But I’m also trying to picture the Nazarene incorrectly wielding something like copyright law to combat the messaging of the Pharisees and, well, somehow I just can’t seem to conjure the image, no matter how hard I try.The reason why you can’t picture it is because that’s not how it would have gone down. If the Roman Empire had copyright law, it would have been the Pharisees who went after Jesus for infringing their copyright by contrasting their teachings to his for the Kingdom of God. And it would have been Jesus who would have to mount a fair use defense. Sadly, due to their undying support of Trump, the Billy Graham Association (and other Evangelicals) are acting more like the Pharisees in this case and others than actual followers of Jesus. They’re blind to their idolatry and hypocrisy, and I’m saying that as a Christian!
As someone who resides within the 7th circuit, I have to wonder how their decision 10 years ago (Kienitz v. Sconnie Nation LLC) operates under the new-ish fair use regime as created by the problematic Andy Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith SCOTUS ruling, especially since the former was cited in part in the latter by the 2nd Circuit in their initial ruling for Goldsmith.
This is spray-and-pray litigation Hovde apparently hopes will silence one of his critics, either by forcing the PAC to pull the ad or intimidating TV stations into refusing to do business with WinState.And this is why we need an Anti-SLAPP law, if not nationally, then at least in my home state of Wisconsin!
We've been trying to reach you about your car's extended warranty...
Louis Rossmann made a video on the subject that brought up a good point: Disney's initial decision to enforce its forced arbitration clause was the biggest justification for piracy. Had the plaintiff sailed the high seas instead of being a law-abiding person by doing the right thing through streaming, there wouldn't be a forced arbitration clause they agreed to, making the claim have to go through the courts on the merits. Put another way, if Disney thought it could get away with killing its customers with impunity just for doing the right thing, the MAFIAA is a lot closer to the actual mafia than I think anyone wanted.
A problem has been detected and Windows has been shut down to prevent damage to your computer. The problem seems to be caused by the following file: DMCA512F.SYS COPYRIGHT_CLAIM_IN_NONINFRINGING_AREA If this is the first time you've seen this stop error screen, restart your computer. If this screen appears again, follow these steps: Check to make sure any usage of your copyrighted content is not authorized by you, your agent, or the law. If this is something that could be arguably be fair use (such as criticism, educational use, or parody), you must consider if it is before proceeding. If problems arise because this isn’t really a valid copyright claim, back down or fire any legal counsel who said this takedown request was a good idea. Continuing anyway opens you up to liability under section 512(f) of Title 17, U.S. Code. If your customers need to use Safe Mode to remove or disable a Windows Signed Driver you assured your investors was 100% safe when it really wasn’t, re-evaluate your priorities and fix your own problems before taking down lawful parodies. Technical information: **** STOP: 0x00000451 (0x00001C3, 0x00000001, Ox00002121, 0xFFFFFFFF) **** DMCA512F. SYS - Address FFFFFE3C base at FFFFDEDE, Datestamp 669a3667
That's how he should do it. Register his lyrics with the copyright office, and force his probation officer or whoever to pay the copyright office for a copy of the deposit submitted with the registration. As long as he gives the copyright office permission to do so, they can send a copy to them... for a fee. Once they start having to pay a fee for each copy of the lyric, it will add up, fast! Then, they might finally come to their senses with how ludicrous this all is.
Not gonna lie, the last line sounds like an apt slogan for a lot of articles here... Techdirt: "I should have stayed off the internet even longer."
A virtual machine or emulator running a modern PC operating system under iOS could theoretically offer some generalized competition for the apps Apple offers in its official App Store.I own a couple Apple Silicon Macs: An M1 Mac Mini, and an M1 Max MacBook Pro. Not the newest generation, but the M1 Max is certainly more powerful than the processor in iPhones. An emulated x86-64 system running a modern operating system is unusably slow. And the framework that makes ARM64 virtualization possible isn't even available on M-series chip iPads. That framework is exclusive to Mac. So, I doubt that this rule, at the current time, could possibly be done to prevent competition in certain apps. That's not to say that it couldn't change in the future. But my take? I'm not a fan of all of Apple's decisions, but this seems less like a legal one and more of a private policy decision. It's Apple's right to decide to not allow certain apps on the app store. While technologically and legally, emulating a PC and emulating a game console is not all that different, if Apple wants to make that distinction and allow one and not the other, that's legally within their rights.
I was about to post something similar. In the mind of today's average Republican, exposing private information about leftists and democrats are investigative journalism. But when it's right-wing conservatives and Republicans, it's an invasion of their privacy and their rights, and they will not stand for it!
