also confusing plagiarism with copyright, which is a completely different issue... if I publish the complete works of Shakespeare, and claim I wrote them, that is plagiarism. They're not copyrighted. There aren't specific plagiarism laws
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Yeah, we'll lets think about software patents for a minute....Why? It's totally insane and so is this. Yep, the US is going down the tubes without anyone else left. OK we will have a depression followed by global war. The human race cannot stand another world war so we need to get our stuff together and get rid of nonsense like this.
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heh (Score:4, Insightful)
Frederick hopes 'if Righthaven shows continued success, that it will find other clients looking for a solution to the theft of copyrighted material' and ends his 'editorial' (or is it an ad?) inviting other newspapers to become Righthaven customers.
So, is this possibly a Glenn Beck/Goldline [yahoo.com] type of situation?
Copyright trolls or enforcers (Score:3, Informative)
This isn't companies sitting on pools of copyrighted content they've no intent to distribute. This is companies hiring a third party to protect their material.
Lots of small companies can't afford their own legal teams to protect themselves so it makes sense to outsource this type of thing.
"Protection" (Score:5, Interesting)
What is being "protected" here is an out of date business model, created in an era where making a high quality copy required specialized and expensive equipment. Now things are different, and less than a week's pay at minimum wage is sufficient to make perfect copies of music or movies, and the practice is widespread. Instead of updating business models to reflect the reality of the 21st century, what are these companies doing? Attacking people and attacking technology, hoping to turn back the clock.
Why should we feel sympathy for companies that engage in that sort of behavior? These companies are not protecting anything, they are just trying to scare people away from modern technology through malicious litigation, and trying to turn a profit in that process. I feel no sympathy for them, and I certainly won't defend their abuse of the American judicial system by suggesting that they are "protecting" anything.
Re:"Protection" (Score:4, Insightful)
You've seem to left out the part that includes money being spent to pay the reporter's salary and his travel expenses. Not to mention the salaries of the support staff that doesn't include distribution.
It appears that the business model that you support involves taking someone else's work, republish it, garner web hits for free, and cash the check from Google. This doesn't sound like a sustainable business model. Of course, you are preserving the work itself by helping it being distributed to a wider audience. This is a flimsy moral argument that ignores the original author's intent or the need to sustain the actual sources of these articles.
Why does it appear that the "new business model" is parasitic? How does this model continue when the host dies?
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Yeah, that second one sounds nice. A system where the public pays for the news. Where the law protects the public's interest in having access to reliable news, rather than putting the public in danger if they dare to disseminate the news further. Or, if the thought of t
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A system where the public pays for the news.
Like NPR?
I hear what you're saying about people protecting their wallets, not their content. And because people need to eat, these newspapers, movie moguls, songwriters still need the money, not just your interest. In terms of online news, much of it is paid for through advertising. So if people aren't going to that particular site because they're reading it elsewhere, that newspaper isn't making money. If there was a technological way of having the attributio
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Sounds unrealistic, and a catch 22. How can you attract subscribers without stories? How can you publish stories without subscribers?
Now if only there was a way you could publish a story and have people come to your site and actually read it. But we need to make sure no one else poaches our story and reap the rewards of our hard work. If only there was a way of doing just that... oh right it's called copyright.
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It seems as if people who claim to support GPL and other effective community-building copyright licenses that depend on the protections provided by copyright law also show blatant contempt for idea of copyright. I'm not talking about the irrational duration of copyright, but the idea that the creator of content should get to set the rules for use of his own content.
Maybe I'm wrong, and the people who don't respect copyright also don't give a crap about the GPL, but if I were to characterize the Slashdot com
Re:"Protection" (Score:4, Insightful)
The whole "GPL is built on copyrights, so free software supporters should not opposed other uses of the copyright system" is misleading and attempts to portray the GPL as another case of "creators get to decide the rules." The point of the GPL is to improve the public's access to software, and the philosophy is based on improving the public's access to information and creative works in general. Sure, dismantling the copyright system entirely, without creating a new set of laws protecting the public's access to creative works, would be a problem for free software supporters. Replacing the current copyright system with a new system that encourages sharing and increases the ability of people to find information, that is perfectly fine for a free software supporter.
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Actually, the whole point of the GPL is that the authors of creative works should not retain absolute control over the distribution of the work. The fact that the GPL uses copyright law as a means to that end is entirely incidental; it would have been just as effective to rewrite the law itself to grant the public the same rights that the GPL grants.
Baloney. Fundamentally, the copyright system works as intended as a protection for the creators of publishable material. I only see problems in two areas: Duration and enforcement.
