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Old 07-31-2021, 03:43 AM  
dcortez
DINO CORTEZ™
 
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Vancouver Island
Posts: 2,145
Generally speaking, if you post (publish) content, for which you have a license to do so, that paperwork is your evidence.

Out of curiosity, what happens if an original producer, sells their works to another company (this is happening with legacy adult content), and the new owner decides to tighten copyright enforcement on their entire collection, including older works?

You either have a license to publish that work or you don't. Right?

DMCA seems to be the adult industry equivalent of a Slapp suit.

Large companies can scrape your content, edit it, publish it, and if you have the resources to find where your stolen content is making money for someone else, all you can do is file DMCA complaint - with no measures to recover lost revenues.

Disingenuous DMCA complaints against small companies, or individuals, can tie up their limited resources just proving that they were not in violation.
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