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Wal-Mart Parody Site Censored by DMCA

davidwr writes "Wal-Mart used the Digital Millenium Copyright Act to temporarily shut down a university student's parody of the Wal-Mart Foundation." The story's details are also available via BusinessWeek. From the article: "Papasian launched the Web site April 16 for an art class at Carnegie Mellon University called 'Parasitic Media.' The class teaches students about the political uses of satire in the media. He acknowledged using Wal-Mart's graphics on his Web site but said he believed he could use the images as part of a parody."

469 comments

  1. Just call it MalWart by aphor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you alter the content, they have no claim against DMCA. MalWart != WalMart.

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
    1. Re: Just call it MalWart by panda · · Score: 1, Funny

      I prefer to call it WalFart, myself.

      --
      Just be sure to wear the gold uniform when you beam down -- you know what happens when you wear the red one.
    2. Re: Just call it MalWart by Eric+Damron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And Lindows != Windows

      Oh, wait!

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    3. Re: Just call it MalWart by saintp · · Score: 3, Funny
      I prefer to call it WalFart, myself.
      "We smell for less"?
    4. Re: Just call it MalWart by guitaristx · · Score: 1

      Better shut this down, too.

      --
      I pity the foo that isn't metasyntactic
    5. Re: Just call it MalWart by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Are they going after the "Super China Buffet" too? When it opened here, they were pumping out flyers to get people to visit, including the statement that they were in the same parking lot as "Wart-Mart".

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    6. Re: Just call it MalWart by graphicsguy · · Score: 1

      We used to prefer the name WaitMart, for their fabulous check-out lines. Of course, WalMart is now irrelevant to us because we have Target.

    7. Re: Just call it MalWart by Kick+the+Donkey · · Score: 1
      For me, SprawlMart is much more accurate.

      Now I'm going to have Fox all over me for cr infringment...

      --
      /. is a bunch of nerds at a million typewriters. It's not a political conspiracy determined to undermine your beliefs.
    8. Re: Just call it MalWart by frantzdb · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you do that, you can use the DMCA. If they think MalWart has anything to do with WalMart, then they circumvented your encryption scheme.

    9. Re: Just call it MalWart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Are they going after the "Super China Buffet" too? When it opened here, they were pumping out flyers to get people to visit, including the statement that they were in the same parking lot as "Wart-Mart".

      I would think that this might also be an issue with them because (given the land of origin of a portion of their large line of merchandise), "Wart-Mart" might claim to be the original "Super China Buffet".

    10. Re: Just call it MalWart by WarPresident · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, they were "shut down" over this. Well, they crumbled under a C&D to pull the strip, anyway.

      --
      Here come da fudge!
    11. Re: Just call it MalWart by Bravoc · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of the old "microsnot.com" website. That's gone now too. Had very believable pages such as "Microsnot to aquire the Catholic Church" and such.

      Had great graphics and color scheme.

    12. Re: Just call it MalWart by uhoreg · · Score: 1
      And Lindows != Windows

      Uh, that was a trademark dispute. The DMCA is only related to copyright.

      --

      To get something done, a committee should consist of no more than three persons, two of them absent.

    13. Re: Just call it MalWart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The nearest Wal Mart to Kutztown, PA is in Temple.

      There happen to be mushroom houses there and quite often the air outside is rather... Fragrant...

      So, perhaps.

    14. Re: Just call it MalWart by thejake420 · · Score: 1

      HOnestly. his is just getting out of hand anymore. There has got to be a way to make these idiotic lawmakers see some sense. I mean, the whole DVD thing is bad enough (You are allowed to copy it, but you're not allowed to break the easily-defeatable-by-a-6-year-old copy protection to do so...), but this is way past the land of common sense.

      I don't suppose anybody here happens to have a part time job in the US Senate, huh? Oh well, it was worth a shot.

      Jake

      --
      Webmaster
      www.JakesJokes.com
    15. Re: Just call it MalWart by KillShill · · Score: 1

      tell me, is copyright "promoting science or the arts"?

      i say we repeal this artificial bullshit limit to natural systems.

