Quote:
Originally Posted by blackmonsters
But consider this.
The real problem is that sites like youtube don't just host uploaded content, they
publish it. It's not like your hosting company that gives you a server and only you
publish the uploads.
So the law is trying to protect youtube in the same way that your hosting company
is protected but they aren't even doing the same thing.
One is hosting and the other is hosting and publishing.
Publishing is where copyright actually comes into play. It's not illegal to record a TV
show and upload it to your server for you to watch later. You are not publishing
it until you post a link to it.
If you upload and publish content that you know is legal then false claims mean nothing
to you. But youtube doesn't know what it is publishing so they have a problem with
false claims.
So the real question is "who the fuck ever changed the law to allow people to publish
content they don't buy, create, own or fall into fair use guide lines?" Nobody!
The DMCA is just a way around the real law and it deserves to be abused because
it's an abuse of the real law to begin with.
People like youtube and because people like it then it "must be right".
Too bad it's not right and it never was right, but since we like it so much we have
to fiddle with the law to "make it right".
Publish your own content and not someone else's and that will end of problem.
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Youtube isn't publishing content. Their users are. That's the problem with social sites. And as these services evolve from being websites, to being communication platforms, this little distinction becomes even more important to keep in mind. It should always be the individual that publishes something that will ultimately be responsible.
Facebook is now evolving into becoming an im service much like messenger, icq and skype. They have their own messenger client, and you don't even need to use the website any more to use facebook and communicate with people.
So the question is: Do we want them to have to censor and decide what we as the users can talk about? Do we really want an internet where companies like these have to police their users and make sure they don't talk about something illegal or share anything copyrighted amongst themselves on services like these?
That paints for a scary Big Brother type of scenario, and I don't like it.