This argument about "improving the public's access to information and creative works" suggests that that ONLY appropriate model for managing publication rights is the GPL model. Even the FSF doesn't promote this view, as evidenced by the various FSF-created licenses (various GPL versions, LGPL versions, GFDL). What the "replacing
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Why? People will just find a new source for their news. Now that we have a massive, globally deployed network that enables fast communication, news spreads quickly. Of course, good, solid journalism is another story, but the age of greed based journalism is at its end. It is time for a new system to be devised, where journalists are paid for their work without having to rely on the scarcity of information.
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Re:"Protection" (Score:4, Interesting)
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"There were patrons, who sponsored commission on a work. Afterwards, the patron owned the work, but the rest of the world got to appreciate it. In other words, the patron could use it for whatever purpose they wanted, but the rest of the world could only use it for viewing (modern equivalent of non-commercial purposes imo)"
The most famous work (Las Meninas) by Spain's best painter (Velasquez) happened to stay in the monarch's bedroom for a few hundred years before it moved to the museum. The rest of the wo
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Where did I say people should not get paid? I have no problem with people getting paid for their work. My problem is that these companies are attacking the general public. As far as I am concerned, it is time to find a new way to pay journalists and artists. "You're also forgetting that copyright law is vitally important to the GPL and creative commons too."
Please point out where I said we should repeal copyright law. All I said was that it is
Re:"Protection" (Score:4, Insightful)
the system whereby creators can get paid
A system whereby creators can get paid ... just not very well. This doesn't mean it's the only possible system.
Most of the payment currently goes to people who have nothing to do with the creation. This is one of the reasons why it's hard to take the IP lobby's "rights of the artists" cant seriously -- anyone who pays any attention knows that "the artists" are the last people to get paid under the MAFIAA system. I don't know about journalism, but it wouldn't surprise me if it works the same way there; certainly reporting isn't known as a high-pay profession.
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Leaving the larger issue aside... Copies are not work.
Acting is work, the DVDs containing a record of it are not. Photographing is work, prints are not. Composing, performing and singing is work, the CDs containing a record of them are not. Writing, editing and typesetting is work, the books themselves are not.
This does not addres
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Here's my favorite quote:
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Here's my favorite quote:
Not having read the complaint, I don't know what the context of that quote is, but it seems reasonable. Once the cat's out of the bag, someone can grab it, put it on BT, and anyone can get it.
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Re:Copyright trolls or enforcers (Score:4, Insightful)
that's the wrong issue (Score:3, Interesting)
the issue is not the legitimacy or illegitimacy of the enforcers, the issue is the legitimacy or illegitimacy of what is being enforced
the very concept of copyright itself is coming under question as to its validity due to technological progress (the internet)
there is an entire body of legal status quo that was developed in an age of vcr tapes and vinyl records and xerox machines. much of it is fundamentally at odds with how the internet functions
such that renegade nongovernmental organizations exploiting t
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mankind has burned witches before and sadly we'll burn 'em again. All most of us can hope for is that we're not identified as one until this blows over.
Strange Bedfellows - Re:Copyright trolls or enforc (Score:2)
Does anyone else find it odd to see the EFF and MPAA on the same side for a court case?
The EFF's motivations I understand. I guess I need to RTFA, but my gut-level guess at the MPAA's motivation is, "Only big guys like us (MafiAA) who can afford a stable of lawyers and a few purchased legislators deserve copyright protection."
But it still hurts the newspaper (Score:2, Interesting)
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They built their business in an age where creating copies of a newspaper required expensive equipment. That age is gone. To be perfectly honest, the age of "news as a business" is on its way out -- it is time for us to start looking at new ways to pay journalists for their services. Either that, or newspapers need to come up with a really good bu
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... it is time for us to start looking at new ways to pay journalists for their services.
It's called blogs. Look it up.
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I am thinking more in terms of a system where journalism is viewed as a public service, so the public pays for it, and the public has the right to copy and disseminate the news as much as they want. Instead of the law being used to limit the spread of that information, the law would be rewritten
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Plaintiff is no member of the MPAA (Score:2, Funny)
How can a blogger belive he can just copy an artic (Score:4, Insightful)
I really think the newspaper is right in this case and I can't belive why the blogger belive he is allowed to just put a copy of (large parts of) an article online on his own page. What he should do is to put a snippet(Normally the first paragraph or so) and then link to the newspaper. (Like google news does).
But when that is said, I still think that suing without even sending a warning is a bit aggresive.
Oh and the reason this kind of lawsuits are so seldom seen is that if the newspaper just send an takedown email, the article will normally be taken down, simply because the guy who put it up there normally know he has no right do so, so he will just take it down when asked.