      DMCA is evil blah blah blah.

      not even remotely as evil as copyright itself.

      we'd live in a much more productive and happier world if we didn't have such a festering malignant tumor on top of us.

      every day we have more stories about the crappy system of modern information inslavement. we hear the same whining, same stupid jokes, same apathetic behavior.

      i just don't see how intelligent, educated people can find even the remotest benefit to society that copyright provides.

      it started out as a means of censorship. that should have tipped people off as to what kind of monster it was and is.

      information doesn't want to be free.

      it always was and will be.

      only tyrants want to keep it bottled up and hidden away.

      cast out the money changers from the temple of information.

      --
      Science : Proprietary , Knowledge : Open Source
    16. Re: Just call it MalWart by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
      I prefer to call it WalFart, myself.
      In Québec, people call it Wall-Marde, where "marde" means "shit".
    17. Re: Just call it MalWart by millennial · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, the DMCA is not related to copyright. It's related to copyright circumvention. If a person downloads a movie/song off the internet, or shares a song, they are NOT in violation of the DMCA, regardless of what the *AA want you to think.
      The DMCA makes it illegal to either willfully circumvent a copyright prevention technology, or to create a technology that does. Most CDs still have no copyright protection. If you share or download a ripped non-protected CD, you are not violating the DMCA, because you didn't circumvent any protection measures. If you share a movie, however, it is likely that you have somehow violated the DMCA; downloading a movie, however, does not.
      Remember, kids: the DMCA does not modify USC Title 17 (federal copyright law). It has nothing to do with the enforcement of copyrights.

      --
      I am scientifically inaccurate.
  2. Foolish boy... by meringuoid · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ... didn't he read the clause about 'if and only if you have the legal resources to make an argument about it'?

    Exceptions to copyright for parody, fair use, etc. only apply to those who have lawyers.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    1. Re:Foolish boy... by reezle · · Score: 1

      "Exceptions to copyright for parody, fair use, etc. only apply to those who have lawyers"

      Wonderful way to put it. This one will have to go in my scrap book.

      All my mods are belong to you... (Sorry I have none today)

    2. Re:Foolish boy... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Fair use in parody only applies if you're not using their exact graphics/trademarks. If you are you're violating their copyrights, and possibly open for libel/fraud depending on what you're attributing to the company.

      I don't know why this would fall under the DMCA, other than the fact that its a website. Standard copyright/trademark law would apply.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    3. Re:Foolish boy... by schon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Fair use in parody only applies if you're not using their exact graphics/trademarks.

      Bullshit. Try reading section 107 of the copyright act.

      If you are you're violating their copyrights

      Again, pure bullshit. Use of a work for parody is *NOT* a copyright violation.

      possibly open for libel/fraud depending on what you're attributing to the company

      It's not fraud unless you claim that you are the entity in question, and it's only libel if the claims are false, and only in some situations (libel is more difficult to prove against public entities.)

      Standard copyright/trademark law would apply.

      Yes, and because it's parody, it has an exception under Section 107 - so he's protected.

    4. Re:Foolish boy... by nickname225 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I am a lawyer - althought Copyright is not my area of expertise... anyway - the standard for parody is something like - is a a reasonable person likley to confuse the parody work as the work of the original. It sounds like no reasonable person would confuse this guys work as an actual wal-mart site.. But as noted above those kinds of arguments can be expensive to prove and that protection really does only apply to those who can afford to at least get the issue in fromt of a judge and ask for dismissal or summary judgment. Waht would that cost in a case like this - figure with discovery and drafting and filing fees - maybe as much as 10,000 and up. Easy to see why this college student just folded.

    5. Re:Foolish boy... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Legal precident sez you're wrong.

      Deere & Co. v. MTD Products, Inc., 41 F.3d 39 (2d Cir. 1994).

      Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, Inc. v. Pussycat Cinema, Ltd., 604 F.2d 200, 206 (2d Cir. 1979).

      Libel applies whereever you attribute something in writing to someone who does not hold that belief. It is always legally actionable.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    6. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But does he have stairs in his house?

    7. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it sad that people find expletives so debilitating to an argument.

    8. Re:Foolish boy... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 2, Informative

      It sounds like no reasonable person would confuse this guys work as an actual wal-mart site.

      Go to his site and click on the Cease and Desist PDF. After looking at the screenshots they presented, I'd say Walmart has a pretty good case for unfair use of copyrighted material. Not to mention all the trademarks he appropriated in this stunt...

    9. Re:Foolish boy... by schon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thanks for replying, it's good to get some feedback from someone "in the field" (even if it's only tangentally related.)

      anyway - the standard for parody is something like - is a a reasonable person likley to confuse the parody work as the work of the original

      Yes, however I believe that deciding if something is a parody or not is a different issue than whether a parody is protected.

      The previous poster said that parody is not considered fair use, and that it's a violation of copyright to use someone else's material in a parody, and I was correcting him (or her?)

      those kinds of arguments can be expensive to prove

      Which is why we (well me, and probably the people who modded me up :o) are outraged.

      protection really does only apply to those who can afford to at least get the issue in fromt of a judge

      Which (again) is another issue entirely - and (if I may say) is a sad, sad comment on the state of free speech in the country that claims to value its' freedom so much.

    10. Re:Foolish boy... by mattjb0010 · · Score: 1

      Libel applies whereever you attribute something in writing to someone who does not hold that belief. It is always legally actionable.

      RTFA, it's not about libel, but copyright infringment, so your precedents are irrelevant. There are legal precedents where use of copyright materials are allowed, such as those listen in section 2 here.

    11. Re:Foolish boy... by schon · · Score: 1
      From law.com's definition of libel
      The rules covering libel against a "public figure" (particularly a political or governmental person) are special, based on U.S. Supreme Court decisions.
      I think you should read this, specifically the part about The statement or other material constitutes a fair comment - that is, a comment or opinion on a matter of public concern being a defense against libel charges.

      It is always legally actionable.

      *Anything* is actionable - whether or not it's *winnable* is another matter entirely.
    12. Re:Foolish boy... by cfulmer · · Score: 1

      Uh, wrong...

      (1) Deere & Co was decided under NY trademark law, *not* federal copyright law. Secondly, it wasn't a straight parody case -- a competitor was using the parody to sell a competing product. Didn't you read the case? (p. 44) "Satirists, selling no product other than the publication that contains their expression, may wish to parody a mark to make a point of social commentary . . . Such uses risk some dilution of the identifying or selling power of the mark, but that risk is generally tolerated in the interest of maintaining broad opportunities for expression."

      (2) Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders also was not a parody case. In fact, if you look at the page you cite to, it says ". . . the doctrine of fair use permits limited copyright infringement for purposes of parody."

      If you think about it, parodies have to make some use of the original copyright material, if only to remind people of the original. As Justice Souter said, 'When parody takes aim at a particular original work, the parody must be able to "conjure up" at least enough of that original to make the object of its critical wit recognizable.' Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569, 588 (1994).

      IANAL -- don't take this message as legal advice.

    13. Re:Foolish boy... by hey! · · Score: 1

      The Deere case, if I recall, was a trademark case. A competitor did a commercial which had the JD deer jumping around or something stupid like that. It was indeed parodying Deer's trademark, but they got in trouble for misusing the trademark, not Deere's creative expression.

      However, this was a commerical misuse of Deere's trademark. I'm not sure that this would apply to a social or political parody. After all, if the Republicans registered a trademark for their elephant, would that mean it couldn't be used in political cartoons? I don't think so.

