France's Three Strikes Enforcement Agency… Pirated A Font For Its Logo

from the oooops dept

We’ve been highlighting how Nicolas Sarkozy — who was the original strong supporter of “three strikes” proposals to kick people off the internet based on accusations (not convictions) — and his political party have been caught time and time again infringing on the copyright of others. It looks like that’s happening again in an even more embarrassing fashion. The organization that’s been designated to deal with three strikes in France, Hadopi, unveiled a new logo… that used an unlicensed font, that had been created by France Telecom and had not been licensed for use by anyone else. Hadopi had to scramble and try to find a new font once called on this, and issued an “apology,” but will it allow those accused of infringement online the right to “apologize” as well?

These may seem like minor issues, but they’re actually quite instructive. The point is that due to the way copyright law is set up, people infringe unintentionally all the time. Even the biggest defenders of copyright do so. And that is the problem with any sort of system that punishes people for something as minor as three infringements — and it’s even worse when its three accusations of infringement, rather than actual convictions. It creates a massive liability for the way everyone — even copyright defenders — do things every day. But, of course, the big powerful folks — the ones who passed and support this law — can just apologize and ignore the consequences. Everyone else? Good luck.

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Comments on “France's Three Strikes Enforcement Agency… Pirated A Font For Its Logo”

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52 Comments
Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Ha!

Well, it seems pretty clear to me that, for Hadopi, this is steeeerike one!

A couple more goofs like that and they won’t be allowed onto the internet their supposed to be policing, which should be fun.

It’d be wierd to be sititng in a hotel room with the leaders of Hadopi andLily Allen, suggest that we all get pizza, and have no one be able to use a quick google search on their laptops or smart phones because of their own idiotic rules….

RD says:

One rule for them, another for us...

TAM and his Corporate brown nosing masters will undoubtedly wave their hands dismissively and sate its “no big deal” and “they fixed it right away,” since its Big Corp, they get a pass. If it was you or me infringing any aspect of copyright, however, then its Off with their Heads!

Hypocrisy knows no bounds, after all.

kyle clements (profile) says:

Science Daily recently had an article “Why Powerful People – Many of Whom Take a Moral High Ground – Don’t Practice What They Preach”

Sarkozy’s behaviour certainly provides some compelling evidence for this idea.

Intellectual Property Laws + Digital Technology = Epic Fail.

It’s nearly impossible to use digital media and not violate several intellectual property laws. More restrictive laws will only make these problems worse, not better.
Fanaticism breeds fanaticism. A movement for copyright expansion leads to movements for copyright abolition, and the kind of hypocrisy we are seeing coming from people like Sarkozy makes it easier for the abolitionists to take the moral high ground.

RD says:

hahaha

“Are these strikes accumulated in a rolling system? Like 3 strikes in a 1-year period or something?”

Hahahaha good one! No, it wont be rolling or time-frame, it will be EVER. 3 strikes (aka mere accusation) EVER, and you are cut off. Possibly, you could go to another ISP, and start over there, but I wouldnt count on THAT lasting either. Soon it will be 3 strikes and you can never have an internet connection ever again. This is the goal of Big Media. They DO NOT want you to have access to anything THEY dont provide TO you for a FEE. Anything less, and they will lobby and buy politicians as much as they can to stop.

This is the world we now live in.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Legal Staff (heehee!)

If it is this easy to “accidentally” infringe on someone’s copyright with a full legal team, how are those of us without one supposed to navigate these maze of what is okay and what isn’t?

This is why there should be exemptions for non-commercial infringement, along with very defined rules for what “non-commercial” means.

I’m such a dreamer.

The Anti-Mike (profile) says:

Actually, what it proves is that someone, somewhere felt that they could duplicated the french telecom font, and give it away on their “free fonts license free fonts” site.

Essentially, they are victims of fraud, not copyright infringers. They are not different from someone telling them the car they just bought was actually stolen. They aren’t the thieves, just another victim.

The Anti-Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I do have to add this:

First, the title is misleading, because they didn’t pirate a font. The firm they used to make the logo used a font they don’t have the rights for, but hadopi or whatever their name is didn’t pirate a font. Very misleading, to say they pirated something is extremely misleading.

