Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Communications Government Network Networking Open Source Privacy Programming Security Software The Courts The Internet United States Wireless Networking News Technology

DMCA Notices Remove 8,268 Projects On Github In 2015 (torrentfreak.com) 116

An anonymous reader writes: Github's transparency report for 2015 shows that the site received many DMCA notices that removed more than 8,200 projects. "In 2015, we received significantly more takedown notices, and took down significantly more content, than we did in 2014," Github reports. For comparison, the company received only 258 DMCA notices in 2014, 17 of which responded with a counter-notice or retraction. In 2015, they received 505 takedown notices, 62 of which were the subject of counters or withdrawals. TorrentFreak reports: "Copyright holders are not limited to reporting one URL or location per DMCA notice. In fact, each notice filed can target tens, hundreds, or even thousands of allegedly infringing locations." September was a particularly active month as it took down nearly 5,834 projects. "Usually, the DMCA reports we receive are from people or organizations reporting a single potentially infringing repository. However, every now and then we receive a single notice asking us to take down many repositories," Github explains. They are called 'Mass Removals' when more than 100 repositories are asked to be removed. "In all, fewer than twenty individual notice senders requested removal of over 90% of the content GitHub took down in 2015."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

DMCA Notices Remove 8,268 Projects On Github In 2015

Comments Filter:
  • Yeah.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @08:30PM (#52417145)

    The DMCA is like the TSA:
    In the words of the head of El Al, "The TSA isn't security. It's an annoyance."
    The DMCA doesn't stop pirates, it just interferes with legit and acceptable things.

    • Re:Yeah.... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by zrobotics ( 760688 ) on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @08:56PM (#52417223)
      Come on though, when I want the hottest new Hollywood movies or the freshest warez the first place I turn is github. Seriously, this is some weapons grade bullshit, I've never run into pirating on that site. I may have seen something that was patented, but I'm not sure that 20: print "Hello World" isn't covered by someone's patent anyway. If I sand round corners onto a block of wood, do I owe apple money?
      • by Anonymous Coward

        If I sand round corners onto a block of wood, do I owe apple money?

        Yes. In fact, you even owe them if you don't do anything with blocks of wood.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I have a theory that the DMCA and other similar legislation were written by Reptilians decades in advance, placed in a drawer, and pulled out years later. They planned many (but not all) of the paths taken and knew what was to come.

          That is the US. Overseas, they are hard at work on other matters. Take, for instance, that shockwaves are reverberating around the Kremlin today as word spreads regarding an extraordinary meeting called by Vladimir Putin yesterday where, according to sources, the Russian presiden

    • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @12:07AM (#52417645)
      Why only list DMCAs? Because they're a special subset of cases that sometimes makes Github look like the good guy? How about listing the repos they forced offline themselves for petty ideological reasons?

      The 2014 report failed to list [reddit.com] the takedown of the Gamergate hub, and this 2015 report doesn't mention how Github took down WebMConverter [reddit.com] to strongarm the developer [reddit.com] into changing its content [imgur.com].

      Instead of using a broad, feel-good word like "transparency," they should just call it the DMCA report since that's the one specific kind of censorship it discloses.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward

        GitHub has gone full retard.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @06:43AM (#52418281) Homepage Journal

        The GamerGate repository was removed for TOS violations, specifically that it was being used to collect information used to harass and dox people. Interestingly it also rather gave the game away for GamerGate; the readme.md file didn't mention ethics in journalism until several paragraphs down. Instead it started with a rant about feminism.

        As for WebM, they were asked to remove the word "retards", and did so. It really helps if you explain these things so that people can make up their own minds as to if it was justified. It's almost as if you were hoping they wouldn't bother to check.

        In any case, those things were not included in the transparency report because they were widely reported (i.e. already transparent). The transparency report is a list of otherwise non-public requests from outside parties.

        • So, I assume you are ok with a bakery censoring what they write on cakes then? You should be perfectly fine with a baker saying they refuse to write two male (or female) names on a cake and putting two husbands (of wives) on a cake. This is the same thing after all, and a private company should be allowed to self sensor what people can do on their premises.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            That's not censorship, that's discrimination which is illegal. Gender and sexual orientation are protected from discrimination when providing a commercial service. Posting racism on a forum that has stated it wishes to to maintain certain standards of decency and non-discriminatory language is not legally protected.

            Your understanding of this issue is simplistic and childish.