      Or course, I don't know. I am not a lawyer, my only way to find out about these things is to encourage other people to do legally risky things and see what happens to them.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    14. Re:Foolish boy... by Bradee-oh! · · Score: 1

      I checked out section 107 and was suprised to see Fair Use coverage was broader than I'd thought! Section 107 never actually uses the specific word "parody." However, I think looking at the actual language used is directly applicable to this case and alot easier to substantiate in defense -

      "the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright."

      If this Walmart site was anything other than "criticism (and) comment," then someone please explain why my perceptions are way off.

      --
      "This is Zombo Com, and welcome to you who have come to Zombo Com" - www.zombo.com
    15. Re:Foolish boy... by slapout · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Saturday Night Live uses the exact graphics from other companies in their paraodies. But then again SNL isn't very funny, so maybe that doesn't count...

      --
      Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    16. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's one for you and the mods of this site ...

      F*** YOU!

      Hey, maybe now I'll be modded up for lowering myself to you and the mod's level.

    17. Re:Foolish boy... by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps, but what does the DMCA have to do with it? The very fact that Walmart chose to cry "DMCA violation!" tells me they know they don't have a case and are just trying (successfully) to intimidate the guy.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    18. Re:Foolish boy... by Temsi · · Score: 2, Interesting

      *Anything* is actionable - whether or not it's *winnable* is another matter entirely.

      Exactly, and until the US legal system starts making those who sue and lose, pay for the defendant's legal costs, corporations and others with lots of funding, will continue to use the legal system as a business tool, used for intimidation and career advancement.

      Until the legal system is changed so it applies equally to all people and not just those who can afford a good lawyer, corporations will continue to get away with all sorts of shit, at the expense of our rights.

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    19. Re:Foolish boy... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Informative

      The DCMA has a clause that allows copyright holders to force an ISP to remove infringing content. (This letter was directed at the ISP.) All that's required to get the ISP off the hook is for the website owner to write a response saying that he feels he has a right to the materials he is publishing. The DCMA then *requires* that the ISP restore the material, as they are no longer responsible for its trafficing.

    20. Re:Foolish boy... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      figure with discovery and drafting and filing fees - maybe as much as 10,000 and up

      Yes, but that's true of virtually ANY threatened litigation. It would be the same if Walmart threatened to sue him for looking crosseyed at Sam Walton.

      That's a very different problem in our legal system for which the DMCA does not deserve the blame.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    21. Re:Foolish boy... by Craig_P92669 · · Score: 0

      I'm a gynecologist - and I can still spell better than "lawyers."

      --
      http://xs4.xs.to/pics/04481/p556222.gif
    22. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Use of a work for parody is *NOT* a copyright violation.....because it's parody, it has an exception under Section 107 - so he's protected."

      this is "pure bullshit" - parody does NOT grant you rights to use trakemarks

    23. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, but that's true of virtually ANY threatened litigation. It would be the same if Walmart threatened to sue him for looking crosseyed at Sam Walton.

      It's pretty easy to get a judge to drop a frivalous case.

      That's a very different problem in our legal system for which the DMCA does not deserve the blame.

      The DMCA is to blame because it forces ISPs to pull the plug without due process.

    24. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As a matter of fact, parody is not automatically protected by the fair use clause. The courts have generally taken the position that a parody is protected by fair use only if the parodist used the minimum copyrighted material necessary.

      So please, please stop acting like a lawyer. You keep putting your foot in your mouth by not knowing basic things like this. There's a lot more to the law than a simple reading of the statutes.

    25. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      After looking at the screenshots they presented, I'd say Walmart has a pretty good case for unfair use of copyrighted material.

      All I see it parady, which is clearly fair use. As far as trademarks, he's not selling anything and the DMCA doesn't apply to trademarks.

    26. Re:Foolish boy... by zeromentat · · Score: 1

      Your right, looking at the screenshots, you wouldn't notice that it was a parody until you were reading the articles. I'd say for once it looks like someone was using the law for what it was intended for, to prevent copywright infringement, though unintentional it may have been.

      --
      Gotta move .. gotta go!
    27. Re:Foolish boy... by torokun · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice.