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From the blog post... (Score:5, Insightful)
Look at this way. Say I owned a beautiful 1967 Corvette and kept it parked in my front yard. And you, being a Corvette enthusiast, saw my Vette from the street. You stopped and stood on the sidewalk admiring it. You liked it so much you called friends and gave them my address in case they also wanted to drive over for a gander. There'd be nothing wrong with that. I like my '67 Vette and I keep in the front yard because I like people to see it. But then, you entered my front yard, climbed into the front seat and drove it away. I'm absolutely, 100% not OK with that. In fact, I'm calling the police and reporting that you stole my car. Every jury in the land would convict you. Yet, when it comes to copyrighted material -- news that my company spends money to gather and constitutes the essence of what we are as a business -- some people think they can not only look at it, but also steal it. And they do. They essentially step into the front yard and drive that content away.
The part in bold is my emphasis. Is he saying that facts, meaning news, can be copyrighted? That if his paper is the first to publish an article about the outcome of a sporting event, that that should be copyrighted? I agree that an article about the game shouldn't be copied verbatim to another site but copyrighting the facts is ridiculous.
Also worth a laugh is the entire analogy of the Corvette and the "news." They are very different. With the Corvette, he would no longer physically have the Corvette. With the news, he has a copy and now the thief has a copy. What has actually been stolen is the possibility that someone might only see that article on his site. It's now available in two places. This is a lot different than the Corvette. I'm not saying it makes copying articles verbatim OK, I just think the analogy is incorrect.
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Plagiarism is plagiarism. Newsworthyness means nothing if it's lifted wholesale and unaltered. That copyrighted works are a 'body' like a 'Vette is real.
Steal the news, steal a 'Vette, both are stealing.
You can take a picture of the 'Vette. Fine.
You can look at it. Fine.
Drive it away, and it's stealing, as its *owner* is denied its benefit, a benefit that he may have paid nothing for, or a lot of money. It matters not what the ownership was worth, rather, that he (presuming his gender; I could be wrong) the
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I just wanted to amplify your sentiment, since it got lost in the weird corvette story.
The issue isn't the copyrighting of facts. The issue is the verbatim copying of t
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They keep trotting out the stolen car analogy, when anybody with half a brain can see that if you steal my car, I no longer have my car. If you make a copy of my car, why should I complain? Nothing was stolen.
Copyright infringement is not theft. Nor is it rape. It's copyright infringement.
What is and isnt ok (Score:4, Insightful)
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Its ok to try to protect something you poured your blood sweat and tears into, even if copying it only costs a few pennies. Whats not OK is trying to claim that each infringement costs them thousands of dollars. If youre going to sue for a few MP3s, then do it in small claims court, and do it often. Don't blame one person for the crimes of 10,000.
Its too easy to defend yourself in small claim's court so they don't want to sue there. They want a lawsuit where its cheaper to just fork out the money and pay them off than it is to fight.
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Its ok to try to protect something you poured your blood sweat and tears into...
Even this sounds benign, but is dangerous reasoning. It's really a revenue stream that Copyright holders are trying to protect, not the information itself. Further, the mechanism they use to protect this revenue stream is to tell me what I'm allowed to do with copies. While Copyright may give them that legal right for a limited time, let's not pretend that it is somehow inherently right for content creators to be able to say what I can and cannot do indefinitely just because they poured effort into making s
Warner v. Warner (Score:2)
Aren't Time Warner Cable and Warner Brothers owned by the same company? Couldn't this motion come back to bite them if WB ever wants to sue TWC customers?
(On the other hand, maybe their plan is to make it hard for their competitors to sue, but helpfully provide customer details whenever WB asks.)
How many deaths? (Score:3, Insightful)
Patent Troll vs Copyright Troll (Score:2)
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Are we going to call companies who slap shoplifters with overly large penalties "shoplifting trolls", or call groups who hit car thieves with big punishments "car theft trolls"?
Only once they start suing everyone near the store during the time of the shoplifting, and everyone within two blocks of where the car was stolen.
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How attorneys can print money (Score:4, Insightful)
1) A lawyer copies a story from your newspaper and posts it anonymously on a blog or user aggregated news site. Then that same attorney runs to you and says "They stole your story! You should sue!!!"
2) Repeat
3) Profit.
What a tool (Score:2)
It's one thing when their views are limited to the Opinions section, but when it's pervasive throughout the entire paper it's too much. And then he wonders why no one is buying his rag.
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No, this is all about extorting money from these schlumps in order to generate revenue to save his dying newspaper empire.
Why bother trying to reinvent yourself for the 21st century when you can make up for lost profits thru extortion?
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Copyright laws were not designed to be used as an alternative profit stream. Nor to be used as extortion leverage against those who cannot realistically defend themselves in court.
And these weren't "timely" news stories either, so that argument fails too.
I think these lawyers are in for a surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm guessing that these lawyers will be laying out a lot of money, and a whole lot of time, and their fees won't even come close to what they expend.
Which of course, serves them right for being involved in extortionate, champertous, unnecessary litigation.