[Fmpro] Viacom
Robert Stanton
zolessi at comcast.net
Fri Jul 4 19:40:21 GMT 2008
That's a great idea Les!!!!!
Now, how do we get that message across? Unfortunately, they may have no
interest because their agenda for handing over that info may be for
completely different purposes.
It seems to me that the PROs should be interested because it would no doubt
generate additional income for them - or do they have so much they don't
care. I'm glad to see a cc went to Doug Wood.
Cheers!
Robert Scott Stanton
San Francisco Bay Area, CA
zolessi at comcast.net
-----Original Message-----
From: fmpro-bounces+zolessi=comcast.net at nxport.com
[mailto:fmpro-bounces+zolessi=comcast.net at nxport.com] On Behalf Of LesHurdle
Sent: Friday, July 04, 2008 12:01 PM
To: fmpro at nxport.com
Cc: Doug Wood; Guy Fletcher
Subject: [Fmpro] Viacom
A U.S. federal judge has ordered Google Inc. to hand over the records
of every video users have watched on its video-sharing site YouTube
to media giant Viacom, records that include users' names and IP
addresses.
What if this data were supplied to PRO's !!
L
YouTube ordered to hand over user details
A U.S. federal judge has ordered Google Inc. to hand over the records
of every video users have watched on its video-sharing site YouTube
to media giant Viacom, records that include users' names and IP
addresses.
03/07/2008 11:24:33 AM
CBC News
Viacom is suing Google for not doing enough to keep its copyrighted
videos from television shows such as The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
and The Colbert Report off the popular website YouTube.
Viacom, which owns several U.S. television networks including MTV,
VH1, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central and Spike TV, alleged in $1-billion
US lawsuit launched in March 2007 that almost 160,000 unauthorized
clips of its programming are available on YouTube. Those clips have
been viewed more than 1.5 billion times, Viacom charged.
The company argued it needed access to the information on user
viewing habits to prove that copyright-infringing material is more
popular than user-generated videos on YouTube, which would strengthen
its case against Google.
In a ruling issued on Tuesday, Louis Stanton, a judge with the U.S.
District Court for the southern district of New York, agreed with
Viacom and ordered Google to turn over the information.
Google argued user data should not be handed over because of privacy
concerns, but Stanton dismissed those concerns as "speculative."
San Francisco-based privacy advocacy group The Electronic Frontier
Foundation said the ruling was "a setback to privacy rights, and will
allow Viacom to see what you are watching on YouTube.
"We urge Viacom to back off this overbroad request and Google to take
all steps necessary to challenge this order and protect the rights of
its users," wrote EFF's senior staff attorney Kurt Opsahl on Wednesday.
Viacom also asked for the underlying code Google and YouTube use to
search for keywords and video in order to demonstrate what Google
could be doing to block infringing videos. They also wanted access to
Google's advertising database scheme in the hopes of proving that
infringing videos are driving advertising revenue.
But the court denied these requests, arguing the code and ad data was
too valuable to Google.
YouTube and Google should not be made to place this vital asset in
hazard merely to allay speculation," said Stanton. "A plausible
showing that YouTube and Google's denials are false, and that the
search function can and has been used to discriminate in favour of
infringing content, should be required before disclosure of so
valuable and vulnerable an asset is compelled."
At issue in the case is whether Google has fulfilled its requirements
under the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
The DMCA gives websites protection against infringement claims
provided copyrighted material is removed upon notification. Viacom
has argued Google could do a better job of blocking the infringing
material but doesn't do so because infringing material makes up a
significant portion of the website's traffic.
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