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 Chilling Effects Clearinghouse > DMCA Safe Harbor > Notices > shopforphones.co.uk complaint #5 (2/4) (NoticeID 1654, http://chillingeffects.org/N/1654) Location: https://www.chillingeffects.org/notice.cgi?NoticeID=1654

shopforphones.co.uk complaint #5 (2/4)

February 04, 2005

 

Sender Information:
shopforphones. co.uk
Sent by: [Private]
[Private]
Bedford, MK41 0AA, UK

Recipient Information:
Customer Support, DMCA Complaints
Google, Inc.
Mountain View, CA, 94043


Sent via: email
Re:

Dear Sir or Madam,
1. The copyrighted work at issue is the text that appears on the following page:
a. http://www.shopforphones.co.uk/motorola-razr-v3.htm
2. The search query and web pages with the unauthorized material are:
a. Search Query: MOTOROLA RAZR V3
Infringing Web Page: http://www.myworldphone.com/razr.html
b. Search Query: MOTOROLA RAZR V3
Infringing Web Page: http://www.gadgetflava.com/phones/razrv3.htm
3. My contact information: [Private]@dynamoo.com
4. Infringer's Contact Information: [Private], [Private], Briarwood, New
York 11435, United States. Fax: (760)[Private]. Email [Private]@myworldphone.com
5. I, [Private], have a good faith belief that use of the copyrighted materials described above
on the allegedly infringing web pages is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the
law.
6. I swear, under penalty of perjury, that the information in the notification is accurate and that I am
the copyright owner or am authorized to act on behalf of the owner of an exclusive right that is
allegedly infringed.
Both web sites in paragraph 2 are operated by the same company. In respect of the page listed in 2a,
several requests have been made to [Private] and their web hosts to no effect.
Sincerely,
[Private], Site Owner, shopforphones. co.uk
Phone: +44 [Private]
Fax: +44 [Private]
Email: [Private]@dynamoo.co

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FAQ: Questions and Answers

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Question: What is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act?

Answer: The DMCA, as it is known, has a number of different parts. One part is the anticircumvention provisions, which make it illegal to "circumvent" a technological measure protecting access to or copying of a copyrighted work (see Anticircumvention (DMCA)). Another part gives web hosts and Internet service providers a "safe harbor" from copyright infringement claims if they implement certain notice and takedown procedures (see DMCA Safe Harbor).


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Question: What kinds of things are copyrightable?

Answer: In order for material to be copyrightable, it must be original and must be in a fixed medium.

Only material that originated with the author can support a copyright. Items from the public domain which appear in a work, as well as work borrowed from others, cannot be the subject of an infringement claim. Also, certain stock material might not be copyrightable, such as footage that indicates a location like the standard shots of San Francisco in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home. Also exempted are stock characters like the noisy punk rocker who gets the Vulcan death grip in Star Trek IV.

The requirement that works be in a fixed medium leaves out certain forms of expression, most notably choreography and oral performances such as speeches. For instance, if I perform a Klingon death wail in a local park, my performance is not copyrightable. However, if I film the performance, then the film is copyrightable.

Single words and short phrases are generally not protected by copyright, even when the name has been "coined" or newly-created by the mark owner. Logos that include original design elements can be protected under copyright or under trademark. Otherwise, words, phrases and titles may be protected only by trademark, however.


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Question: Am I free to copy elements of someone else's website verbatim?

Answer: No. While you are free to report the facts and ideas embodied in another person's article or web page, copyright protects the expression


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Question: What is copyright infringement? Are there any defenses?

Answer: Infringement occurs whenever someone who is not the copyright holder (or a licensee of the copyright holder) exercises one of the exclusive rights listed above.

The most common defense to an infringement claim is "fair use," a doctrine that allows people to use copyrighted material without permission in certain situations, such as quotations in a book review. To evaluate fair use of copyrighted material, the courts consider four factors:


  1. the purpose and character of the use
  2. the nature of the copyrighted work
  3. the amount and substantiality of copying, and
  4. the market effect.

(17 U.S.C. 107)

The most significant factor in this analysis is the fourth, effect on the market. If a copier's use supplants demand for the original work, then it will be very difficult for him or her to claim fair use. On the other hand, if the use does not compete with the original, for example because it is a parody, criticism, or news report, it is more likely to be permitted as "fair use."

Trademarks are generally subject to fair use in two situations: First, advertisers and other speakers are allowed to use a competitor's trademark when referring to that competitor's product ("nominative use"). Second, the law protects "fair comment," for instance, in parody.


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Question: Does a copyright owner have to specify the exact materials it alleges are infringing?

Answer: Proper notice under the safe harbor provisions requires the copyright owners to specifically identify the alleged infringing materials, or if the service provider is an "information location tool" such as a search engine, to specifically identify the links to the alleged infringing materials. [512(c)(3)(iii)], [512(d)(3)]. The provisions also require the copyright owners to identify the copyrighted work, or a representative list of the copyrighted works, that is claimed to be infringed. [512(c)(3)(A)(ii)]. Rather than simply sending a letter to the service provider that claims that infringing material exists on their system, these qualifications ensure that service providers are given a reasonable amount of information to locate the infringing materials and to effectively police their networks. [512(c)(3)(A)(iii)], [512(d)(3)].

However, in the recent case of ALS Scan, Inc. v. Remarq Communities, Inc., the court found that the copyright owner did not have to point out all of the infringing material, but only substantially all of the material. The relaxation of this specificity requirement shifts the burden of identifying the material to the service provider, raising the question of the extent to which a service provider must search through its system. OSP customers should note that this situation might encourage OSP's to err on the side of removing allegedly infringing material.


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