Google Customizes Its YouTube Takedown Message In Response To Bogus Innocence Of Muslims Takedown

from the sorry-about-that dept

We just wrote about the 9th Circuit’s ridiculously problematic ruling claiming that an actress who appears in 5 seconds of the 13 minute Innocence of Muslims “trailer” has a copyright interest in her performance, allowing the court to order Google to remove all copies of the video (along with a highly questionable gag order).

Soon after the ruling came out, EFF’s Parker Higgins suggested the sort of custom “takedown” message that Google might want to put on the video:

The YouTube sad face icon and takedown message has become fairly iconic, so much so that I have random people stop me on the street frequently to comment on my own YouTube takedown t-shirt. However, historically, YouTube has stuck to its basic default messages when videos are taken down, almost never providing much in the way of details. Apparently, the lawyers at YouTube are so upset about this particular ruling that they’ve gone a different route, taking a page from Higgin’s suggestion and having the takedown message on the video actually explain that they disagree with the situation:
Yes, that’s the actual message shown if you go to see the video right now. While I doubt YouTube will be using these sort of customized messages that often, it seems like something similar might come in handy over in Germany, where a court has ordered YouTube to stop hurting GEMA’s feelings with its takedown messages, which highlight how GEMA has refused to license music to YouTube at a reasonable rate (like basically every other collection society in the world).

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Comments on “Google Customizes Its YouTube Takedown Message In Response To Bogus Innocence Of Muslims Takedown”

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41 Comments
John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

I don’t love to fiddle with passwords, but I do love increasing my security (or at least not reducing it by using the same password for everything — that’s the #1 security problem with passwords these days.)

There’s an easy workaround that I recommend to everyone who complains about this “one password for everything” business (which is a LOT of people!) — just create a different account for each service.

crade (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

increasing security is a completely separate thing, which is measurable only by results in a private company like Google. Increasing the number of passwords you keep track of passwords only gives the perception of security. Using the same password for multiple accounts is not at all the same thing as using the same account for multiple things.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

“Using the same password for multiple accounts is not at all the same thing as using the same account for multiple things.”

You’ve lost me here… what is the effective difference between these two things?

In either case, if a hacker were to determine the password he would have access to all of the the things controlled by that password. Only, with a SSO system, the hacker is given a greater level of convenience when figuring out what other services the password will provide access to.

Password-based SSO systems are dangerous for this reason. There are other ways of doing SSO that aren’t as risky, but they’re not password-based.

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I certainly hope the second notice is not the work or has been approved by counsel for Google/YouTube.

Mike’s post indicates the YouTube message is from Google’s lawyers.

Spending quality time before a court explaining its contents and why they should not be disciplined is not a productive way to use one’s time.

Disciplined for what exactly? For posting facts that are part of the public record?

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Spending quality time before a court explaining its contents and why they should not be disciplined”

It would be very little time in court. In the US, there would be no basis for a case at all, and it would be tossed out unceremoniously. They should not be disciplined because they did nothing wrong or illegal. Case closed.

Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I certainly hope the second notice is not the work or has been approved by counsel for Google/YouTube.

My understanding is that it absolutely was.

Spending quality time before a court explaining its contents and why they should not be disciplined is not a productive way to use one’s time.

Under what possible legal theory could that ever lead to them being disciplined? The statement is no different than the kind of corporate statement companies release to the press after losing court cases all the time.

You really need to let go of your irrational hatred of all things Google, and your desire to slam everything. It just suggests you’re not nearly the super lawyer you pretend to be. It repeatedly clouds your judgment.

OldGeezer (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Put up an edited version

I suppose if there is a religion that flies jetliners into buildings, blow themselves up, stone their daughters for kissing a boy, start deadly riots over a cartoon etc. maybe you shouldn’t perform in a video they would consider blasphemous. Does the name Salman Rushdie mean anything to you?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Put up an edited version

Extremists do those things in the name of the religion. You ignore the fact that the vast majority of practitioners of the religion throughout the world are peaceful people who reject such practices. Statements like that only polarize people further exacerbating the problem. Would it be appropriate to characterize the exploits of the Westboro extremists as being representative of the entire Christian religion simply because the act in the name of it? Of course not. You need to use a smaller brush in the future.

