Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts Piracy IT

Embedding Isn't Copyright Infringement, Says Italian Court (arstechnica.co.uk) 25

The appeal court of Rome has overturned one of the 152 website blocks another court imposed last month, and ruled that embedding does not constitute a copyright infringement. From an ArsTechnica report: The order against the Italian site Kisstube is annulled, but the other websites remain blocked. Kisstube is a YouTube channel, which also exists as a standalone website that does not host any content itself, linking instead to YouTube. Both the channel and website arrange content by categories for the convenience of users. The Italian court's decision was informed by an important ruling by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). In the BestWater case, the CJEU held that embedding or framing a video or image from another website is not copyright infringement if the latter is already accessible to the general public. However, another CJEU judgment ruled that posting hyperlinks to pirated copies of material is only legal provided it is done without knowledge that they are unauthorised versions, and it is not carried out for financial gain.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Embedding Isn't Copyright Infringement, Says Italian Court

Comments Filter:
  • iframe (Score:5, Insightful)

    by zifn4b ( 1040588 ) on Monday December 05, 2016 @09:18AM (#53424565)

    Is this really just about the semantics of an iframe? An iframe is like another separate browser window only placed in a more specific location in the browser's window area. You basically just say this particular rectangular region of another web page should render the content at . It's not even technically embedding. Embedding would indicate you have embedded the actual content into your site which is not even the case in an iframe. Is there going to be a separate followup argument regarding popups then? Modal dialogs? Sheesh.

    This quite frankly is an argument that only people who don't understand technology would ever insist on having because it's irrational. Insisting that putting an iframe in a website pointing to another URL is embedding is like claiming hyperlinks are embedding, it's about on par with insisting there are dump trucks driving your data around intertubes and therefore there ought to be a toll on those trucks. Ugh.

    • by Jaime2 ( 824950 )
      Since video can't actually be binary embedded into HTML, all websites that present video are simply markup constructs that tell the browser to go get a video. Whether the browser uses the iframe, video, or object tag is what's irrelevant. The question here is how far copyright law goes in limiting other's use of presenting content. Unfortunately, this is destined to come down to intent and to become a gray area that will be expensive to litigate.
    • Re:iframe (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Wycliffe ( 116160 ) on Monday December 05, 2016 @09:49AM (#53424787) Homepage

      Iframe or hyperlink, the issue is that someone is creating an organized list of infringing items that they have uploaded to youtube. The stuff is not suppose to be on youtube and youtube is supposed to be policing it but youtube is playing whack a mole. If youtube doesn't know where the mole is then most of their users won't either. A 3rd party site can bypass this as they can index it on their side and they don't necessarily have to even name it correctly on youtube's side which makes it even harder for youtube to find it. This is the reason that the media companies have used the courts to go after hyperlinks and iframes. With cloud computing and thousands of sites, it's pretty easy to dump something into an anonymous ftp, dropbox, youtube, amazon instance, etc... that isn't owned by you. You could even store it piecemeal in comments on a wordpress site, etc... It's practically impossible to stop someone from hosting data somewhere but if you can restrict someone from organizing that data then it's not near as useful as there is noway to really find it.

      • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

        But youtube is playing whack a mole.

        Welcome to the internet. The game of copyright infringement is indeed a game of whack of mole as it has always been. I fail to see how you or this article is making any progress towards any solution. You're doing an excellent job of defining the problem dare I say whining, but I don't see anyone doing anything productive about the root cause of the problem. There have been many discussions had on slashdot about this issue in many forms and no one that I know of has any solution for copyright infringemen

        • The media companies are playing a game they can't win. The only thing they can do is move copyright infringement to the gray area where it's more convenient for a percentage of their customers to buy it. I'm surprised torrent link sites haven't moved to tor yet. Tor seems like the perfect place to store links. Tor is too slow for streaming but it would a perfect place to catalog where on youtube you can find the videos a person wants to watch. As currently, it's still legal to watch pirated movies, the

  • Theoretically fine, except for this:

    ... posting hyperlinks to pirated copies of material is only legal provided it is done without knowledge that they are unauthorized versions

    How is a someone who has been taken to court over this but never knew that the content they linked to was infringing supposed to prove that they didn't know that the content was unauthorized?

    Or, assuming that they are treated as innocent until proven guilty, how is the court supposed to prove that a person knew that the content they

    • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

      Theoretically fine, except for this:

      ... posting hyperlinks to pirated copies of material is only legal provided it is done without knowledge that they are unauthorized versions

      How is a someone who has been taken to court over this but never knew that the content they linked to was infringing supposed to prove that they didn't know that the content was unauthorized?

      Wrong question - the right question is "how do you know they knew it was infringing?" followed by "prove it".

      Or, assuming that they are treated as innocent until proven guilty, how is the court supposed to prove that a person knew that the content they wanted to link to was unauthorized to get a conviction?

      Still wrong premise, the court doesn't prove anything, the plaintiff has to prove it. Note that things like emails saying "post this link to blah from pirate site yarr and add this awesome ad so we make money" would likely be considered a smoking gun in this situation.

      • by tomhath ( 637240 )

        Wrong question - the right question is "how do you know they knew it was infringing?" followed by "prove it".

        Because they were sent a take down request and didn't comply.

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        Still wrong premise, the court doesn't prove anything, the plaintiff has to prove it

        That depends on whether the defendant is in a civil or criminal case.

  • by HornWumpus ( 783565 ) on Monday December 05, 2016 @11:57AM (#53425625)

    Unless the web site allows it, it is leeching bandwidth. Admins are well within their rights to configure their servers to not serve the expected graphic file. Even if it did work when the web site author tested it.

    • That's exactly what I thought when I read the summary; you can just reference page elements from other sites. Been doing the "http_referer" check for a few years on a basically any web site I deploy or work with..

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

Working...