[Not exactly sure where to put this or if it should even be posted on this site. Let me float one out and we will see how it goes.]
Usenet Provider and BREIN Continue Battle Over Piracy Keyword FilterThis is an article over a court fight between the Dutch anticopyright organization called Brein (means brain in Dutch) and a Usenet provider. In it Brein is demanding that keywords be used to eliminate links to infringing material. News-Service.com has said doing so would be too expensive to do and it would have to shut down the service on the internet as a result. The court has issued a stay so that News-Service does not at this point have to initiate the keywords filter while it is being decided in court or to go dark in the internet. Of course Brein wants to say everyone else does it so it has to be done here.
I'd like to point out what is not being said by Brein. News-Service is not posting infringing content. It's users of the service are. This is a case where laws of a nation have carefully been picked as to where to take the case. In the US, this would not hold up in court and would be thrown out. Safe Harbor Law says the hoster of a service is not responsible for the uses of its' service by individuals outside the company.
Since the internet is global in reach, the decision of this court won't just be effective for this one country of The Netherlands but rather, every copyright holder globally will be able to send take down requests and expect News-Service to attend to them. Failure to do so, will have Brein back in court to see it upheld.
The problem News-Service says is it's not feasible to do this keyword filtering. For one thing they have a point. To illustrate it, I'd like to point to Google. Google receives something like 100,000 requests per hour to remove links from the search engine results. Google has the funds to hire a complete section of people to tend to this. This option is not available to smaller outfits.
Worse is there are no penalties for false claims for infringing links. When a mistake is made and caught, those sending in the links just say, "oh well" and continue to send in more links. But often the links are not to a single hyperlink but rather to a site address, meaning that if Google were to ok this request, a site on the internet would just disappear from search results, which is not the purpose for the DMCA law in the US, which similar laws have been inserted into trade treaties signed by other countries to observe. One of the purposes is not to remove sites from search engine results but rather to remove results from that one link.
These submissions are by large not done by human hands but rather by bots that crawl the internet looking for infringing content. The programming of many bots make some serious mistakes, such as using keywords that have sites show up that have nothing to do with infringement. The source site for this article is one such that is often taken off line even though they host no infringement links at all but rather discuss the issues surrounding copyright and it's results to the internet in general.
What becomes a rib tickler at times is the bots will list legal authorized sites such as the home page of one of the labels, studios, or a site for purchasing such digital goods. So mistakes are made and they are not that rare. Google often refuses to take a mistaken link down. This is a chancy move in the US as it opens the company that fails to take a link down on request to the same penalties as the infringer if the infringer is taken to court and found guilty. Those Google refuses to remove are most probably checked over by a legal department before refusal as the owners of the bots do not take Google to court over refusing to remove links. Especially when it is one of the official authorized site links where a mistake has been made.