The latest bunch of idiocy comes from Paramount Pictures, whose copyright bots appear to be scouring the Internet for any combination of words like “torrent” and the studio’s movie titles.
TorrentFreak noticed several instances of the movie studio demanding that Google remove links to online forum discussions simply because they may contain common words or phrases that were also titles of Paramount films.
Like this DMCA takedown request for alleged infringers of the little-seen 2009 Eddie Murphy movie Imagine That.
Paramount sought to have links to this forum discussion at utorrent.com removed, claiming it was infringing on the copyright of this particular film.
But there is no mention of this movie, nor any links to any sort of torrent file. Merely a discussion that includes the phrase “imagine that’s” somewhere in one of the comments.
Another utorrent.com discussion that had nothing to do with the Paramount movie Ghost was cited in a DMCA takedown notice as infringing on the copyright of that Patrick Swayze-starring documentary on homemade pottery. Why? Most likely because of the word “cyberghost” in the forum’s subject line.
The clueless studio also didn’t realize that someone in a utorrent forum might describe themselves as “cluless” without actually infringing on the copyright of the movie Clueless.
Thankfully, Google is better at reviewing takedown requests than the companies that file them, as these utterly unrelated discussions have not been flagged as piracy sites… because they aren’t.
We understand that piracy is a huge and valid concern for the movie industry, but it can’t just cast such a wide and careless net without regard for innocent people who might get caught in it.
A federal appeals court recently allowed the mom behind the now-famous “Dancing Baby” YouTube video to pursue her lawsuit against Universal Music. In that case, the record label ordered YouTube to remove a 29-second video of a baby dancing to a quick snippet of a Prince song.
The mom was able to convince YouTube that her video was an allowable “fair use” of the song and the clip has remained. She is now trying to prove in court that Universal violated the law by knowingly filing a false DMCA takedown notice.
by Chris Morran via Consumerist
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