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View Full Version : DMCA 'good faith' web site shut down


View Full Version : DMCA 'good faith' web site shut down


matt merch
May 30th, 2003, 03:29 AM
Court confirms DMCA 'good faith' web site shut down rights
By Ashlee Vance in San Francisco
Posted: 30/05/2003 at 05:39 GMT


A U.S. court has extended the power of the DMCA even further with a ruling this week that backs up copyright holders' ability to shut down a Web site on "good faith."

InternetMovies.com had asked the District Court for the District of Hawaii to require that copyright holders investigate infringing Web sites before shutting them down. This rational request was rejected by the court, as its granted the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) and any other DMCA zealot the right to put the clamp on Web sites at will.

"This decision rules that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) does not require a copyright holder to conduct an investigation to establish actual infringement prior to sending notice to an Internet Service Provider (ISP) requiring them to shut-down an allegedly infringing web site, or stopping service all together to an alleged violator," InternetMovies.com said in a statement.

In the land of the DMCA, a "good faith belief" of infringement makes it possible to hijack a Web site without investigation.

This decision seems to have thrown a large chunk of the Internet into a virtual Guantanamo Bay. The U.S. military describes its Cuban compound as the least worst place , which is an apt take on where Internet users appear to be.

InternetMovies.com claims to have provided little else other than movie trailers to upcoming flicks. Some would characterize this as a service for the movie industry, but the MPAA saw things in a different light.

After issuing several cease and desist orders, the MPAA shut down InternetMovies.com in 2001. The movie site then fought back by filing a lawsuit against the MPAA last year, claiming it did not provide copyrighted content to users at all.

Despite the recent setback, InternetMovies.com plans to continues the legal battle with the MPAA by filing an appeal with U.S. Court of Appeals of the Ninth Circuit here in San Francisco.

The company hopes to cut off a path for various DMCA zealots trying to shut the Internet down.

"This has serious implications to university campuses as many students and faculty use the school as ISPs and any copyright holder can seek to lawfully shut down whole university networks or obtain individual identity without an investigation under the protection of the DMCA," InternetMovies.com said in the statement.

This recent decision builds on a disturbing trend where no Internet user is safe from copyright holders' prying eyes.

For example, four Ohio State University students had their computers seized in a raid earlier this month and have yet to be charged with a crime. They've been banned from using the Internet at school and still have not received their kit back.

It's dangerous out there on the Web these days. Please, dear readers, surf with caution. ®


http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/30943.html

Siskabush
May 30th, 2003, 05:17 PM
Damn american hypocrites

Critisizing China's censorship. but yet willing to give big companies the power to censor websites.

This aint good at all
Im still glad I live in Canada. My country isnt owned by Sony corp or Paramount studios.

Ken17625
May 30th, 2003, 06:01 PM
Im still glad I live in Canada. My country isnt owned by Sony corp or Paramount studios.

Yet.

Anyone can be bought. The Canadian government is no exception.

Mitsugi
May 30th, 2003, 06:05 PM
Originally posted by Siskabush
Im still glad I live in Canada. My country isnt owned by Sony corp or Paramount studios.
http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/epic/internet/incrp-prda.nsf/vwGeneratedInterE/rp01099e.html
it's possible we may get stricter law concerning copyrights, and prohibit the circumvention, for infringing purposes, of technological protection measures. (think about open source software, and encrypted DVD)

killswitch1968
June 8th, 2003, 05:55 AM
Originally posted by Ken17625
Anyone can be bought. The Canadian government is no exception.

We're most likely the next line as well. Our governments are too closely linked, the US rules Canada whether we believe it or not.

Siskabush
June 8th, 2003, 07:18 PM
Originally posted by killswitch1968
We're most likely the next line as well. Our governments are too closely linked, the US rules Canada whether we believe it or not.

I dont think so. After all the american pressure over the war, we still said no way.

The americans dont own us.

Java
June 15th, 2003, 06:48 PM
Man, I just wish that the courts could actually think about what they're doing... We need a serious rehaul of the whole "rights" system around here. :mellow

twuckDrifer
June 15th, 2003, 07:08 PM
The americans dont own us
Damn tootin they dont.