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| Chilling Effects Clearinghouse > DMCA Safe Harbor > Notices > Botanical Database Compiler Complains to Google (NoticeID 2002, http://chillingeffects.org/N/2002) | Location: https://www.chillingeffects.org/notice.cgi?NoticeID=2002 |
June 06, 2005
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Sender Information: |
Recipient Information:
User Support, DMCA complaints
Google, Inc.
Mountain View, CA, 94043, USA
Sent via: email
Re: NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT
Dear Google, NOTICE OF COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT I am acting in my capacity as the author and copyright owner of BoDD - Botanical Dermatology Database, an information resource that is accessible on the internet at http://BoDD.cf.ac.uk/ (the "BoDD Owner"). As required under Sections 512(c)(3) and 512(d)(3) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. x x 512(c)(3) and 512(d)(3)), I am placing you on notice that: BoDD Owner is the exclusive owner of the copyrights in and to the BoDD.cf.ac.uk website and the html code, the text as rendered therefrom by any web browser, the graphics, the visual layout, and the BoDD logo appearing therein, and in all directories and sub-directories (singly and collectively, the "BoDD Material"); and Searches carried out on Google generate links to pages at http://poison.is-
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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?
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