View the following clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1KfJHFWlhQ , then
read the article below. Are Money Minder going too far late or are they in
the right?!:

http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070725-universal-demands-takedown-of-
homemade-dancing-toddler-clip-eff-sues.html

A 29-second video clip of a toddler dancing to Prince's "Let's Go Crazy" is
the subject of a new court complaint against Universal Music Publishing
Group, which demanded that the clip be removed from YouTube in early June.
Apparently, the company believes that a few seconds of music blasting from a
background stereo infringes on its copyright, but the Electronic Frontier
Foundation disagrees. The EFF filed suit against Universal yesterday,
alleging that the music in the clip was "self-evident non-infringing fair
use." 

The clip in question has already been reposted and so is still available for
viewing on YouTube, but the site has yet to restore access to the original
clip. The video of Stephanie Lenz's 18-month old son Holden was uploaded to
YouTube back in February; Universal filed a DMCA claim against the clip in
early June. Lenz responded with a counter-notification of her own at the end
of the month, but the clip was never reinstated. Now, she has joined forces
with the EFF to recover damages after she "has been injured substantially
and irreparably," according to the court filing. Lenz wants money to cover
her legal expenses and wants an affirmative judgment that her clip is not
infringing. 

Universal has been in this situation before. In fact, it has been in this
situation quite recently. In May, parent company Universal Music Group sent
a similar takedown to YouTube over a Michelle Malkin podcast critical of the
rapper Akon. YouTube reinstated that clip after hearing from the EFF. 

Viacom found itself in a similar situation earlier this year when it
demanded that a Stephen Colbert parody be pulled. The company eventually
admitted that it issued the notice in error and pledged to improve its
process for sending out such notices. Before it issues a takedown notice,
Viacom will manually review the video in question and that it will educate
its reviewers about fair use to cut down on erroneous takedown notices. It
will also not challenge the use of its content if it is "creative,
newsworthy or transformative" and is "a limited excerpt for noncommercial
purposes." 

As these case show, people aren't taking these inappropriate takedown
notices passively. There has been a growing movement to hold copyright
owners responsible when they overstep the limits of fair use, a movement
that has had a string of successes over the last year. One would expect that
media companies would get more careful about the DMCA takedowns they shoot
out, but as EFF attorney Corynne McSherry notes, this newest case "doesn't
even pass the laugh test." 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                      NewPowerNewYork Mailing List
                          website: Www.NPNY.Org
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Unsubscribe? Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED], in body place npny
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
               Questions/Help?: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to