Second, and just as important, the font they used wasn’t EXACTLY the font in question (called bienvenue, or welcome), as the letters were not exactly the same, but close enough to be recognized. It gives more credence to the idea of a font from a free font site or something similar.

It would be much more helpful if you can read french, as the story in french is significantly different from the rather slanted “ding” post from torrent freak. By taking their bias and adding your own onto it Mike, you make it sound like the Hadopi people hacked into someone computer to steal something, which just isn’t the case.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

The font used wasn’t exactly the font in question because the design form modified the original font (Bienvenue).

I suspect that if I “pirated” some music and changed a few notes you would have no problem going off on one of your uninformed rants about how I’m an evil immoral pirate thief destroying the music industry.

DTS says:

Re: Re: Re:

> Second, and just as important, the font they used wasn’t EXACTLY the font in question (called bienvenue, or welcome), as the letters were not exactly the same, but close enough to be recognized.

I’m not sure how this even helps your argument at all. The relevant industries (such as music) have voiced their displeasure strongly at deriative works from supposed property they own the rights to. For them as long as something is “close enough to be recognised” it qualifies as infringement.

robin (profile) says:

Re: Re: TAM Fails Again

“It would be much more helpful if you can read french, as the story in french is significantly different from the rather slanted “ding” post from torrent freak.”

en fait, l’article d’origine au pub numerama.com est fidelement decrit par les mecs chez torrentfreak. l’agence creatif est reduit a se defender avec une admission de “erreur de manipulation”.

ce que veut dire, that the articles, even in english, are accurately describing the hypocrisy and arrogance of an elite class.

nice try bud…..

btr1701 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Aren’t you the one who keeps suggesting that sites like YouTube be held responsible for whatever is posted there, even if it’s done by third parties? That they should not allow something to be posted unless they’ve done some kind of due diligence and made sure there’s no IP violation?

Here we have the exact same situation and you’re now suggesting that the hadopi site be relieved of responsibility and viewed as a victim for putting up something they weren’t aware was an IP violation.

So how come in the world of Anti-Mike, YouTube has a due diligence responsibility but hadopi does not?

You could just be refreshingly honest in your answer (if you even bother to give one) and admit that the double-standard stems from the fact that you’re perversely compelled to argue against whatever Mike’s position happens to be at any given moment, regardless of whether it turns your various responses, taken as a whole, into a hellish contradictory mess.

Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Essentially, they are victims of fraud, not copyright infringers. They are not different from someone telling them the car they just bought was actually stolen. They aren’t the thieves, just another victim.”

Sigh, do you have even one iota of evidence to back up that scenario as truth? I’m definitely willing to listen, as Mike has made mistakes in the past by not digging deeper, but somehow I doubt it on this one….

The Anti-Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Go read the story in french – the logo was created by Plan Créatif, a third part design company. I would suspect that, like many organizations, Hadopi was not aware that they needed not only to register the logo, but to assure rights of the underlying font(s) used. It would appear to be an error by Plan Créatif, or a misrepresentation.

It’s a fail, but certainly Hadopi didn’t pirate anything themselves.

:) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

It doesn’t matter under their own rules they just passed under HADOPI every person is responsible for their networks they did this specifically to close a “loophole” that gives people an “excuse” to pirate anything and you wont be able to go to another ISP as they will create a national database of infringers from what I understand.

So they are responsible even if they were not directly responsible is that what they fought for and passed for a law.

Now that is ironic.

Want to see more irony?

How about artists that don’t want to pay ISPs for the privilege to put their content on the internet and are all grouping together to lobby for net neutrality 🙂

http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/01/rem-everybody-hurts-without-network-neutrality.ars

Probably because they saw the research that said it would switch wealth to the ISPs instead of content creators LoL

http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2010/01/new-study-no-net-neutrality-means-weaker-internet-economy.ars

Michael (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Then back to the main point. If the group that is supposed to enforce these rules cannot figure out what they need to do to abide by them, how is anyone else supposed to?

Now if they find someone else “accidentally” infringed, does that person get a pass on the strike?

