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The Media News

Sunday Times Issues DMCA Takedown Notice To the Intercept Over Snowden Article 125

An anonymous reader writes: On Sunday, British newspaper The Sunday Times published an article citing anonymous UK government sources claiming that the cache of documents taken by Edward Snowden was successfully decrypted by the Russians and Chinese. Shortly thereafter, Glenn Greenwald at The Intercept published scathing criticism of the article. In Greenwald's article, he included a photograph of the newspaper's front page, where the story was featured. Yesterday, The Intercept received a DMCA takedown notice from News Corp alleging that the photograph infringed upon their copyright. The Intercept is refusing to comply with the takedown demand.
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Sunday Times Issues DMCA Takedown Notice To the Intercept Over Snowden Article

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    in 3... 2... 1...

    Now everybody knows what a sycophantic suck-up Rupert Murdoch's little "journalism" outfit is. That is, if they didn't already.

    • Now every action News Corp take against The Intercept only draws more attention to The Intercept's article and makes The Times look worse and worse. All Greenwald has to do is sit back and keep saying "No" and allow it to happen and everyone gets to see a wonderful spectacle.

      Its also really sad that major news outlets like BBC ran the story on the Time Article but are not covering The Intercept's response.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    1- This is the 2nd time in a the last 2 days I've seen a British paper try to silence someone using the DMCA

    2- Britain has an established cultural norm of Newspaper front pages being considered "fair game" as far as copyright goes, tomorrows front pages will already have been broadcast by the BBC, will be on it's website, and papers are not above "borrowing" images from early editions of other publications.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 16, 2015 @07:33PM (#49925591)

    See this amazing interview [cnn.com] of the "journalist" who admits he has no idea about the veracity of the article. The reporter personifies deer in the headlights. Wonder why the Times hung him out to dry?

    • Let me see if I've got this straight. The Sunday Times found some evidence which they presented to the UK government, and the government anonymously verified said evidence, but the Times decided to print only the government statements without the evidence?

      Would I be entirely off the mark in guessing that the "evidence" also came from an anonymous government source? Oh right, this reporter "is sorry to disappoint you again," but he "does not know."

      It seems to me that the Department of Disinformation is havin

  • Fair use case (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Tuesday June 16, 2015 @07:33PM (#49925593)

    I'm pretty sure that reproducing a low resolution image of a front page headline for the purposes of commentary illustration counts as fair use? Am I wrong?

    Also, the DMCA does not I repeat NOT apply outside the borders of the United States of America territory. Ergo, a British newspaper owned by an AUSTRALIAN has no claim under the DMCA. Or am I wrong about that as well?

    • Re:Fair use case (Score:5, Insightful)

      by PRMan ( 959735 ) on Tuesday June 16, 2015 @07:44PM (#49925639)
      Ask Kim Dotcom. He can tell you whether the DMCA applies in other countries that have no relationship to the USA.
    • I'm pretty sure that reproducing a low resolution image of a front page headline for the purposes of commentary illustration counts as fair use? Am I wrong?

      Also, the DMCA does not I repeat NOT apply outside the borders of the United States of America territory. Ergo, a British newspaper owned by an AUSTRALIAN has no claim under the DMCA. Or am I wrong about that as well?

      Well, you'd be spot-on *IF* the US & UK still operated under Rule of Law instead of Rule of/by Men. In Rule of/by Men "Law" is whatever Men currently in power say it is and are themselves not bound by any such.

      Strat

      • by Desler ( 1608317 )

        Well, you'd be spot-on *IF* the US & UK still operated under Rule of Law instead of Rule of/by Men. In Rule of/by Men "Law" is whatever Men currently in power say it is and are themselves not bound by any such.

        No one is operating outside of the rule of law. News Corp, a US corporation, is using a US statute, the DMCA, against another US corporation, First Look Media. Now, their claim is silly, but their use of the DMCA is not outside of what the law allows.

        • a US statute, the DMCA

          Which would not exist if not for the US government exceeding/abusing/end-running/mission-creeping the powers it is allowed under the only document that gives it legitimacy, and even adding more powers that have no basis whatever in a plain reading (as those who wrote it said they intended it to be read) of that same sole document that gives it legitimacy.

          I mean, infinity minus a day is considered "limited" when discussing US copyright law? Really? You don't change the rules by redefining the terms if not en

    • by Desler ( 1608317 )

      Also, the DMCA does not I repeat NOT apply outside the borders of the United States of America territory. Ergo, a British newspaper owned by an AUSTRALIAN has no claim under the DMCA. Or am I wrong about that as well?

      You're extremely wrong.

      1) No one is applying the DMCA outside of the US. Both companies are US-based.
      2) Murdoch's citizenship doesn't matter at all.
      3) Copyrights that are valid in one WIPO signatory country are valid in another. And both the US and UK are WIPO signatories.

