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| Chilling Effects Clearinghouse > DMCA Safe Harbor > Notices > Art Minds Requests Google Remove Photos (NoticeID 565, http://chillingeffects.org/N/565) | Location: https://www.chillingeffects.org/notice.cgi?NoticeID=565 |
February 14, 2003
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Sender Information: |
Recipient Information:
[Private]
Google, Inc.
Mountain View, CA, 09007, USA
Sent via: email
Re: Creator requests removal of photos
From: "Art Minds" TO: [Private] Pursuant to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, this is notification The following image are displayed at http://www2.xasa.com/postales/: The following images are displayed from http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/p__sz1.jpg The following images are displayed from http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_rma.jpg The following images are displayed from http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_rf.jpg The following images are displayed from http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_ck.jpg The following images are displayed from http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm10.jpg All of the above images appear at http://www.artminds.com, with a I am the creator of each of the images listed above and am the owner I swear, under penalty of perjury, that the information in the Please remove all images immediately from your computers and /signed/ [Private]
Subject: Copyright infringement
Date: Fri, 14 Feb 2003 02:39:34 -0800
Xasa S.L.
[Private]
Burgos, Burgos 09007
ES
Phone: [Private]
Fax: [Private]
of copyright infringement of original photographs in which I own the
copyright.
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/sz1.jpg
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin.htm
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/p_rf1.jpg
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/p_lp1.jpg
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/p_joshs2.jpg
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/p_ec2.jpg
http://www.xasa.com/postales/adultos/sanvalentin/p_ec.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos1.htm
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_rj.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos2.htm
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_mbgrp1.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_ks.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_kl1.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_kl.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_jpo.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_jp.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_jm.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_hn.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_gl.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_db1.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_ct.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos3.htm
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_cc.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_br1.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1667_2261654.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1667_2224760.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1667_2189794.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1667_2086727.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1667_2015314.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1666_2623660.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1666_2516926.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/modelos/p_artminds_1666_1642664.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey.htm
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm09.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm08.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm07.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm06.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm05.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm04.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm03.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm02.jpg
http://www2.xasa.com/postales/adultos/jeffmackey/p_jm01.jpg
notice of copyright clearly displayed on each image or on the page on
which the image is displayed.
of the copyright in each of the images listed. I have the rights to enforce copyright violations
of these works.
notification is accurate and that, for each image identified above, I
either own the copyright or am authorized to act on behalf of the
owner of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed.
immediately cease and desist from further display, transmission, publication,
or other infringement of my copyright in these images.
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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). Question: What are the DMCA Safe Harbor Provisions?
Answer: In 1998, Congress passed the On-Line Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act (OCILLA) in an effort to protect service providers on the Internet from liability for the activities of its users. Codified as section 512 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), this new law exempts on-line service providers that meet the criteria set forth in the safe harbor provisions from claims of copyright infringement made against them that result from the conduct of their customers. These safe harbor provisions are designed to shelter service providers from the infringing activities of their customers. If a service provider qualifies for the safe harbor exemption, only the individual infringing customer are liable for monetary damages; the service provider's network through which they engaged in the alleged activities is not liable. Question: What may be copyrighted?
Answer:
In order to be copyrightable, a work must be Question: What constitutes copyright infringement?
Answer: Subject to certain defenses, it is copyright infringement for someone other than the author to do the following without the author's permission: Question: How can I find out whether a work has a registered copyright? Answer: Works are copyrighted as soon as they are "fixed in a tangible medium of expression," but some legal rights and remedies are available only if the work's copyright is registered. To find a copyright registration, you may search copyright records at the Copyright Office website, but be aware that not finding a match does not mean the work is uncopyrighted. Question: Who may hold a copyright? Answer: A copyright ordinarily vests in the creator or creators of a work (known as the author(s)), and is inherited as ordinary property. Copyrights are freely transferrable as property, at the discretion of the owner. 17 U.S.C. 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. 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:
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. Question: What are the notice and takedown procedures for web sites?
Answer: In order to have an allegedly infringing web site removed from a service provider's network, or to have access to an allegedly infringing website disabled, the copyright owner must provide notice to the service provider with the following information:
Once notice is given to the service provider, or in circumstances where the service provider discovers the infringing material itself, it is required to expeditiously remove, or disable access to, the material. The safe harbor provisions do not require the service provider to notify the individual responsible for the allegedly infringing material before it has been removed, but they do require notification after the material is removed. |
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