Rotolight Uses DMCA To Censor Review They Didn't Like, Admits To DMCA Abuse For Censorship
from the copyright-as-censorship dept
Remember how a copyright maximalist was just claiming that it’s simply ridiculous that anyone would ever use copyright to censor? We pointed out a pretty long list of examples of how that’s bogus, but here’s another one, via BoingBoing. It seems that a guy named Den Lennie did a video review comparing the Rotolight Anova to a competing product, the Kino Flo Celeb. Lennie’s review showed that the Kino device was better, and apparently Rotolight took offense. So what do they do? They send a completely fraudulent DMCA complaint to Vimeo, who shamefully took the video down without doing even the slightest check to see if it was actually infringing.
Even worse, when Den posted about this, Rotolight flat out admitted to a fraudulent DMCA takedown, noting that they “did not feel the test was fair or representative” and thus they used the DMCA to take it down:

But, no, we’re told, copyright law is never used for censorship…
Filed Under: copyright, dmca, reviews, trademark
Companies: rotolight
Comments on “Rotolight Uses DMCA To Censor Review They Didn't Like, Admits To DMCA Abuse For Censorship”
If Rotolight filled out a regular DCMA form then they have committed perjury and quite likely broke another law or two along the way. But US law does not apply to corporations or the wealthy, so no one is going to get penalized except for the victim who had his review pulled.
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I wonder if we could get the DOJ to use the CFAA against them if we say this has to do with a copyright claim? We just forget to mention it was a false claim …
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Ha ha ha ha!!! The DOJ doesn’t go after corporate violators. They only go after poor citizens that break stupid laws intended to advance corporate profits.
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No, the law would apply to them if they were alledged of doing something against the corrupt law owners agenda.. You don’t see google (or a bunch of others) getting away with things like telling people the truth about whats on the internet and such..
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US law also doesn’t apply to UK individuals or companies.
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I think US corporations would disagree with that.
Someone get this man a lawyer
Even in a ‘mild’ case like this, where the company filing the DMCA claim like this doesn’t seem to be doing it maliciously, merely anti-competitively, such a clear-cut case of ‘DMCA abuse as censorship’, helped along enormously by the fact that the company has admitted it had nothing to do with copyright or trademark law, but was merely to silence a critic, could provide an excellent precedent for future cases like this,
Wait… normally it’s basically impossible to prove bad faith in a DMCA takedown… but, wouldn’t this be admissible in court?
We're so sorry
We can’t help being douchebags – we hope you can forgive us, and oh – your testing sucked, we want you to do it again in OUR facility, where we can control the process and your perceptions. No hard feelings, sorry your speech was censored with an illegal takedown request – we’re really really sorry that happened and we promise it wasn’t our intention to paint ourselves quite so douchey. And hey, kudos to Vimeo for supporting our asshattery!
Re: We're so sorry
Well pinewood studios is like the UK version of Hollywood so its no surprise they used these underhanded tactics to censor.
Seems like this would be the perfect evidence to get the DMCA overturned on grounds that it violates the first amendment.
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never happen
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The sad fact of the matter is: none of us should ever hope that the DMCA is overturned.
If it is, they would have to replace it with something else to retain the same safeguards. I do not trust a single person in congress or the senate to not make the resulting bill many times worse than what the DMCA already is. It would be ProtectIP but on a scale that would destroy the concept of service providers.
I’m convinced the DMCA is a necessary evil, it’s not perfect, however the possible alternatives are far worse.
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Why would they have to?
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Massive outcry from law-enforcement, politicians in EU forcing it back and many companies around the world screaming in rage.
The system has become a too integral part of what people expect from a law-abiding company.
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Because the safe harbours would disappear
Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
You have an isolated incident, while nearly every file of PETABYTES on Megaupload was infringing. Your only consistency is that you STILL defend Megaupload and use this to attack copyright.
Tell ya what: take the admission and prosecute to fullest extent of the law. I’m all for curtailing abuses by corporations.
