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Universal Sues Grooveshark over 100,000 pirated songs no fair use
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sounds like a lesson for those have their employees uploading content to video sites |
how long until this thread turns into the usual retards screaming at each other?
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Which came first? The content or the visitors?
Don't we all come across an empty content sharing site and spend days uploading to help them out? |
imagine gfy without all that stolen youtube content.
what would people link? LOL :1orglaugh |
http://www.google.ca/search?gcx=c&so...paid+royalties - lawsuits against universal unpaid royalties
some amusing reading |
yup there were ex-employees on reddit? saying after they took something down via dmca an employee would reup.
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:winkwink: |
I can't imagine under what perspective a site designed to share music wholesale could ever be considered to be fair use. It's not quotation for review, it's not partial use, it's not non commercial or for educational purposes.
Sites with user uploaded content where the users actually have created the content DO exist, it's not that hard. |
Oh, well ...
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That site isn't even close to what could be considered a neutral service entitled to safe harbor protection.
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user uploads, no way its not real?
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Cut off their hands. Islamic copyright theft punishment.
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There's a lot of people in this world that have the definition of "fair use" twisted to meet their own cheap-ass needs.
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Now if someone could only find out who some of the "users" are on Pornhub.
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User uploaded content, yeah right.. The dumbest thing is that those tracks would probably get uploaded anyways, just a bit later.. If you play with fire you get burned..
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1. Grooveshark sorts content by artists/albums/genres, they even have album covers database, all built into their script, which is specifically designed to "share" music that way. No way you can argue them being a mere neutral storage of bandwidth provider when they build their site with such an obvious targeting. Youtube has none of the above, aside from search by tags and titles, and some automatic "relevant" suggestions, they have no categorization tools. They're pretty much upload what you want and name and tag it however you want. They're not urging users to upload any title specifically because it is missing after it was taken down by copyright holder, which grooveshark does. 2. Youtube implements digital fingerprinting which is darn effective. They can fingerprint your video (and audio too) if you so wish after you sent them DMCA take down request, or you can fingerprint your whole content library instead of hunting down individual clips, which puts you in complete control of what's going on with your intellectual property at youtube. No reupload tricks will work, DFP would not let them through. Grooveshark doesn't implement DFP, which is of itself outrageous nowadays when that technology is mature enough to provide practically meaningful results in preventing copyright infringment. They go way beyond that, they maintain meta descriptions library of almost all music in the world, where all entries remain in place even after they receive take down requests. It simply shows that some track is missing now and encourages users to reupload this specific track again, despite them knowing copyright holder does not want it there. How's that neutral, how's that not encouraging infringment? That of itself is enough to make them liable. If they go even further and upload some of the missing tracks themselves because they do not want to wait when their lazy users will do that, that makes matters worse for them of course, much worse, but even without that there's more than enough evidence of them willingly assisting and being an active part of copyright infringment. |
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And that "stolen videos from youtube at GFY" argument, is bullshit too. Youtube has DFP which is free and available at any moment to any copyright holder, and they also respond to DMCAs quickly if you're too lazy to fingerprint your whole library, and at least that specific clip will be added to the DFP database so nobody will be able to upload it again.
They also ban repeat infringer accounts, and they warn users not to upload stolen shit at many occasions, which helps too. Because of that, when you embed from youtube, you know that copyright holders either want their stuff there, or do not care. Or at least you know that they can quickly take care of that infringment if it struck them only yesterday that maybe there's some of their stolen stuff at posted youtube. Youtube is the SAFEST place on earth to embed from copyright infringment wise. If somebody will attempt to make GFY liable for youtube videos posted there, they can simply state what is written above and walk free. Youtube policies are enough for safe harbor protection, and any site that embeds from youtube can enjoy safe harbor too because of that. |
the point is employees were uploading songs. ex-employees admitted they did so.
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Porn is not THAT different from mainstream in that regard I guess. They also need fresh quality stuff to keep visitors coming, guess older videos are getting, well, old and recycling them doesn't work that great as it once did anymore. |
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And it is also funny as hell when surfers bitch about not enough new content being posted, and blame it all on "greedy shitposters" who recycle instead of posting new. They got so accustomed to their twisted pirate view of the world during several recent years of rampant piracy it seems they really do not understand that content appears on their hard drives not because some "original poster" posted it, but because it was actually produced in the real world by real producers. And now that piracy has hit the industrial scale and really affected production, meaning way less of new content is being produced, they're still entrapped in that pirate mentality and expect some "quality posters" will magically appear to cure the problem of not enough new content being posted. Reality check is coming, let's see if the whole army of posters that we have now will be able to actually produce at least ONE new movie. Well, we all know the answer :pimp But for pro-piracy surfers it isn't obvious yet. |
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