Keep this in mind: Although you are probably correct that they did not have knowledge of this infringement, there is likely no proof of that. Because who could document something like “we don’t know that we cannot use this font”? So, we have to take their word that they did not know and were ignorant that they needed to research it. If that can be a defense, can’t anyone just say “I didn’t know?”

compgeek (profile) says:

Re: Re:

if an average citizen is seen using unlicensed material in something they create they get sued. it doesnt matter if it is accidental or not. it doesnt matter where they got it. they get sued. why is it that a corporation can get the benefit of the doubt (which is what you are giving them) but the lowly consumer cannot? someone i know was fined for using a virus scanner they got with a “1 year free” coupon. the coupon was legit. they got it from 3rd party but it was a legit coupon. they got fined for “pirating” the software anyway because the company dismissed the coupon after this person used it. the company admitted the coupon was real and dropped (and sent it to a collection agency afterwards, illegaly. zombie debt, look it up) the fine though. anyway what i am getting at (and what you missed) is: if we accidentally infringe why do we get fined, but the corporations get off without even a slap on the wrist?

Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Question:

“We’ve been highlighting how Nicolas Sarkozy — who was the original strong supporter of “three strikes” proposals to kick people off the internet based on accusations (not convictions)”

You know, I’ve been wondering, given the whole baseball analogy, if this three strikes based on accusations as opposed to convictions can’t be applied to the Cubs to help them win the world series. I see it going something like this:

Announcer: It’s a lovely day here at Wrigley Field, where the Cubs enter Game 7 tied with the Yankees in the World Series, presented by Sound Exchange. Let’s go the action on the field.

Umpire: Play Ball!

Carlos Zambrano: Okay, Jeter is out!

Umpire: What do you mean? You haven’t thrown the ball!

Zambrano: No, he swung. I saw him do it!

Jeter: I didn’t swing! You haven’t thrown the ball!

Zambrano: No, you swung, I saw it. In fact, you swung three times!

Jeter: I did not! Hey, this isn’t fair!

Zambrano: Can you prove you DIDN’T swing at my non-existent pitches?

Jeter: What!!!?? How the hell could I do that? That doesn’t make any sense!

Umpire: YOU’RE OUT!!!!

RD says:

TAM the amazing TAMHOLE

“First, the title is misleading, because they didn’t pirate a font. The firm they used to make the logo used a font they don’t have the rights for, but hadopi or whatever their name is didn’t pirate a font. Very misleading, to say they pirated something is extremely misleading.”

First, the title “pirate” is misleading. People dont “pirate” they infringe copyright. No one is deprived of property as in true piracy. Very misleading, to call people “pirates” when its not, is a CIVIL, not criminal, infraction, and is infringement, not theft.

“Second, and just as important, the font they used wasn’t EXACTLY the font in question (called bienvenue, or welcome), as the letters were not exactly the same, but close enough to be recognized. It gives more credence to the idea of a font from a free font site or something similar.”

People dont “pirate” music. The files they use arent EXACTLY the music in question (due to being compressed and having 30-60% of the data being discarded due to one sound masking another, and using psycho-acoustic modelling) , but close enough to be recognized.

Really, you are off the plot now. You are grasping at ANYTHING that will exonerate your Corporate masters and vilify everyone else (ie, the consumer). You are stretching so far in your twisted, tortured attempt at rationalizing behavior on one side (your Corporate overlords) that you sound completely ridiculous. And when you are called out on it, you dont argue the merits or points at all, you are either silent or you build straw-mans or attack the poster.

Pathetic weasel.

:) says:

The People.

The people from France will have a bumpy ride with the legislation they enacted.

When even the government that have much more resources can’t keep their own act clean, individuals have no chance of doing any better.

Copyright is for everything on the internet and this could lead to a lot of people being disconected not only for music but for realy anything from text to videos.

Anonymous Coward says:

Hadopi has issued an apology through gritted teeth, but while France Telecom-Orange has confirmed it won’t be taking legal action over the infringement of its rights, the same cannot yet be said of Jean-François Porchez. He has contacted his lawyer to see what can be done.

That’s one huge embarrassing first strike for you, Hadopi.

David Muir (profile) says:

All these loophole closures

Strongly derivative work. Unintentional infringement. Network or supply chain responsibility. Is this all seriously in the French legislation? Add all that to three mere accusations of infringement and you’ve got a nation headed for Internet impoverishment.

It is scary like a horror story, which makes me hope that the claims about the legislation made in the comment are exaggerated.

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