Everything You Ever Need to Know About the DMCA
By Michael
Spadaccini
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (lawyers call it the
DMCA) updates U.S. Copyright law for the digital age. The
DMCA has several components. Circumvention of Copyright Protection
Technology
The DMCA prohibits persons from circumventing electronic
copyright protection systems. In other words, persons may
not descramble or decrypt a copyrighted work, nor may they
bypass, remove, deactivate or impair a technological measure
intended to protect the work. So, a content thief who steals
a password to gain access to protected material would violate
the act. And the circumvention provision even goes farther-it
prohibits the manufacture or sale of technology that is primarily
designed to circumvent copyright protection technology. This
is good news for copyright owners and for companies who develop
and implement copyright protection technologies-and bad news
for hackers and content thieves. This provision carries steep
civil and criminal penalties.
A minor provision of the DMCA prohibits tampering with copyright
management information. Copyright management information is
essentially any information which identifies the owner of
a particular work, or the terms and condition of use of the
work.
Liability Protection for Online Service Providers
The DMCA brings good news to online service providers. The
DMCA shields online service providers from civil and criminal
liability for copyright infringement under some circumstances.
These protections for service providers are limited, and are
annoyingly complex.
An online service provider cannot be found liable for infringement
if the provider is simply transmitting or routing unmodified
information at someone else's direction through an automatic
process. In other words, if a service provider's system receives
a request from an end user to receive copyrighted content,
the service provider is not guilty of copyright infringement
merely because it transmits our routes the content to the
end user.
An online service provider cannot be found liable for infringement
if the provider is simply temporarily caching or storing copyrighted
content and the material is made available online to the public,
the material is transmitted at the direction of a third party,
and the material is stored through an automatic technical
process. Thus, a service provider may, without fear of infringement
liability, cache a popular web page, for example, so that
multiple users may benefit from faster access to the material.
Under some circumstances, an online service provider is immune
from infringement liability merely because it refers or links
users to an online location that provides infringing information
or because one of its users stores infringing information
on its system. The service provider must demonstrate, however,
that it did not know and had no reason to know about the infringing
activity, and that it moved quickly to disable access to the
infringing material by use of the "take down" procedures.
The Notification of Infringement and "Take Down"
Procedures
When a copyright holder discovers that its content appears
on the Internet without proper authorization, the holder may
take advantage of the DMCA's Notification of Infringement
and "Take Down" procedures to have the content removed.
The notification and "take down" provisions of the
DMCA govern the process of notification by copyright holders,
and the rights and responsibilities of online service providers
once they receive notice of infringing material.
The notification and take down procedures are good news for
copyright owners. The procedures aid copyright owners by providing
a well-defined set of procedures for removing valuable copyrighted
content from unauthorized use. Furthermore, the DMCA gives
copyright owners the right to obtain a subpoena that directs
an online service provider to provide identifying information
regarding an alleged copyright infringer.
Online service providers benefit from the notification and
take down procedures as well: if a provider follows the notice
and take down procedures carefully-and in good faith-the providers
are protected from liability for removing or blocking access
to material that later turns out to be unprotectible.
Online service providers, however, must follow specific procedures;
service providers may enjoy liability protection only if they
designate an agent to receive DMCA infringement notices. The
U.S. Copyright Office maintains a list of agents on its website-thousands
of service providers have registered, and their contact information
appears on the website.
So how does a notification and take down work? Assume a copyright
owner discovers its content on an unauthorized website. The
various parties must follow the following complicated notice
and counter-notice scheme:
1. The copyright owner must contact the online service provider's
designated agent to receive DMCA infringement notices. The
notice must meet the following requirements: · The
notice must be written · The notice must contain the
signature of a properly authorized person · The notice
must identify adequately the copyrighted work · The
notice must contain information sufficient to allow the service
provider to contact the complaining party · The notice
must contain a statement that the complaining party has a
good faith belief that the material is unauthorized ·
The notice must contain a statement that information is accurate,
and under penalty of perjury, that the complaining party is
authorized to act on behalf of the owner of an exclusive right
that is allegedly infringed.
2. Upon receiving the notice, if the service provider removes
the allegedly infringing content, then the provider is exempt
from copyright infringement claims for displaying the content
the content and is exempt from claims based on having taken
down the material.
3. The service provider, however, must notify the subscriber
(the alleged infringer who is posting the copyrighted material)
that the material has been removed or blocked.
4. A subscriber that feels his or her material is not infringing
then may file a "counter-notice" to respond to the
notice and take down. The counter-notice must meet the following
requirements: · The counter-notice must be written
· The counter-notice must contain the signature of
a properly authorized person. · The counter-notice
must adequately identify material that has been removed or
to which access has been disabled and the location at which
the material appeared before it was removed or access to it
was disabled. · The counter-notice must contain a statement
under penalty of perjury that the subscriber has a good faith
belief that the material was removed or disabled as a result
of mistake or misidentification of the material to be removed
or disabled. · The counter-notice must contain the
subscriber's name, address, and telephone number, and a statement
that the subscriber consents to the jurisdiction of Federal
District Court for the judicial district in which the subscriber's
address is located.
5. The copyright holder, upon receiving the subscriber's
counter-notice, must bring a copyright infringement lawsuit,
or the service provider is obligated to restore the removed
or disabled material.
The preceding is a Learn About Law staff article. From http://www.LearnAboutLaw.com/,
a collection of valuable and free legal resources: articles,
how-to guides, a free legal dictionary (at http://www.learnaboutlaw.com/Glossary/),
research tools, free forums (at http://www.learnaboutlaw.com/forums/),
Q&As, and self-help books.
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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