      • No disagreement from me that the DMCA is being served between two American entities (i.e. I agree with your three points). Where I will disagree, however, is with the implication that the DMCA would be valid in being applied to a UK-based entity. Just because American copyrights are recognized in the UK and vice versa, it doesn't mean that national copyright laws, such as the DMCA, are recognized across those borders too. As a quick example of that fact that we're likely all familiar with, fair use (i.e. ex

        • by Holi ( 250190 )
          Fair use is never a cut and dry issue and the copyright owner has every right to contest the usage.
          • Fair use generally is a cut and dry issue, though there certainly are cases that push the boundaries. This is not one of them. I agree that the content owner is indeed well within their rights to contest the usage, just as they always are, but their doing so won't amount to anything, since this usage, as I said before, easily falls under fair use.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Murdoch has been a USA citizen for getting on 20 years. You can keep him... we don't want him back

    • I would think it counts as fair use. Some might say that if the whole page was readable versus just the headline that might not be fair use. (But it's likely not readable in a low resolution image, and could even be blurred while leaving the headline readable.)

      At the worst, if some court rules that it's not fair use then create a new version of the story, which replaces the image with a description of what the image was and a comment that the image had to be removed due to a DMCA request by the Sunday Time

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        If the whole page was published along with it's ads then Sunday Time received free publication and access to customers it would otherwise have not reached, so not loss in fact they got free benefit.

        The real problem is the reality that News Corporation is the first media empire in history that is actively not trusted and in fact loathed by a substantial portion of humanity. It it's core markets it is hated. Seriously https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com] that search "Fox reporter attacked" 27,100 results, jus

    • by Lumpy ( 12016 )

      You are wrong. the UK became the USA's bitch when they signed the WIPO treaty.

      You guys are now our property because of your leaders signing whatever our leaders put in front of them.

    • Yes, you are wrong. Under bilateral copyright agreements [wikipedia.org] copyrights from certain countries have the same legal standing as US copyrights. Using the DMCA against a US company in the US is valid for any entity from any of the countries that have agreements with the US.

    • by Holi ( 250190 )
      I am pretty sure that First Look Media is an American Company, so the alleged infringement happened in America, hence the application of the DMCA. Pretty easy to follow logic, not sure why it escaped you.
    • by Holi ( 250190 )
      1 A Briitish newspaper owned by an American Company, that is owned by and American (sorry Murdoch is not an Aussie any more, hasn't been for 20 years), suing another American company.

      Your just confused by... actually I have no idea why you got this so fucking wrong.
  • Excellent...... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dega704 ( 1454673 ) on Tuesday June 16, 2015 @07:35PM (#49925597)
    Come on, Sunday Times. Be even more aggressive! Work that Streisand Effect!
  • by GrahamCox ( 741991 ) on Tuesday June 16, 2015 @07:40PM (#49925615) Homepage
    A Murdoch mouthpiece, trying to pull strings, push an agenda and suppress free speech? Who'd have thunk it?
  • *gets popcorn*

  • Apparently News Corp. needs to direct its litigation employees to pay more attention to SuicideGirls... There's no way that could go wrong...

  • and the story?
  • The Intercept should just claim the photo is appropriation art [msnbc.com] and then claim a copyright on the Sunday Times front page for himself ... like Richard Prince with Instagram photos.

  • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Tuesday June 16, 2015 @08:29PM (#49925915)

    Good on them for not kowtowing to this kind of crap. How has no one said this yet? :(

  • Screw the Russian and Chinese hacking national security secrets. I wanna see Lindsay Lohan: Sex, Drugs, and Babies!

  • Businessman/oligarch Denis O'Brien successfully silenced [theguardian.com] all of Ireland's news media from reporting a speech protected by parliamentary privilege, because part of the speech was covered by an injunction - and almost none of Ireland's news media had the balls to report it, before they were given 'permission' by the court that placed the injunction (at which time, everybody already knew through forums/Facebook etc.).

    Sad state of journalism in Ireland. Meanwhile, real journalists like Greenwald, are more than

  • So if you're in the newspaper business, it is somehow bad if millions of extra people see the front page of your paper? Because none of those people would conceivably think of actually going to the NYT site? Ah well, it used to be a good paper before NewsCorpse got ahold of it.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Based on the quality of the article and the CNN interview with the journalist, this whole thing may have been generated by trained monkeys... in which case it can't be copyrighted.

    http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2014/08/monkeys-selfie-cannot-be-copyrighted-us-regulators-say/

  • by TangoCharlie ( 113383 ) on Wednesday June 17, 2015 @02:52AM (#49927315) Homepage Journal

    The BBC news website, and App has a regular piece reporting what the papers are reporting, and shows photographs of the front pages of all the big UK papers. The review of 'tomorrow's papers is also a regular feature on one of the late news programmes broadcast on the BBC.

    The Times, yet again, demonstrates just how poor its journalism is, by trying to use the DMCA to remove any criticism of the paper.

  • George: "What, the curtains?"
    William: "No, not the curtains, lad. All that you can see! Stretched out over the hills and valleys of this land! This'll be your kingdom, lad!"

    If you download the Times' front page image from The Intercept and explore for this bit of Python (Monty),
    thank you for preserving evidence of Rupert's typical Orwellian thinkfuckery.
    For your complete safety, please ensure you wash your eyes thoroughly (to match your new brain sparkle).

  • Check out this boingboing article about a CNN video interview with the author of the ST story. Watch the linked video; it's stunning. The guy essentially admits the whole thing is a fabrication with zero evidence, and all they do is "report the position of the British Government".

    http://boingboing.net/2015/06/16/cnn-interview-with-author-of-d.html [boingboing.net]

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