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03.30.2007 (previous | next)
Google on YouTube

Google still has not posted anything about the Viacom suit on the press pages of either Google or YouTube. But it did send a letter to the WaPo in answer to an oped that appeared there, in which it said:

Viacom's lawsuit is an attack on the way people communicate on the Web and on the platforms that allow people to make the Internet their own. In the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Congress struck a careful balance between the rights of the copyright holder and the need to protect the Internet as an innovative communication frontier, not as another venue for litigation.

Content-hosting sites such as YouTube, Craigslist and MySpace that want to take advantage of the DMCA's safe harbors must promptly remove infringing content if the copyright owner so requests, giving owners a quick remedy that doesn't require going to court. Copyright owners, in return, have the responsibility to identify infringing material they want removed. Viacom's lawyers helped craft this law but apparently don't like it, after all. They want to shirk the responsibility Congress gave them.

Placing that burden on hosting platforms would turn the DMCA on its head.

Viacom is attempting to rewrite established copyright law through a baseless lawsuit. In February, after negotiations broke down, Viacom requested that YouTube take down more than 100,000 videos. We did so immediately, working through a weekend. Viacom later withdrew some of those requests, apparently realizing that those videos were not infringing, after all. Though Viacom seems unable to determine what constitutes infringing content, its lawyers believe that we should have the responsibility and ability to do it for them. Fortunately, the law is clear, and on our side.

MICHAEL KWUN
Google, Managing Counsel, Litigation

And if you want to know what YouTube life is like if you filter out the professional content, among the current featured viideos are:

Charles Has A Licking Problem: "My dog Charles has a licking problem. I wrote a song about the licking, which accompanies this video."
and
Farting in Public: "What happens when a teenager brings a fart machine into a library?"
http://www.willvideoforfood.com

posted by James DeLong @ 1:11 PM | DMCA

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Comments

I'm surprised to hear this stuff from Google -- it really makes me want to avoid using their services. Isn't this the company that pledged never to commit "evil"?

Maybe it's not "cool" to respect Intellectual Property, but protecting that property is the only reason there are so many videos to begin with.

I really think Google made a huge mistakes in purchasing YouTube. It may be their downfall.

On a bigger level, I tihnk this rampant public piracy is really holding back the creation of "over the top" television services (to use Shelly Palmer's term) and other cable-bypass delivery.

If everyone was stealing videos and not getting paid on the net, would you put your videos on there?

I doubt it.

- Jake

Posted by: Jake at March 30, 2007 4:27 PM

I'm surprised to hear this stuff from Google -- it really makes me want to avoid using their services. Isn't this the company that pledged never to commit "evil"?

Maybe it's not "cool" to respect Intellectual Property, but protecting that property is the only reason there are so many videos to begin with.

I really think Google made a huge mistakes in purchasing YouTube. It may be their downfall.

On a bigger level, I tihnk this rampant public piracy is really holding back the creation of "over the top" television services (to use Shelly Palmer's term) and other cable-bypass delivery:
http://advancedmediacommittee.typepad.com/emmyadvancedmedia/2007/01/over_the_top_fi.html

If everyone was stealing videos and not getting paid on the net, would you put your videos on there?

I doubt it.

- Jake

Posted by: Jake at March 30, 2007 4:27 PM








 
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