Company Hired By Ecuador Uses Bogus Copyright Claims To Censor Website Of Ecuadorian Newspaper
from the copyright-as-censorship dept
We've written a few times about Spanish company Ares Rights, which presents itself as an "anti-piracy" firm, but rather than searching the internet for unauthorized movies and music, has a long history of working for Latin American governments, using questionable copyright claims to censor the internet and take down content those governments don't like. The latest example may be the most extreme, as Ares Rights used a DMCA claim in the US to block the website of Ecuadorian newspaper La Republica for a period of four hours last week.At issue was an article about the diversion of funds from the government to the bank accounts of certain police officers. In other words, it was a story about possible corruption. One of the police officers, Santiago Mena Vallejo, was the person whom Ares Rights claimed to be representing in sending the takedown notice. Specifically, there was a photograph of a check to the officer. It is unclear, from La Republica's reporting who the DMCA notice was actually sent to, but it seems like yet another clear case of copyright (and the DMCA in particular) being used for out and out censorship.
In this case, as with previous Ares Rights moves, the actions are egregious on multiple levels:
- Using a bogus copyright claim to take down clear news reporting of corruption (stifling public discussion of tremendous importance).
- Making a copyright claim where the claimed copyright holder almost certainly has no such copyright.
- Filing a claim in the US against an Ecuadorian newspaper
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Filed Under: censorship, copyright, corruption, dmca, ecuador
Companies: ares rights
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YouTube/RuTube
At least it's not as bad as Youtube, which will suspend a person's (or small organization's) account for weeks due to bogus - and often anonymous - copyright claims. (which is why anti-fraud/corruption/abuse activists have flocked to RuTube.ru, a Russian site which ignores DMCA takedown notices.)
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What's in a name?
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Over in Thailand
Journalists and academics have been arrested and are only released when they sign a contract promising not to criticize the junta or their policies on pain of long arrest.
But social websites have been a problem for them. People have been criticizing them freely on sites like Pantip.
They junta told a story of a 'people's' mob marching on Bangkok, facing lots of violence and deaths, and the army 'forced' to step into stop the violence.
The truth is quite a bit darker, with deaths and violence being PLANNED in the palace as cover for the army coup. Just as they planned in 2008:
https://wikileaks.org/cable/2008/11/08BANGKOK3317.html
"(C) Chutinant believed PAD continued to aim for a violent
clash that would spark a coup. He asserted that he had dined
on October 6 with a leading PAD figure (NFI), who explained
that PAD would provoke violence during its October 7 protest
at the parliament....PAD remained intent on a conflict that would
generate at least two dozen deaths and make military
intervention appear necessary and justified. "
So General Prayuth seizes power from the elected government to 'prevent violence', but we can see he's part of the PLANNING for that violence, and all the grenade attacks that miss the big guys and hit food stalls nearby, all of that is military and planned.
Social media has repeatedly exposed this, with grenade throwers being spotted among PDRC's *OWN* guards. Making the lie unsustainable.
So now the internet is to be even more heavily censored in Thailand, and social networks banned to be replaced by one official one.
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Moneymaker
Maybe I should start it: As many embarrassing details as our governments (fed/state/local) have to hide, it should be a real moneymaker.
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