Surgeon General Warning: Enrolling your child in a public school can increase issues with your child's mental health due to peer pressure and bullying. Homeschooling is advised.See how ridiculous that sounds? I was bullied WAY more in school than I was on social media growing up, and yet I don't see the Surgeon General demanding warnings on school enrollment forms. And if some troll says, "School is mandatory, but social media is not," let me ask you why is school mandatory? Because of its net benefit to society. A good quality education is important. Yet, whenever someone points out how social media can be beneficial to teens (i.e., helps them express themselves, get help when needed, feel like they belong, etc.) and research backs up that this is the case, such studies are hand-waved away as irrelevant. Social media isn't the boogeyman many claim it is. It reflects real life, and real life has good and bad things about it. It can build people up or bring people down. So can social media. So don't write it off as "all bad" for kids.
AFAIK, it can't be appealed. The CJEU is essentially the SCOTUS of the European Union. This is the final ruling. Online privacy is dead in the EU because some corporations are scared their bottom line will be harmed by a few people who dare copy a digital file without permission.
Copyright defenders will claim that the law incentivizes creativity and ensures creators get paid fairly. But this situation makes a mockery of that claim. I'm sure many small online creators (like myself) make next to nothing from our content. Yet, scammers can abuse YouTube's copyright-policing bots to passively make money from 6-hour videos they didn't make just because the video featured a 3-second jingle they don't own that was played on one of the newest music players: Washing Machines! But go on, copyright maximalists, tell me how this is a one-in-a-billion chance story over all the piracy that's being stopped by laws you insist still aren't strong enough.
I’ve been talking to a pretty long list of lawyers about this and I’m somewhat amazed at how this seems to have taken everyone by surprise. Normally, when new lawsuits come out, I’ll gut check my take on it with a few lawyers and they’ll all agree with each other whether I’m heading in the right direction or the totally wrong direction. But here… the reactions were all over the map, and not in any discernible pattern. More than one person I spoke to started by suggesting that this was a totally crazy legal theory, only to later come back and say “well, maybe it actually makes some sense.”Are you saying that, perhaps you, Mike, are, gasp, wrong about a part of Section 230? That other tech industry lawyers you know are also wrong? What topsy-turvy world did I just wake up in?
After reading this response letter and the other response letters you linked to, it got me thinking: The past brief humorous responses were perfectly summed up in this newest one. But, is there a way to sum it up so it's even shorter? I think the answer to this question can be best summed up with the wise words of Mike Dunford:
LOL, no.
Get the line veto, or Paragraph Veto...Congress once passed a law allowing the President to line-item veto, and the Supreme Court quickly ruled it unconstitutional in Clinton v. City of New York.
...or JUST VOTE ON 1 THING PER BILLSmart idea. Just one problem. House takes up TikTok ban bill independently. It passes the House. It passes the Senate. Biden signs it into law (as he said he would). The TikTok ban would become law even if it was voted on independently.
Instances of copyright infringement? Got to catch 'em all!!
I'd argue that the Campbell precednt is at the very least limited by the recent SCOTUS precedent set by Andy Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith. That case has upended fair use precedent as we knew it. In fact, I've seen recent fair use decisions that cite that for the first factor before or even instead of Campbell. As I best understand this problematic decision, transformative use is determined by asking, "Why are you using it?" and not "What new meaning or message have you added?" In Campbell, Pretty Women was used as a parody to mock and criticize the song. It doesn't matter what the critical commentary actually said, but rather the mere fact that it was used for criticism at all. In some cases, it's a distinction without a difference, but in other cases, there is a difference. For example, consider the contrast with Andy Warhol Foundation, where the painting of Prince was "licensed to a magazine to depict Prince in an article about Prince." It didn't matter how different the aesthetic was, or the fact that there was a new meaning or message in Warhol's work not found in Goldsmith's photograph. That purpose, the court deemed, was not transformative and therefore favored a finding against fair use. To be clear: I vehimentally disagree with the majority opinion in Andy Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith, but unless and until Congress passes a change in copyright law to overturn this harmful precedent (which seems unlikely, given their current priorities), this decision remains the law of the land. Now, I haven't seen the original video described in this article, so I can't comment on how likely fair use would apply in this case. However, your suggestion that showcasing a Pokémon mod to comment on "the wholesome feel of the games" points to a transformative use of the mod, not Pokémon itself. As far as I can tell, the mod's use of Pokémon points more towards a derivative work than a fair use, because as the SCOTUS has said in the Andy Warhol Foundation case, a new meaning or message must go beyond what is required for a derivative work for it to count as transformative within the meaning of fair use. That isn't the case here, and so the mod itself and videos showing its use can constitute copyright infringement.
Not too surprisingly, Roku is refusing to respond to press inquiries as to why it thought being a restrictive and obnoxious jackass was a great business decision.Don't you know? The first rule about enshittification is you don't talk about enshittification, especially with the press!
I’m surprised Techdirt isn’t insisting that Carr pays you a fee every time someone views his misleading Tweet… By not directly linking, he’s also circumventing your royalties from the link tax for displaying your copyrighted headline without permission! /s