            • https://www.eeoc.gov/facts/qan... [eeoc.gov]

              Not exactly. The bakeries are not discriminating for a job, so the Office of Personnel management interpretation of the discrimination laws does not apply.

              Your understanding of this issue is entirely based upon your feelings about the specific incident, and not by equality under the law. You are the one who seems to be being simplistic and childish as you have this whole opinion that laws should have favorites. Either we are all protected equally, or the law provides no p

              • My understanding of the details primarily comes from the Finding of Facts in the court ruling, personally. The ruling said that the bakery had practiced illegal discrimination to start with, and had gone on to encourage online harassment.

                Laws are normally passed either to solve an existing problem or to grandstand. The LGBQ community was having discrimination problems, and many states altered their anti-discrimination laws to include sexual orientation. This does in fact protect anybody, as no busines

      • Takedowns due to philosophical disagreement or policy/disciplinary reasons should remain private unless the targeted party agrees to publicize the issue. It's like disciplinary action being handled privately at work---it's best done quietly so the matter can remain confidential if desired. If someone believes the philosophy is wrong, they can always go public on their own anyway.

        Gamergate was a trash "movement" and doesn't deserve free hosting anywhere. Oh, the media covering video games isn't catering to m

      • That would be because the two lists are fundamentally different things. The first is things they are required to do by law. The second is something they do, on their property, based on their own policies.

        The former is an unnacceptable intrusion on liberty. The latter IS liberty at work.

        You may not like their policies, that's your right - and there are many other code hosts with different policies, but they have every right to have those policies. And not wanting to host content for mysoginistic dickbags on

    • Someone probably got stepped on inappropriately, but. This last year a number of interns at at least 2 companies have posted internal code to github when they didnt get hired. At least four repackaged fraudulent mobile apps I know of were uploaded to github. Some actual problems are being solved with these takedowns.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    On github, what constitutes being a valid target for a DMCA takedown?

    • I don't know. If you "break" into a walled garden, as in try to create compatible software?

      http://boingboing.net/2014/02/... [boingboing.net]

    • Re:Definition? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by henni16 ( 586412 ) on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @08:52PM (#52417205)

      The obvious case would be people using it like any other file(-sharing) host.
      I don't think there's much if anything stopping you from adding e.g. an archive containing a movie or a bunch of ebooks into a throw-away repository and linking it from somewhere else.

      Using Git might even make it easier to reupload stuff after one repo gets taken down - just add another remote to your source repo and push it.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @08:55PM (#52417217)

      GitHub actually them available online: https://github.com/github/dmca

      Some of them are like someone using one of Adobe's .svg graphics or a commercial script file or source code file being distributed.

      And some of them are abuse. Like this: https://github.com/github/dmca/blob/master/2016-01-15-AlgoTrader.md and they did license their source code under the GPL as shown here at the bottom https://web.archive.org/web/20140208002555/http://code.google.com/p/algo-trader/

      So it looks like most DMCA takedown requests are legitimate, but presumably a small percent are abuse.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        What's up with the AlgoTrader ass-hat? He created an open source project (he admits it was an open source project), discontinued it, and now is filing DMCA claims against people who kept a copy and forked it? Does this moron not understand what "open source" means? He should be countersued into the ground.

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Seems you are correct. https://github.com/curtiszimmerman/AlgoTrader

      • GitHub has stopped listing new ones:

        Sorry, we had to truncate this directory to 1,000 files. 322 entries were omitted from the list.

    • Re:Definition? (Score:5, Informative)

      by nmb3000 ( 741169 ) on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @09:22PM (#52417295) Journal

      On github, what constitutes being a valid target for a DMCA takedown?

      Well, you can look at the full list of DMCA complaints [github.com] they have received and see for yourself.

      I randomly looked through them and many appear to be pretty reasonable. Many are related to simple copyright infringement, such as storing textbooks or published homework and test questions and answers. This isn't surprising, as GitHub is basically just a place you can store files.

      Some say the code or data is internal or non-public and was uploaded without permission. There are also a bunch from Qualcomm complaining about firmware images and driver code. VMWare complained about internal roadmap documentation.

      Some are just files with links to other materials, such as TV shows and movies. Sony and Marvel make appearances.

      The line blurs some for others. There are HTML5 versions of classic games, such as ones from Nintendo and Blizzard, that got pulled down. A few companies appear to have searched GitHub for serial numbers and license keys of their products, and requested the entire repo be pulled if it contains a single file with a serial number in it. Many of these appear to be honest mistakes and have counter-notices.

