Thursday, June 24, 2010

In a stunning decision, court sides with defendant Google/YouTube in Viacom case

In a stunning decision yesterday, a federal judge granted Google/YouTube's motion for summary judgement and dismissed the case against them by media giant Viacom, standing on the side of defendants in a decision that has the potential to rock the entertainment world in years to come.

Judge Stanton says that "The DMCA is explicit," and that the law shouldn't attempt to put conditions on safe harbor protections when an Internet Service Provider is actively looking for infringement and removing infringing materials.

In the lawsuit originally filed in 2007, Viacom had claimed that YouTube deliberately infringed on its copyrights and knowingly allowed content to remain on its site. The case is expected to be promptly appealed.

Viacom v YouTube Summary Judgment


Michael Fricklas, General Counsel for Viacom responded to the summary judgment ruling and made the following statement"

"We are disappointed with the judge’s ruling, but confident we will win on appeal.

Copyright protection is essential to the survival of creative industries. It is, and should be, illegal for companies to build their businesses with creative material they have stolen from others. Without this protection, investment in the development of art and entertainment would be discouraged, and the many artists and producers who devote their lives to creating it would be hurt. Copyright protection is also critical to the web -- because consumers love professional content and because legitimate websites shouldn’t have to compete with pirates.

YouTube and Google demonstrated that required tools to limit piracy aren’t impossible to find or even that difficult to implement -- they fixed the problem of rampant piracy on YouTube after Viacom filed this lawsuit.

Before that, however, YouTube and Google stole hundreds of thousands of video clips from artists and content creators, including Viacom, building a substantial business that was sold for billions of dollars. We believe that should not be allowed by law or common sense.

This case has always been about whether intentional theft of copyrighted works is permitted under existing law and we always knew that the critical underlying issue would need to be addressed by courts at the appellate levels. Today’s decision accelerates our opportunity to do so.

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