EFF Gives Prince A 'Lifetime Aggrievement Award' For DMCA Takedown Abuse
from the raspberry-beret-awards dept
The EFF has inducted singer Prince into its “Takedown Hall of Shame” by giving the purple one the “Raspberry Beret Lifetime Aggrievement Award” for his consistent and neverending abuse of the DMCA process to take down content he has no right to takedown. In giving him the award, they list out three examples we’ve spoken about before:
- Prince’s recent DMCA takedown on six second clips on Vine of a Prince concert at SXSW. These clips were clearly fair use — showing tiny snippets where the music isn’t even recognizable.
- Prince’s DMCA takedowns sent over fan-recorded concert videos of his performance of Radiohead’s song “Creep.” As EFF points out, Prince has no real copyright claim here. The copyright of the song is Radiohead’s — and Radiohead demanded that the videos be put back online — and the copyright on the video is whoever took the videos. But that didn’t stop Prince.
- Of course, no surprise here, Prince’s connection to the infamous YouTube takedown of Stephanie Lenz’s 29-second video of her toddler dancing to a Prince song in her kitchen. The lawsuit over that one is still going on. That one might actually be more about Universal Music than Prince, but given his other takedown actions, it would be surprising if he didn’t support Universal on that one (even if he’s had other disagreements with the label).
Of course, if the EFF wanted, it could make the list even longer. Prince sent a cease & desist to an artist who put together a puppet-based tribute to the artist. He similarly threatened a bunch of fan websites, claiming that any photos of him or his album covers was infringement. Oh, and then there was the time he sued 50 musicians for having the temerity to record a tribute album to Prince for his birthday. Such a nice guy.
Filed Under: dmca, dmca abuse, prince, raspberry beret, takedowns