This is my biggest issue with the DMCA. Issuing a take-down notice for content you do not own should result in large fines. Maybe you get a couple of false positives, but at some point you have to be accountable for this stuff. If you want to rigorously enforce your copyright, good on ya... but be prepared to pay out the nose when you hurt someone else in the process.
> Issuing a take-down notice for content you do not own should result in large fines
It effectively does. The DMCA makes damages, costs and attorneys fees mandatory for material misrepresentations. Doctorow can sue at no cost to himself, while Fox would be out a significant amount of money in two sets of attorneys fees plus whatever damages Doctorow can show this caused to his sales.
It's not at no cost. Cory would need to invest the time and money up front for cost of the lawsuit and then make recovery after he won. He may, given his connections, be able to get assistance from organizations to assist with the financial side, but he would still need to invest the time.
Fox likely just has lawyers on staff and would not really be paying attorney fees, just their usual wages.
This is the downfall of the legal system, you need hefty resources to pursue justice.
This seem to be a major reason that there is no practical penalty for false notices the majority of the time.
Once our content was taken down because of DMCA from Poland (With just a gmail address). We got our content back online with counter following procedures with google after 15 days. (That is the time required after counter for the DMCA complainer to respond back).
How can we expect to sue some on in Poland with just a email address and no idea who the real person is and what they are worth?
DMCA is an American law that only hurts people who live in US. It is very easy to abuse DMCA and trouble people in US if you live outside the country.
He said it was put back online after 15 days. That's how it's supposed to work. There is a gap between the content being taken down and going back up to allow time for a copyright holder to go to court and get an injunction.
It would be nice if Google would let submitters to provide (and honor) a OnDMCANotice event handler, so the counter-notice gets sent inmediately, maybe documented with a reference to IP registration.
I'm not a laywer, nor I know US laws, but mustn't DMCA takedown notice include full contact details on entity who owns a copyrighted materials and, thus, sent the notice?
I'm not sure, but I suspect, without those, the notice is legally void and provider should just drop it as junk mail.
Because companies are largely still operated by humans, who make mistakes. There's a difference between "oops" and "let's systematically abuse this system for our benefit". Granted, I think there should still be a penalty for "oops" moments, just not as bad. The penalty should exponentially increase with the frequency of false positives.
As digital "piracy" does not, in fact, kill music executives, I think we should stay with analogies a little closer to civil law. There's honest mistakes, then there's neglect, and then there is fraud.
Then there's conspiracy to commit fraud (I guess that is what happens when your lobbyists can't get your scam passed as law, but you try to get your way anyway? ;-)
Exactly this. The first draft of that sentence included something about big fines on the very first offense. Then I realized it would be rather impractical and unfair. Sometimes you screw up.
This is about "screwing up" alot, to the point that it becomes malicious.
Fines would make the DMCA the exclusive weapon of major corporations with big piles of money for legal stuff.
Oh, wait...
The biggest issue with the DMCA is that it exists. There's no way of mitigating the basic concept of putting exercising the law into the hands of those who profit from it.
I say, misuse it deliberately (and perhaps repeatedly), and you lose the ability, as an and for the entire entity, to use it in future. Oops, material you think is infringing is online? Tough shit.
That's my simple solution: Abuse it, and you lose it -- for everything.
P.S. And your little dog, too. I.e. any subsidiaries or shell companies you create, and any subsequent purchaser of copyright for the specific material in question. (In this instance, Fox's copyright surrounding their "Homeland" product.) And any material passed to another agent under the terms of your sale to said agent remains excluded from DMCA action.
Copyright is a monopoly granted by the government -- in our democracy, by the people -- to serve the common good. I'm perfectly happy with the people changing the terms of such grants when they find that they are not serving the common good. If we can "Mickey Mouse" ever longer copyright term extensions, by goodness, we can curtail them, as well.
Torrent freak sensationalising as usual. Fox was sending takedown notices to Google of links to the Homeland TV show. Included in these notices were some links to a novel with the same name that was available on torrent sites. Seems like a simple mistake. As much as I dislike Fox the title here is completely misleading.
Edit: I agree with the other commenters there should be some sort of financial penalty for this. It's a simple mistake but as it will impact the author of the novel negatively Fox should have to reimburse him in someway. I'm not exactly sure how that would work but it's something that needs to be looked at with the DMCA.
It's not a simple mistake, it's the result of using dumb automated systems without caring in the least if it affects anyone else. In the past they've already sent DMCA notices about news articles[1] and to takedown notices themselves[2].
"links to downloadable editions of the text of Homeland. These downloads are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-NoDerivs license, which lets you share it, provided that you do so on a noncommercial basis. If you'd like to make a remix, please get in touch with us. "
I'm not really sure why it is big news that content copyright holders have automated DMCA scripts running.
Sure, there should be some compensation for false DMCA take downs, but this story is just surfing on some artificial wave of rage against Fox & Murdoch.
Agreed. I think the article could be written in a different way, I mean it kind of reminds me of those cheap government conspiracy speculation articles.