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
MegaUpload’s piracy was caused by copyright law.
There is a reason why when you repress what the public believes to be true through legislation, whether it be the war on drugs, alcohol or prostitution, it turns ugly through black-market monopolies.
If we started funding creativity and not creations, and started backing the crowdfunding revolution and copyright abolition instead, we would have none of these problems.
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
Are you capable of staying on-topic?
Re: Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
Or honest?
Re: Then you need to do more research.
You only think this is an isolated incident because you’re only just now starting to wake up and realize how copyright is pretty much an obsolete invention in this day and age. If you looked a little harder, you’d find many more examples reaching back through history.
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
The problem, Mr Blue, is that there is literally no proof of that, MU followed standard DMCA procedures as far as we can tell and therefore was entitled to all the protection of safe harbors whether you want to kick and scream about pirate-havens or not.
Typically we tend to assume innocence until proven guilty. Anecdotes and hearsay have no place in the realm of justice and guilt (maybe someone should tell our government this, they seem to have forgotten).
Maybe if that fine, upstanding government’s incompetence had not resulted in the deletion of all those PETABYTES of evidence you claim was 100% against MegaUpload, there could have been a wide-ranging study on the data to determine the actual percentage of infringing content. Unfortunately that never came to be, so I guess your baseless conjecture has very little standing, no?
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
You have an isolated incident
No, we have another company, organization, or person thinking they can get away with using the DMCA as a censorship tool ? or did all those examples in the column about people using the DMCA as a censorship tool slip your mind?
(And remember: because government grants people copyright through the law, using the DMCA in this way counts as government-sponsored censorship. Someone really oughta sue someone who uses the DMCA as a censorship tool on those grounds.)
Re: Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
“Isolated incident” sounds suspiciously close to “anomaly.”
Just sayin’.
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
It’s no wonder that the copyright lobby has been working to make sure the Megaupload servers get wiped. There is too much evidence that “nearly every file of PETABYTES on Megaupload was infringing” is flat out false. We routinely used megaupload to move around large files we were using on various projects, and not one bit of it was infringing. We were not alone. Even the DOJ was using it.
Also, this DCMA takedown is hardly an isolated incident. In fact they are pretty standard. Corporations like Roto Light aren’t even embarrassed to admit that they are breaking the law.
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
Your dishonesty and ignorance are truly epic.
Re: Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
while nearly every file of PETABYTES on Megaupload was infringing
This has been proven to be false already especially due to the fact that a huge percentage of the files in their servers were never downloaded suggesting people were using it as backup means. I’ve used Megaupload several times in the past to share huge geographic data such as maps and referenced databases among several peers. The biggest file I’ve worked with at the time had over 2Gb so it’s clear that it had legit usage as a tool for distributing content. And of course the US never let Megaupload dig the servers to build any defense so there isn’t much evidence other than studies and polls.
I’m all for curtailing abuses by corporations.
And yet you are fine with the abuses the MAFIAA and the US Government are engaged into in this case. Carry on little brainless parrot.
Obviously, the rule of law has broken down in the US. It’s therefore up to citizens to deter this type of behavior.
Unfortunately for entities such as Rotolight, citizen justice is usually a bit rougher than legal sanctions.
Seriously
How many ‘isolated incidents’ are required before they can be considered a pattern?
Re: Seriously
Isn’t an incident technically isolated by definition? One incident isn’t another incident so every incident is isolated QED DMCA is never abused!
Every time something comes up that doesn’t fit ootb’s zealot religious stance on copyright, it’s always an anomaly or an isolated incident. After dozens of times, it’s still a rare event, being used more and more.
Have another report vote ootb for not being able to stay on topic and not being able to see the truth when it smacks you up beside the head.
"and i'd do it again"
It’s pretty clear that there is no reason to worry about admitting it publicly.
Wow. Im not sure what to say. smh -_-
Mr Roto Light is abusing Terms of Service with his FB account
I looked up his Facebook account since his image is embedded in this article, and Roto Light is abusing Facebook’s terms of Service by creating a fake profile with a business name, rather than a page or group for his business.
