YouTube Scores Huge Victory in Copyright Case

Page 3 - Seeking answers? Join the Tom's Guide community: where nearly two million members share solutions and discuss the latest tech.
Status
Not open for further replies.
Considering YouTube has created a pretty awesome metadata matching system to find copyrighted material, Viacom’s case seems extremely stupid. Waste of money on their part, what are they hoping to accomplish.
 
[citation][nom]Pyroflea[/nom]Okay, so YouTube hosting copyright material is legal, yet TPB and MiniNova hosting copyright material is illegal? Yeah, that makes perfect sense.[/citation]

youtube makes no sugestions that users post illegal stuff , while on the other hand the pirate bay's name alone is like a beacon saying "post illegal shit here"
 
[citation][nom]swamprat[/nom]If the purpose of hosting the links is to facilitate an illegal action then that sounds likely to breach some law or other - you've got a good slab of mens rea if nothing else.If you're providing a service that just happens to allow some people to breach the law, but you take all reasonable precautions to prevent them doing so / to undo the ill, that seems less wrong.To me at least, maybe I just think backwards and you're right(?)[/citation]

Well I think we're both right; sure, a system to facilitate an illegal action would obviously be illegal, but YouTube is a video sharing medium, just like .torrent files is a data sharing medium.

How individuals choose to use or abuse the system is up to them, but the system itself was not designed to distribute illegal material.

Much like a car actually; it was designed to take us from point A to point B faster than with previous methods. If the car is used in a bank robbery you don't sue the car manufacturer, right?

Bottom line is; neither YouTube nor the Torrent protocol was designed with copyrighted content in mind, they where just better ways to spread the content out to whomever wanted it. People do abuse both systems, but a lot of people can find a legitimate use for those systems and actually do use it that way.
 
Google, just get it over with and buy Viacom. Then fire every executive that wears a suit and start over. Hold them for a while and sell them to break even.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.