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GitHub Reinstates YouTube-dl Library After EFF Intervention (zdnet.com) 47

GitHub has reinstated today the youtube-dl open-source project, a Python library that lets users download the source audio and video files behind YouTube videos. From a report: GitHub, a code-hosting repository, had previously removed the library from its portal after it received a controversial DMCA takedown request from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 23. In a DMCA takedown letter, RIAA argued that the library was being used to "circumvent the technological protection measures used by authorized streaming services such as YouTube" and to allow users to "reproduce and distribute music videos and sound recordings [...] without authorization." RIAA also noted that the project's source code "expressly suggests its use to copy and/or distribute the following copyrighted works." More specifically, RIAA used Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to claim that the youtube-dl library was breaking copyright by providing a tool to circumvent copyrighted material -- even if the youtube-dl library didn't contain copyright-infringing code itself.

But in a blog post today, GitHub said the library did not actually break Section 1201 of the DMCA, citing a letter it received from Electronic Frontier Foundation lawyers, who to take up the youtube-dl project's case. In the letter, the EFF team explained that Google does not have any technical measures in place to prevent the download of its videos -- all of which need to be made freely available to all kinds of apps, browsers, smart TVs, and more. Hence, EFF lawyers argued that the library could never be taken down under Section 1201 of the DMCA since the library doesn't actually circumvent any sort of copyright protection system in the first place.

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GitHub Reinstates YouTube-dl Library After EFF Intervention

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  • Not to mention... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Travelsonic ( 870859 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @01:34PM (#60730686) Journal
    Not to mention, where the fuck does the RIAA get off DMCAing something that doesn't directly infringe on its rights like this? The system is Google's (for YouTube specifically) - other systems belonging to the platforms whom yt-dl can use, so wouldn't it be THEM who would be filing the DMCA claims? What am I missing?
    • The enormous amount of kickbacks Samsung and Sony gave them just to be able to play youtube videos shittily.

    • by Zebai ( 979227 )

      I'm disappointed in Github for taking it down in the first place. As you said the RIAA would not have a claim even if it was valid reason for a take down request as it was not a service they own. I was under the impression you can't file a DMCA on someone else's behalf? Isn't there a penalty for misrepresenting a claim?

      • You most definitely can assign and have that right reassigned to others specifically lawyers to take care of these sort of matters for you. Your going to have a whole chain by the time you get to the RIAA who then contracts with sleaze ball law firm who has a 1st year sign everything, on advice from a more senior lawyer that everything is above board. If anything goes bad you stake that 1st year out as a sacrificial lamb.

        Now you have a technical expert saying that this infringes because their software say

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by thomst ( 1640045 )

          https://slashdot.org/~silas_moeckel claimed:

          You most definitely can assign and have that right reassigned to others specifically lawyers to take care of these sort of matters for you.

          No, you most definitely can't [wikipedia.org].

          (Full disclosure: IANaL. If you need legal advice, contact an attorney - but don't bother contacting Steven Gibson, former CEO of Righthaven, unless you're looking to lose a lawsuit, bankrupt your legal firm, and cause everyone who knows you to laugh and point ... )

          • by silas_moeckel ( 234313 ) <silas@@@dsminc-corp...com> on Monday November 16, 2020 @04:02PM (#60731422) Homepage

            Righthaven claimed overship as a basis to sue for things they did not in fact have ownership of. That is far different than assigning a right to a lawyer to go assert your rights for you.

            You implication would be that eavy copyright holder would have to personally fill out DMCA takedowns is asinine. Not a lawyer either but I've gotten clear instructions from one about DMCA takedowns and validating them.

            • by thomst ( 1640045 )

              silas_moeckel insisted:

              Righthaven claimed overship as a basis to sue for things they did not in fact have ownership of. That is far different than assigning a right to a lawyer to go assert your rights for you.

              No, it's not. You are conflating the assignment of copyrights with legal representation by counsel. They're two entirely different things.

              You implication would be that eavy copyright holder would have to personally fill out DMCA takedowns is asinine. Not a lawyer either but I've gotten clear instructions from one about DMCA takedowns and validating them.

              Again, you're failing to understand what lawyers do and do not do for their clients. They do NOT take ownership of your copyrights in order to represent you. Period. Instead, they act as your legal agent, upon your instructions (which can take the form of standing instructions), to demand action in accordance with YOUR rights. Not their rights - yo

              • You are entirely failing at reading comprehension or willfully misinterpreting what I said.

                You can definitely go pay a lawyer to go file DCMA notices for you, it's done every day.

                STFU and go home troll.

              • Lawyers don't have the right to represent anyone period! Lawyers are people who went to law schools but did not pass the bar in their states. So they can only assist you in filing legal papers and advise you of the laws etc... Attorneys, on the other hand, are the ones who have not only went to law schools but have also passed the Bar. Only Attorneys can represent people or corporations in court without you even having to be there! That is why you should pay attention to their business card when they hand y
      • Github is actually Microsoft, and they are RIAA members. So this was predictable.