      I'm a law student, but I think your description may be a bit misleading. Consumer confusion is usually more relevant to the trademark issues, although it may be considered under the question of substantial similarity in the copyright infringement inquiry.

      He used walmart-foundation rather than walmartfoundation in the URL. This could easily lead to what's called initial interest confusion, where consumers are siphoned away from a legitimate site by a confusing label. This can be a basis for a claim of trademark infringement. If he had used walmart-foundation-sucks or something similar, it would avoid this problem. Also, there's a big trademark dilution law getting ready to go through, that will increase the likelihood that trademark owners can succeed in suits for 'tarnishing' or 'blurring' of their mark, e.g. by associating it with pornography.

      As for parody, the more important considerations are of fair use, such as whether the parody is criticizing or commenting on the actual work that's copied, whether the copier has taken more than what he needed in order to make the parodic point, whether the use is commercial, and the effect of the parody on the market for the works.

    28. Re:Foolish boy... by johnpaul191 · · Score: 1

      well maybe Walmart legal was trying to say he obviously downloaded the actual .gif and uploaded it on his webspace, and that is why it is a DMCA issue?

      yes, i read the article... but it is about as long as my response so we are all guessing here.

      there are some very specific issues for parody uses, but i think he would have been ok. it's another medium, but shows like Saturday Night Live use the parody loophole to do all their spoofs of movies or TV shows. they do not get permission from anyone, and they profit from it.

    29. Re:Foolish boy... by js7a · · Score: 1

      You are saying that you think a bunch of big picket signs saying "Please Vote No" above a caption saying "WalMart Unites Communities" could be reasonably seen as an actual WalMart site? If that's a pretty good case for confusion in your mind, then I salute all five of your brain cells.

    30. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Neither of you are quite right. Parody may be listed as an example of fair use under section 107, but every claimed fair use must be subjected to the 4 factor analysis given in section 107 (just to give an example: though it lists education as an example of fair use, there are nevertheless educational uses that would be unfair, such as distributing entire copies of the book). The fact that the site is not commercial & is an exercise of critical speech is in its favor, but the wholesale use of the graphics is a negative factor (extent of use of CR material). Unfortunately, it is pretty difficult to look at something like this and presumptively call it fair use - particularly when the parody does seem to be a bit subtle...

      As far as the definition of parody being offered up, the one given mentioning confusion is more of a trademark, rather than copyright standard. TM law focuses on likely consumer confusion as the main element in its analysis. Under copyright, parody has a broader definition, which basically translates to using the original material in order to make fun of the author or work itself.

      Though the website may claim parodic use, the flat-out copying is a problem. This doesn't look like something that needed to be filed under the DMCA - standard CR law would have worked.

      WalMart hasn't even filed a TM claim yet. There's going to be domain name issues (Bosley Medical aside) AND in a TM claim, the confusion will be an issue, and it looks pretty bad here...

    31. Re:Foolish boy... by teromajusa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      until the US legal system starts making those who sue and lose, pay for the defendant's legal costs, corporations and others with lots of funding, will continue to use the legal system as a business tool, used for intimidation and career advancement.

      A corporation can easily afford to pay the legal bills of their opponent if they loose. How many individuals can say the same? Individuals would be even less likely to face off against corporations if the consequences of loosing was a mamoth corporate legal bill. You'd only attempt it if you were certain to win - and how often in legal disputes is victory certain?

    32. Re:Foolish boy... by operagost · · Score: 1

      A copyright is not the same as a trademark. A copyright is held on a written, audio, or visual art, while a trademark is held on a visual representation of the compant. For example, Disney holds a copyright on "Steamboat Willie," which would expire if Congress would stop extending copyright durations. But the image of Mickey Mouse is a trademark, which can be extended indefinitely. If Steamboat Willie's copyright expires, you will be able to sell copies of the movie but you still won't be able to sell Mickey Mouse T-shirts. That being said, it is legal to use trademarks in works of parody so this is an abuse of the DMCA.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    33. Re:Foolish boy... by 1ucius · · Score: 1

      >I don't know why this would fall under the DMCA, >other than the fact that its a website. Standard >copyright/trademark law would apply. I agree. The only DMCA provisions that comes to mind are safeharbor provisions. Ironically, those provisions help the individual/ISP, not Walmart. I'm guessing the reporter(s) saw "DMCA" in the C&D and were too lazy to look up the cited sections (or wanted to drive up their hitcount, for those conspiracy nuts out there).