He should be reported to Facebook.
Re: Mr Roto Light is abusing Terms of Service with his FB account
Go ahead. Nobody’s stopping you.
it doesn’t make matters any better when, from what i read elsewhere, the report was on Vimeo, who obliged by taking obeying the removal request. apart from the obvious, desperate need of penalties for abuse of the DMCA (which should be in line with those when the DMCA really is abused) brought in by legislation, there should be a process whereby, in this case, Vimeo should be able to check the claim before removing it and not held liable for not removing the item while it investigates.
Copyright law’s best and brightest.
Rotolight Founder is a HUGE UK Music Producer!
You missed a HUGE Part of this Story, Rod Gammons, Founder of Rotolight is one of the Very Largest Music Industry PUBLISHERS in the UK and the Founder Owner’s wife WROTE A COMPREHENSIVE BOOK on Copyright Law! NO KIDDING! http://www.scribd.com/doc/125580288/The-Art-of-Music-Publishing-An-Entrepreneurial-Guide-to-Publishing-and-Copyright-for-the-Music-Film-And-Media-Industries-Helen-Gammons
LOOK at his Linked in Profile! He knew EXACTLY what DMCA is used for! http://www.linkedin.com/profile/view?id=121492491
Not so simple
A bad effect of this news hysteria has been a unilateral presumption that online video streaming service providers have no legal obligation (and no internal policy) to respect trademarks — no less, claims to invasion of privacy/invasion of publicity/commercial libel. In fact, they do, and they act upon, these grounds not only as a matter of law but within their own terms of service. The D.M.C.A. is just one tool in the toolkit of managing rights, focused upon copyright law, but there are others.
I’m sure people will keep ignoring this nuanced reality, though, to their detriment (because it’s much more fun to crow about fighting the powers that be)…
Study: Megaupload closure boosted Hollywood sales 10%
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/03/08/megaupload_piracy_study/
Just for the permanent record, since the usual Techdirt ankle-biters above are denying results of a study that even Mike had to admit was sound.
Visitors: The ankle-biters sole tactic here is to wear you down by repeating the same FALSE claims over and over. Just read theregister item and compare with comments above. These kids are in their own little walled garden.
Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
[Just repeating mine at #8 since I now see the little censors have hidden it. Yes, folks, THIS is what upsets them:]
You have an isolated incident, while nearly every file of PETABYTES on Megaupload was infringing. Your only consistency is that you STILL defend Megaupload and use this to attack copyright.
Tell ya what: take the admission and prosecute to fullest extent of the law. I’m all for curtailing abuses by corporations.
Re: OOTB #41 Well, you guys say was no infringed content on Megaupload...
You might want to publish an OOTB-English dictionary/translator. Many of the terms you fling about with wild abandon have a different meaning outside your vernacular.
“Censor,” in English, does not mean “reported by the community and hidden from the initial display, but available for reading with a single click.”
Hey, put it online behind a paywall, sit back and watch the millions roll in!
Censorship Law rings true while copyright law does not.
Rotolight upgrade Rotolight ANOVA
Rotolight have announced a new Range of Rotolight ANOVA V2 LED EcoFlood’s. Recently tested out on a shoot by BBC Lighting Cameraman/DoP Mark Langton here’s the video shot with a Sony F5 Camera on a controlled set and used with mixed traditional tungsten bulbs. goo.gl/dstsEU
Den Lennie checked out the New ANOVA’s at IBc 2013 and said “New @Rotolight ANOVA V2 is V impressive. Great Colour output. Look forward to using it. G8 upgrade for existing V1 Owners too”
Den Lennie and Hollywood DoP Rodney Charters will be testing them out shortly. Check out Rodney Charters interview discussing the recent publicity and the new ANOVA’s goo.gl/qXXyaj
Find out more about the Rotolight ANOVA upgrade programme http://www.rotolight.com/upgrade