OldGeezer (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Put up an edited version

I’m just remembering the massive rallies all over the Mid East celebrating and cheering loudly when the towers fell. If Christians attacked embassies and caused riots world wide that results in hundreds of deaths any time someone insults their beliefs I would think differently. If the Muslims truly followed the teachings of Muhammad they would be the “religion of peace” they claim to be. The percentage of extremists is a lot larger than the politically correct liberals want to admit.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Put up an edited version

“I’m just remembering the massive rallies all over the Mid East celebrating and cheering loudly when the towers fell.”

Those rallies had nothing to do with religion and everything to do with politics.

“Christians attacked embassies and caused riots world wide that results in hundreds of deaths any time someone insults their beliefs I would think differently.”

Christians have done this.

Here’s the thing — you’re confusing politics with religion here. The Muslims that are truly dangerous are not dangerous because they’re Muslim. They’re motivated by politics dressed in Islamic clothing. There are tons of examples of the same thing happening, but with Christian clothing instead.

Right now, the political area that has the most militant anger against the US happens to be in an area that is predominantly Islamic, but they aren’t so mad at the US because they’re muslim.

The totality of all muslims in the area is a minority of muslims (Islam is the second most popular religion in the word — there are quite a lot of them.) Most muslims feel about the US about the same way as everybody else.

OldGeezer (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Put up an edited version

It’s a little hard to separate the religion from the politics when many Mid East countries range from heavily to completely under control of the Muslims. Even governments that have some moderate influence protected Osama Bin Laden for a decade. All of the 9/11 attackers were from countries supposedly friendly to us. Sure, there some nut cases and even terrorists who call themselves Christian. In Islamic countries they build shrines to the “martyrs” who strap on bomb vests and set them off in markets and buses to kill their enemies even when that includes women and children. The families of these heroes receive support payments. 70 virgins await in paradise for them to pop their cherries. Extremism will always exist in any religion. Centuries ago the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of England were responsible for ghastly atrocities. In no religion today is it so predominate as it is in Islam. It is only a matter of time until they achieve their goal of setting off a nuclear bomb in a large American city. The mutually assured destruction that kept the Soviets at bay does not matter to them.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:7 Put up an edited version

“It’s a little hard to separate the religion from the politics when many Mid East countries range from heavily to completely under control of the Muslims.”

It’s not at all hard, honest. All you have to do is know something about all of the other Islamic countries.

“In Islamic countries they build shrines to the “martyrs” who strap on bomb vests and set them off in markets and buses to kill their enemies even when that includes women and children.”

You say this like this is common practice in all Islamic countries. That’s simply and plainly untrue. This sort of thing happens in literally a couple of places, not even uniformly in any single nation. It not anywhere near indicative of something that is inherent to Islam or Islamic countries.

“Extremism will always exist in any religion.”

I’m pleased to see that you acknowledge that it is the crazies, not the religion as a whole, that is the problem.

“In no religion today is it so predominate as it is in Islam.”

I’m far from sure this is true, but even if it was — so what? It doesn’t mean that there’s something inherent in Islam to cause it. It means that the areas of great political distress are largely Islamic ones at this time.

“It is only a matter of time until they achieve their goal of setting off a nuclear bomb in a large American city.”

Whose goal? (Hint: it’s not an Islamic goal at all.)

OldGeezer (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:8 Put up an edited version

Don’t have a lot of time right now so I’ll just hit the high points. Perhaps some Islamic countries are not as radical as others but any country predominately Muslim will have factions. If it’s 2% in some countries or 20% in others it will be there. It only took 19 hijackers to kill over 2,000 people. These were from “friendly” countries like Egypt, United Emirates and Saudia Arabia. As far as the nuclear threat many experts are saying it is not a matter of if, it’s when. A great deal of atomic materials from the former USSR are unaccounted for. First it will probably be a dirty bomb but eventually they will achieve thermal. Won’t matter much if they are doing it to please Allah or political reasons.

OldGeezer (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Put up an edited version

Just to add this thought: The Westboro are a very small group of extremists who have few members that are not part of Fred Phelps family and are an embarrassment and universally scorned by virtually every Christian church. No deaths have resulted from their hateful actions. They are not killing people.

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