This isnt censorship. Studio is just trying to prevent copyright violation on its property. Given the book shares the name and the author it was affected as well which is unfortunate but not malicious.
It's time there's a penalty for false takedowns. You shouldn't be allowed to just get Google or others to take down thousands of urls at a time, just by identify a keyword. And we're only in the early days of this. The DMCA requests to Google are skyrocketing every year.
I'm a bit confused about the text of the original article's first DMCA takedown, namely "Allegedly infringing URLs". Why isn't this "URLs that are definitely infringing, under penalty of perjury" as it IMHO was supposed to be in the original law ?
And why aren't lists of "possibly, maybe, infringing URLs" automatically forwarded to trash until the requester bothers to sort out infringing and non-infringing URLs, as (s)he's supposed to?
Read said law. That's not what it requires. The only part of the notice that is under penalty of perjury is "that the complaining party is authorized to act on behalf of the owner of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed" (H.R. 2281, Title II, Sec. 512 (3) (vi)), not the other 5 required elements of the notice, including the list of allegedly infringing activity.
All of the claims in a DMCA notice are about alleged infringement, because copyright holders are not judges and cannot proclaim infringement to have occurred. The most they can have is a good-faith belief that the use was not authorized, and even if that belief turns out to be true, that doesn't necessarily mean the unauthorized use is infringing. There's nothing wrong with using that language in the notice.
Technically... URL is an identifier (locator), not the content. Even more, URL alone does not always denote the content as IP and HTTP headers may affect the result. So, technically a requester can't be sure that re-requesting the resource under a given locator will produce the same content.
But if lawmakers get it, they must also know that URL can't infringe by themselves.
46 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 92.0 ms ] threadCurrently the system allows taking down everything you don't like.
Just amend the law to have a fine of 0.01% of yearly corporate revenue for each bogus notice sent and enjoy the show.
I'd wager "the masses" don't understand the concept of censorship and certainly don't care about universal protections against it.
It effectively does. The DMCA makes damages, costs and attorneys fees mandatory for material misrepresentations. Doctorow can sue at no cost to himself, while Fox would be out a significant amount of money in two sets of attorneys fees plus whatever damages Doctorow can show this caused to his sales.
Fox likely just has lawyers on staff and would not really be paying attorney fees, just their usual wages.
This is the downfall of the legal system, you need hefty resources to pursue justice.
This seem to be a major reason that there is no practical penalty for false notices the majority of the time.
DMCA is an American law that only hurts people who live in US. It is very easy to abuse DMCA and trouble people in US if you live outside the country.
I'm not sure, but I suspect, without those, the notice is legally void and provider should just drop it as junk mail.
Then there's conspiracy to commit fraud (I guess that is what happens when your lobbyists can't get your scam passed as law, but you try to get your way anyway? ;-)
This is about "screwing up" alot, to the point that it becomes malicious.
Oh, wait...
The biggest issue with the DMCA is that it exists. There's no way of mitigating the basic concept of putting exercising the law into the hands of those who profit from it.
That's my simple solution: Abuse it, and you lose it -- for everything.
P.S. And your little dog, too. I.e. any subsidiaries or shell companies you create, and any subsequent purchaser of copyright for the specific material in question. (In this instance, Fox's copyright surrounding their "Homeland" product.) And any material passed to another agent under the terms of your sale to said agent remains excluded from DMCA action.
Copyright is a monopoly granted by the government -- in our democracy, by the people -- to serve the common good. I'm perfectly happy with the people changing the terms of such grants when they find that they are not serving the common good. If we can "Mickey Mouse" ever longer copyright term extensions, by goodness, we can curtail them, as well.
Edit: I agree with the other commenters there should be some sort of financial penalty for this. It's a simple mistake but as it will impact the author of the novel negatively Fox should have to reimburse him in someway. I'm not exactly sure how that would work but it's something that needs to be looked at with the DMCA.
[1]: https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20120525/01520819073/fox-i...
[2]: http://www.myce.com/news/dmca-takedown-notices-run-amok-than...
http://craphound.com/homeland/download/
Most of his ebooks for free here:
http://manybooks.net/authors/doctorow.html
Sure, there should be some compensation for false DMCA take downs, but this story is just surfing on some artificial wave of rage against Fox & Murdoch.
Now, if one of these big companies weren't just caught at this, but actually suffered some legal consequences -- that would be news.
And why aren't lists of "possibly, maybe, infringing URLs" automatically forwarded to trash until the requester bothers to sort out infringing and non-infringing URLs, as (s)he's supposed to?
All of the claims in a DMCA notice are about alleged infringement, because copyright holders are not judges and cannot proclaim infringement to have occurred. The most they can have is a good-faith belief that the use was not authorized, and even if that belief turns out to be true, that doesn't necessarily mean the unauthorized use is infringing. There's nothing wrong with using that language in the notice.
But if lawmakers get it, they must also know that URL can't infringe by themselves.