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 Chilling Effects Clearinghouse > DMCA Notices > Notices > DMCA (Copyright) Complaint to Yahoo (NoticeID 32320) Printer-friendly version

DMCA (Copyright) Complaint to Yahoo

January 10, 2010

 

Sender Information:
realkarate.com
Sent by:




Recipient Information:

Yahoo! Inc.


Sunnyvale, CA, USA


Sent via: email
Re: Copyright Infringement

> As the copyright owner I have a *good faith belief* that the use of
> the content in question is unauthorized.
[redacted]
[redacted]
[redacted]
[redacted]
[redacted]
[redacted]
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>
>
>
> Original Message Follows:
> -------------------------
>
> It has come to our attention a website owner is using our copyrighted >
material to be placed on his pages. We have contacted him [redacted]
> owner of bullshido.net) and he states he knows our property is
> copyrighted, but that he has a right to use our material even though it
> belongs to us. He refuses to remove our copyrighted intellectual
> property.
>
> The material is on several of fifteen pages devoted to infringing on our
> websites. He has copied full pages of our sites, uses our pictures and >
images of myself and has entire photographic screenshots of our pages. >
There is so much of our copyrighted material that the search engines >
think his site is our site when anyone does a search for [redacted]
> or [redacted]. Our videos were also copied from our > pages and posted on
this website.
>
> Thread to be removed along with all sequential pages.
>
> http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=31636&page=15 This
> page is the most blatant as you can clearly see consists of photographic
> screenshots of our pages with pictures of myself.
>
> http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=31636 Thread to be >
removed along with all sequential pages.
>
> Other pages in the thread that violate copyright laws.
>
> http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=31636&page=7
>
> http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=31636&page=8 This
> page has several full page cut and paste from both realkarate.com and >
worldjkd.com
>
>
> http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=31636&page=15 This
> page is the most blatant as you can clearly see consists of photographic
> screenshots of our pages with pictures of myself.
>
>
>
> The sites that they have been copied are realkarate.com and
> worldjkd.com.
>
> Specific pages that were copied.
>
> http://www.realkarate.com/home.php
>
> http://www.realkarate.com/instructor.htm
>
> http://www.worldjkd.com/about.htm
>
> http://www.worldjkd.com/distance.htm and
http://www.realkarate.com/how.php
> Videos taken from these pages and then posted here
http://www.bullshido.net/forums/showthread.php?t=31636&page=7
>
> I am the lawful owner of all the copyrights and all of the information >
is correct under penalty of perjury.
>
> Please remove this thread listing from your search index.
>

 
FAQ: Questions and Answers

[back to notice text]


Question: Why does a search engine get DMCA takedown notices for materials in its search listings?

Answer: Many copyright claimants are making complaints under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Section 512(d), a safe-harbor for providers of "information location tools." These safe harbors give providers immunity from liability for users' possible copyright infringement -- if they "expeditiously" remove material when they get complaints. Whether or not the provider would have been liable for infringement by users' materials it links to, the provider can avoid the possibility of a lawsuit for money damages by following the DMCA's takedown procedure when it gets a complaint. The person whose information was removed can file a counter-notification if he or she believes the complaint was erroneous.

Question: What does a service provider have to do in order to qualify for safe harbor protection?

Answer: In addition to informing its customers of its policies (discussed above), a service provider must follow the proper notice and takedown procedures (discussed above) and also meet several other requirements in order to qualify for exemption under the safe harbor provisions.

In order to facilitate the notification process in cases of infringement, ISPs which allow users to store information on their networks, such as a web hosting service, must designate an agent that will receive the notices from copyright owners that its network contains material which infringes their intellectual property rights. The service provider must then notify the Copyright Office of the agent's name and address and make that information publicly available on its web site. [512(c)(2)]

Finally, the service provider must not have knowledge that the material or activity is infringing or of the fact that the infringing material exists on its network. [512(c)(1)(A)], [512(d)(1)(A)]. If it does discover such material before being contacted by the copyright owners, it is instructed to remove, or disable access to, the material itself. [512(c)(1)(A)(iii)], [512(d)(1)(C)]. The service provider must not gain any financial benefit that is attributable to the infringing material. [512(c)(1)(B)], [512(d)(2)].


Question: What are the provisions of 17 U.S.C. Section 512(c)(3) & 512(d)(3)?

Answer: Section 512(c)(3) sets out the elements for notification under the DMCA. Subsection A (17 U.S.C. 512(c)(3)(A)) states that to be effective a notification must include: 1) a physical/electronic signature of a person authorized to act on behalf of the owner of the infringed right; 2) identification of the copyrighted works claimed to have been infringed; 3) identification of the material that is claimed to be infringing or to be the subject of infringing activity and that is to be removed; 4) information reasonably sufficient to permit the service provider to contact the complaining party (e.g., the address, telephone number, or email address); 5) a statement that the complaining party has a good faith belief that use of the material is not authorized by the copyright owner; and 6) a statement that information in the complaint is accurate and that the complaining party is authorized to act on behalf of the copyright owner. Subsection B (17 U.S.C. 512(c)(3)(B)) states that if the complaining party does not substantially comply with these requirements the notice will not serve as actual notice for the purpose of Section 512.

Section 512(d)(3), which applies to "information location tools" such as search engines and directories, incorporates the above requirements; however, instead of the identification of the allegedly infringing material, the notification must identify the reference or link to the material claimed to be infringing.


Question: Does a service provider have to follow the safe harbor procedures?

Answer: No. An ISP may choose not to follow the DMCA takedown process, and do without the safe harbor. If it would not be liable under pre-DMCA copyright law (for example, because it is not contributorily or vicariously liable, or because there is no underlying copyright infringement), it can still raise those same defenses if it is sued.


Question: How do I file a DMCA counter-notice?

Answer: If you believe your material was removed because of mistake or misidentification, you can file a "counter notification" asking the service provider to put it back up. Chilling Effects offers a form to build your own counter-notice.


For more information on the DMCA Safe Harbors, see the FAQs on DMCA Safe Harbor. For more information on Copyright and defenses to copyright infringement, see Copyright.


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