        I left github for gitlab when they sold out to the devil.

    • As I recall, past cases on the DMCA asserted successfully that simply having a single bit that signals "do not copy" was sufficient to be considered techincal compromise of a protection system if you ignored it.

      • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @05:01PM (#60731658)

        What is it you don't want them to copy?

        Their web server gets a request for a video. The tool in question simply downloads the same video that you'd download to display. It doesn't create a different number of copies than viewing it with a web browser; and in both cases, it is the youtube webserver that creates and distributes the copy.

        If they put a flag in the header telling you not to make additional copies, that wouldn't apply to the tool at all, it would apply to copies the user might want to make after they've completed the download.

        What some people are missing is that this tool is just a command line web browser for video content. And it is named "youtube-dl" but it works with a wide variety of popular websites.

        And furthermore, it supports cookies. When I use youtube-dl, I'm doing so logged into youtube as myself. Or on other sites, using the same anonymous cookie as in the GUI web browser.

        We have reddit fans here, it worked just fine to download this video of important election recount information. It only receives the copy the webserver makes.
        https://www.reddit.com/r/Publi... [reddit.com]
        Disclaimer: No ballots were defaced in the making of this comment.

    • You're missing that they're greedy fucks who will throw shit at anything and see what sticks.
    • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

      What you're missing is that the actual text of DMCA it's all about the copyright holders of the works which are protected. The maker/vendor/etc of the DRM scam has no particular rights under DMCA. So the only way Google would be involved would be if they have uploaded some videos to youtube too.

      • What you're missing is that the actual text of DMCA it's all about the copyright holders of the works which are protected.

        IMO, the thing that still strikes me as weird about this is, it's still not the system of the RIAA, or any of the labels under their umbrella. Seems like that being grounds enough for the RIAA to be able to assert power over a GitHub repository would open one hell of a strange, and problematic can of worms.

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      The system is Google's (for YouTube specifically) - other systems belonging to the platforms whom yt-dl can use, so wouldn't it be THEM who would be filing the DMCA claims? What am I missing?

      Probably the yt-dl code repository does not include any of Google / Youtube's code either, so not even Youtube could say that the program is "copyright infringement."

      Possibly: Is content that encourages others or might contribute to others' copyright infringement might be a valid claim, But that would Not be a va

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Not to mention, where the fuck does the RIAA get off DMCAing something that doesn't directly infringe on its rights like this? The system is Google's (for YouTube specifically) - other systems belonging to the platforms whom yt-dl can use, so wouldn't it be THEM who would be filing the DMCA claims? What am I missing?

      The creators of youtube-dl put up examples of how to use youtube-dl and foolishly used examples of how to download copyrighted material. That gave lawyers representing that content a tool to use. Those are the specific copyrights they claim are being violated. I don't agree with the logic, but that's what it says in the complaint.

    • by anegg ( 1390659 )

      Not to mention, where the fuck does the RIAA get off DMCAing something that doesn't directly infringe on its rights like this?

      You must have missed the battle over the MP3 audio format when MP3 was first put into play. The RIAA essentially tried to get the technology ruled "illegal". See https://www.eff.org/wp/riaa-v-people-five-years-later [eff.org] because going after the actual individual violations was extremely difficult (and that effort was itself rife with highly questionable tactics from the RIAA).

      The RIAA is funded by people who were making scads of money off of music publishing (prior to price pressure from Internet distribution

    • “Intellectual Property has the shelf life of a banana” (Bill gates, 2011)

      I think in 2020, IP has an even lower shelf life than in 2011, the Banana outlives it.
      RIAA needs to get over this.

  • by Ostracus ( 1354233 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @01:35PM (#60730696) Journal

    But in a blog post today, GitHub said the library did not actually break Section 1201 of the DMCA, citing a letter it received from Electronic Frontier Foundation lawyers, who to take up the youtube-dl project's case.

    Bet you all love lawyers now?

    • by orlanz ( 882574 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @01:39PM (#60730718)

      In general, I have always liked the ACLU and EFF lawyers. Even in the few cases where I disagreed with the ACLU ones.

    • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @02:58PM (#60731132)

      But in a blog post today, GitHub said the library did not actually break Section 1201 of the DMCA, citing a letter it received from Electronic Frontier Foundation lawyers, who to take up the youtube-dl project's case.

      Bet you all love lawyers now?

      Not really no. It's like the army: we only need the armed services to protect us from the sort of people who join the armed services. We only need lawyers to protect us from other lawyers.

    • When even a patent lawyer is against Imaginary Property with a free ebook Against Intellectual Property [mises.org] you know the world has gone crazy.