      In any case, it's nice to see GitHub being transparent. The DMCA requests themselves are pretty interesting, but since the vast majority of the targeted repos are no longer accessible, it's hard to gauge how justifiable most of the complains really were.

      • by tomxor ( 2379126 )

        ...In any case, it's nice to see GitHub being transparent. The DMCA requests themselves are pretty interesting, but since the vast majority of the targeted repos are no longer accessible, it's hard to gauge how justifiable most of the complains really were.

        My thoughts exactly... when looking though that list, almost all of them can be normalised to be meaningless:

        • - Unspecified infringing content at URL which is no longer accessible
        • - Signed REDACTED

        The only ones that you can glean any information from are where the file URLs have been given instead of entire repo URLs.

  • Solution -- (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @08:42PM (#52417185)

    Don't host anything in the US. Ever.

    Host your projects in more liberal countries like Russia or China.

    • by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

      Given the results of our last elections, I'd say Canada is a pretty Liberal country.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Clinton type liberal but more stupid.

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Anonymous Coward

        When we use "liberal" as an adjective we mean as in liberty. It's not our problem that the Americans don't know what liberty is and just define "liberal" to be "progressive".

    • Re:Solution -- (Score:4, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @06:55AM (#52418325) Homepage Journal

      That isn't bad advice, actually. Most of the copyright trolls seem to be in the US, so if you host your stuff in another country it saves you a lot of bother with DMCA notices. I responded to the first few I got but then just started ignoring them.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Each and every crooked piece of bought-off shit that voted to pass this abomination need to be drawn, quartered, and put on display.
  • My icon... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @08:43PM (#52417193)
    I had a 16x16 icon of a question mark that a popular project was using that had forked several thousandth times... I made my request and they were all taken down. Justice served!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    The DMCA has been such a blessing to our family (my wife is also a lawyer).

  • counter notice (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @09:19PM (#52417283)

    I was one of those counter notices. An ex business partner tried to claim ownership of my work, after I pulled my code from the project. Github disabled and then re-enabled my repository, within 1 week of sending in a counter notice. The person claiming infringement profited from my work without giving me a cent. He failed to file against me in court, as he was as broke as I am and had no merit to his claims.

  • These transparency reports are quite informative. But I'd love to see the actual removals. At some pont, we need to see if the removals have any validity or not. We just can't tell from this data. Is there any legal reason they can't be publicly posted? Actually, I wonder if the DMCA should *require* that they be public, so that the public at-large knows who the bullies are, or maybe who the jerks who keep copying people's stuff are. If you don't want your notice public, don't file it.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Myen ( 734499 )

      For the DMCA takedowns, yes we can - they are at https://github.com/github/dmca [github.com] (it's in the second-to-last paragraph). I don't think they're allowed to for the NSLs. I didn't spot any listings for other forms of takedowns.

      It appears that the massive majority (>5000, according to https://github.com/github/dmca... [github.com] ) is one project; judging by Google results of the repo name, it's some Chinese e-commerce site's source code. Not sure why people would be so interested in forking it that there's that many

  • by lapm ( 750202 ) on Wednesday June 29, 2016 @09:35PM (#52417329)
    I wonder how many of those takedowns were done under false claim. Meaning its fraudlent DMCA takedown request... In youtube they match all sort of shit for DMCA takedown making sometimes just unbelievable claims. What chances does small person or developer to really challenge those false claims. Example in my country its perfectly legal to reverse engineer software and make compatible software. Our law also docent know shit like DMCA and hopefully newer will.
    • I just had a youtube video taken over by a music company, automatically taking my adsense revenue. The shitty part is the music I was using was youtubes own copyright free music!
  • that would contain only the projects censured by DMCA.
  • DMCA Notices Remove 8,268 Projects On Github In 2015

    I think the real news is that they have a time machine.

  • That's a lot of DMCA notices, more than I would expect. But perhaps this explains why:

    "In all, fewer than twenty individual notice senders requested removal of over 90% of the content GitHub took down in 2015."

    Seems my prediction didn't count on those ten people who sent most of them. The "90% by 10 people" figure is similar to patent law suits. About four or five "companies" file over half the patent law suits in the US.

    I wonder, though. Other commenters who looked at the DMCA notices say most of them se

news: gotcha

Working...