YouTube Wins Against Viacom Again 49
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "Once again YouTube has defeated Viacom and other members of the content cartel; once again the Court has held that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act actually does mean what it says. YouTube had won the case earlier, at the district court level, but the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, although ruling in YouTube's favor on all of the general principles at stake, felt that there were several factual issues involving some of the videos and remanded to the lower court for a cleanup of those loose ends. Now, the lower court — Judge Louis L. Stanton to be exact — has resolved all of the remaining issues in YouTube's favor, in a 24-page opinion. Among other things Judge Stanton concluded that YouTube had not had knowledge or awareness of any specific infringement, been 'willfully blind' to any specific infringement, induced its users to commit copyright infringement, interacted with its users to a point where it might be said to have participated in their infringements, or manually selected or delivered videos to its syndication partners. Nevertheless, 5 will get you 10 that the content maximalists will appeal once again."
Asymmetrical cost structure in the courtroom (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the main reason why the MAFIAA cases are still heating the courtrooms around the country is so cheap to sue somebody and so expensive to defend
When the justice system makes it so easy to attack someone and so hard to defend oneself, of course someone gonna abuse it to their own advantage
Re:Too bad /. can't win against abusers... apk (Score:1, Insightful)
Or just collapse comments that are longer than X number of lines. Then again, I don't think the slashdot staff has much time due to the large number of Bitcoin articles they need to get for the site.
Re:That's a new one... (Score:4, Insightful)
Obviously, he meant "copyright maximalist"
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)