News Site About Popcorn Time App Goes To Court To Get Back Seized Domain
from the copyright-as-censorship dept
Over and over again, we're told that copyright is not about censorship, and yet time and time again we see how it is used to censor speech quite frequently. Back in March, we wrote about the somewhat horrifying bit of news that a news website that posted stories about the app Popcorn Time had been seized by Norwegian police. The "crime" according to the police was that the site -- which never hosted the app at all -- did link to some other sites where you could download Popcorn Time. This is so far removed from the actual infringement as to be crazy. Yes, some users of Popcorn Time use the software to infringe on copyright-covered works. No one doubts that. But the software itself -- like a VCR -- can also be used for legitimate purposes as well. If a user infringes, go after the user. But the software itself shouldn't be targeted (even though it is). But, then you go another step removed to sites that host the app. And then a further step removed to a news site that links to sites that link to the software that a user might use to infringe.And the police deemed that worthy of seizing? Even though the site also had a ton of news articles that would normally be considered protected expression?
I want to repeat this just to show how crazy it is. The police in Norway didn't go after actual infringers, they went after a news site that links to sites that host an app that might be used to infringe. Oh, and they did it using an asset seizure procedure that has basically no due process prior to an entire news website disappearing. That's messed up.
Apparently, Electronic Frontier Norway (EFN -- which is unrelated but similar to the EFF here in the States) -- and the Norwegian Unix User Group (NUUG) went to court over this, but had that rejected (perhaps reasonably) for lack of standing. However, TorrentFreak is reporting that the case is being appealed... but this time with the legal owner of the site:
With the new party the groups hope to have sufficient standing to have the case heard. In their appeal there’s a strong focus on the free speech element, and they hope the court will clarify when domain seizures are appropriate.This use of asset seizure to take down news sites that might be distantly related to infringement is extremely troubling. It's happened in the US, including just recently returning some domains it had seized five years prior, without ever having any evidence of actual infringement associated with those news sites.
“We feel that this is an important case that addresses the limits of free speech,” EFN’s managing director Tom Fredrik Blenning tells TorrentFreak.
NUUG leader Hans-Petter Fjeld adds that the authorities shouldn’t be allowed to seize the domain name of a news site, which writes about open source software that by itself is not infringing.
“Part of what makes us upset is that the domain name of a news site about a piece of free software that has both legal and illegal uses, has been seized without judicial scrutiny,” Fjeld says.
The idea that this form of blatant censorship is being used globally should be yet another warning of how copyright law is regularly abused for censorship.
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Filed Under: censorship, domains, news, popcorn time, secondary liability, seizures, tertiary liability
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Stop the crazyness.
Stop the crazyness.
Abolish copyright.
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Re: Stop the crazyness.
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The reason why the software or website is targeted is that it is a whole lot easy to go after taking down one thing i.e. software or website for the infringement that users do then it is to go after 1000's of users individually that commits the infringement which incurs way more money to go after the 1000's of individuals than going after the software or website.
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1) You manufacture cars.
2) People use those cars to commit criminal acts.
3) It is a "whole lot easier to go after taking down one thing" (i.e., you - the car manufacturer) than to go after 1000's of criminals individually.
Wow! You're absolutely right! It is a whole lot easier when you ignore whether or not someone is actually breaking the law and just prosecute whomever is the most convenient party that can be in any way associated with the with the crime.
Perhaps you should consider a career in law enforcement.
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Mike Masnick hates it when copyright law is enforced
Now that that's out of the way, I wonder how long until we have stories about people being killed over copyright infringement and some company steps up to say "it's still not enough, since the descendants of a creator get the rights for 300 years past the author's death, so too should 300 years of a copyright infringer's descendants be punished for his crimes. Anything less send too weak a deterrent and invites others to to the evil act of piracy!"
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2. Give it five minutes. Punishments are becoming increasingly draconian.
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Safe space
Well of course. You see, it's all my doing. I'm fatally allergic to all corn products everywhere and I'm making myself a SAFE SPACE (only the world) so that I can breathe and live freely.
You: meh.
Monsanto / Bayer, you're next. (I'm working up to my evil nemesis: Orville Redenbacher.)
Really, a friend of mine [Hi Lisa!] had it exactly right. She wanted to be a corporate lawyer -- not to uphold the law, but to bend it in unusual ways so as to do her bidding.
"I'm going to take the site down; now I only need to find the best excuse to do so."
(It's not always about the money, sometimes it's just about power. Money just helps out.)
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Let me guess...
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Translated into oligarchy-speak
Oligarch: "That's fucking awesome."
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"The light is better over here."
Going after the tool also has the not-so-coincidental side-effect of killing off potential competition, as a tool that can be used for infringement can also be used for perfectly legitimate content/distribution that isn't controlled by them, so killing off the tool is a win-win all around.
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Then I posted it to a Norwegian forum....Quick, Norwegian police...attack Microsoft for 'selling' MSpaint....
No? Didn't think so.
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Barbara Gottmundstreisandir
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