    • It was lawyers who started all this. Without an army of lawyers, the entertainment industry would never have been able to go after people in the first place with LAWsuits for copyright violations. Without lawyers, the entertainment industry would not have gotten the congress to put "takedown notices" into the lawyer-written DMCA in the first place. Without lawyers, companies would not be easily bullied into taking stuff down to protect themselves from other lawyers.

      If a few "good guy" lawyers come along and

  • by Anonymous Coward
    I don't think I'm alone in saying if every executive and decision maker in the RIAA/MPAA just disappeared suddenly the world would be a much better place. They're a bunch of predators who have convinced the recording and movie industries that they are needed and invaluable, while they get a nice fat paycheck from everyone elses hard work. Fuck em.
  • Funny how a lot of people HERE knew that and said that, but the RIAA is able to create pain for people nonetheless.
    • It costs very little to tell the truth when nobody is listening. I wonder what it cost this time to force the truth to be heard.

      • Whatever your donation to the EFF was.

        • by Falos ( 2905315 )

          Reminder that smile.amazon.com lets you set them as your beneficiary.

          I only buy off them once or twice a year so I guess this gesture helps more.

          I don't agree with 100% of the EFF's movements but I'd rather have them than not.

  • Now the RIAA will demand YouTube enact measures to prevent downloading or expand the law to encompass YouTube-dl... probably with bipartisan support of politicians sucking off the billionaires teats instead of representing their constituents.
    • They should make it so web browsers can't download them either. You never know what the user is going to do with them once they are on the client machine.
      • Probably we should all be wearing shock collars and have always on cameras embedded in our foreheads, so we can pay the RIAA for surveillance and punishment to ensure we never infringe on their IP rights.
        • Ooh I'm a bad little pirate! *zzzap* Ugghh, ooh I didn't pay for this stupid marvel movie! *zzzaap* Ooh yes, I'm so naughty watching this blu-ray rip I torrented! I didn't pay! *zzzaapp* *nuts*
      • Careful they will go push some plugin that throws DMR on the whole thing.

      • by anegg ( 1390659 )

        They should make it so web browsers can't download them either. You never know what the user is going to do with them once they are on the client machine.

        Be careful what you suggest. I would be surprised if the RIAA hasn't considered making the claim that they have to control browser software in order to make sure copyright law is properly administered in the browsers. It would kill the cash cow to not let the hoi polloi view the content, but as long as they control all means of viewing the content, it would be allowed.

        If they could have gotten their way, all media playback would be through licensed technology only, that enforced all kinds of marketing sc

    • Now the RIAA will demand YouTube enact measures to prevent downloading or expand the law to encompass YouTube-dl... probably with bipartisan support of politicians sucking off the billionaires teats instead of representing their constituents.

      Dicks. Very few billionaires have teats.

    • Now the RIAA will demand YouTube enact measures

      And Google can go tell them to fuck off. They are a DMCA compliant company and are under no obligation to support the RIAA with copy protection mechanisms.

  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @03:32PM (#60731278)

    "the youtube-dl library was breaking copyright by providing a tool to circumvent copyrighted material"

    "CIRCUMVENT COPYRIGHT MATERIAL" ?!

    Do the editors EVER read what they quote ?

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday November 16, 2020 @03:45PM (#60731348)

    When I said precisely what the EFF said I had a torrent of people claim that I was wrong and that any action of viewing the footage outside of a youtube approved way was in fact running afoul of "copy protection" because it was being copied in an unintended way.

    Glad to hear it from actual lawyers now that it's bullshit.

    • I'm surprised the mafRIAA didn't try to make a bullshit claim that "buffering the video" was making a copy of the video. /s

  • The RIAA are being so mind-numbingly predictable, and don't ever seem to mind being perceived as attack dogs. But what's mainly embarrassing here may be that these sorts of claims denote a reasonably poor understanding of the mechanism through which YouTube and the entire online world functions nowadays.

    One would think they'd at least have one or two capable technology consultants informing them of these realities, and of their poor chances of it succeeding. More than a bit surreal actually.
  • Until digital reproduction, recording technology and an artist's royalties enjoyed the engineering advantages of a medium; From wax cylinders to the compact disc, the mutual benefit was an increasing ease of reproduction in terms of scale and cost.

    The conflict of accounting for distribution has run up against whether a computer is an appliance offering features or a fully programmable tool. The RIAA has no qualms about appliances because their dependency on authorization is their designed feature. But for
  • Github was sent a take down notice and has to follow it. (whether or not that notice was bogus doesn't matter). Now they have been presented with a counter notice and (per the law) have reinstated the content.

    The law now says that the submitter of the original take down notice can either do nothing (in which case the content stays there) or fight in court (with the courts deciding if the content gets to stay up or not)

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