Judge Rejects Viacom's Suit Against Google & YouTube
NEW YORK
-- Entertainment
companies may find it harder to
keep movie and TV show clips from circulating for free online after a
federal judge threw out Viacom's hotly contested $1
billion copyright infringement suit against Google's YouTube.
U.S. District Court Judge
Louis Stanton said
that the popular video website could not be held responsible when
people post clips from productions such as Viacom's The Daily Show with
Jon Stewart and The Colbert Report
without the entertainment giant's approval.
He rejected Viacom's argument
that YouTube's
business model depended on a sleight of hand: It attracts millions of
visitors who want to see hit entertainment for free. Viacom said the
site ensures that there's plenty to see, without paying a license fee,
by making it easy for users to post clips and hard for copyright owners
to keep track of those posted without permission.
Every minute of the day,
people post 24 hours' worth of videos to YouTube, the ruling noted.
But Stanton said that the
Digital Millennium
Copyright Act includes a "safe harbor" provision. It was designed to
relieve websites from the burden of checking user-generated material
before it's posted.
Other entertainment giants —
including Disney, NBC Universal and Time Warner— as well
as music publishers ASCAP and BMI wrote briefs supporting Viacom.
But Google general counsel
Kent Walker, in a
blog posting, said the decision "is an important victory not just for
us, but also for the billions of people around the world who use the
Web to communicate and share experiences."
Groups that want to promote
widespread Internet
use also applauded the ruling, saying that most websites don't have the
resources to determine whether user-supplied videos violate the law.
"As the law now stands,
prompt compliance with
take-down notices shields an online service provider from liability,"
says Sherwin Siy, deputy legal director of Public Knowledge,
an activist group that encourages citizen access to media.
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