    34. Re:Foolish boy... by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      The funny thing was, he didn't even lower himself to your level. He just mentioned that getting your panties twisted in a knot over a swear is completely ridiculous. I could understand you getting upset over poor grammar and the inability to understand what the moron posting it is trying to say, but it's not as if the expletive hinders your ability to understand their point. In some ways, it clarifies it.

      I imagine if you got to use the word "fuck" a lot more often, you wouldn't feel so compelled to tell a stranger "fuck you" all the time. But I guess that's what happens when you can't express yourself properly - you start running into anger issues.

    35. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's DMCA - how is that difficult to get right?! You can't all be dyslexic.

    36. Re:Foolish boy... by Artifakt · · Score: 1

      Most corporations don't think they can afford the publicity costs of having sued and lost. Having a judge dismiss over some "technical point" in process can be spun to the public as a neutral settlement. "A pays all B's costs" makes a loss look like a loss - the public reads that as "A did something crooked".
      The people inside corporations who decide whether a given lawsuit is worth persueing also can't afford the hit to their career that comes from repeatedly paying out to plantiffs.
      When a corporation gets big enough to afford its own internal legal department, they basically pay so many thousand a year for services, regardless of the number of cases (yes, that's a simplification - most companies have to pay some costs for outside consutation and of course filing fees and such, but, the total cost is pretty close to flat).
      The person running a legal department needs to win most of the time, to look good to his boss. BUT, legal isn't like an R&D department (there to make the company more profitable, and if it doesn't, get rid of it), it's often there to keep someone else from taking all the marbles, or just because it's something you have to have.
      The person making decisions to sue/not sue can often show the company a set of fixed, yearly costs for legal, that would be the same whether they sue anyone or not, and a much smaller set of variable costs that come from deciding to actually sue. Paying out, even if for only the most unjustifiable lawsuits, would all show up in that second category, which would actually help companies judge the worth of their legal dept. better.
      Now as you've shown, the consequences work both ways, and the same people who are intimidated by a company's deep pockets now are going to have problems with increased risks. Personally, I'd say changing the law would help, not if it became a blanket policy that any loser pays, but if it became something invoked when the case is genuinely frivolous. The one reason I doubt this, you haven't stated, but it's a big arguement for your position: Investors are flat-out idiots when it comes to corporate lawyers, and already lose huge sums of money to them all the time without it buying them a clue, so more legal penalties won't make it any better.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    37. Re:Foolish boy... by penix1 · · Score: 1

      "Also, there's a big trademark dilution law getting ready to go through, that will increase the likelihood that trademark owners can succeed in suits for 'tarnishing' or 'blurring' of their mark, e.g. by associating it with pornography."

      And the funny thing that is pushing this legislation is www.whitehouse.com (a porn site that has been the thorn of presidents since the creation of the web). The legislation is also beamed at cyber-squatters. It allows celeberty entities (white house included) to reclaim their domain. I don't know if it will ever pass or if it was already squeeked though on some other legislation (like most other bad laws get passed).

      B.

      --
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    38. Re:Foolish boy... by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      But I would say that you would notice that it was a parody. I'd go so far as to say that to me it is pretty clearly a parody. So at what level do we pitch this? If there is this much allowance for people who do not notice then surely the law should err on the side of the observant? Or must satirists poll people to ensure they are targeting the lowest common denominator?

      Addendum: I'm not calling the parent a "low-denominator" because he says it isn't immediately apparent that it is a parody to him. We all are familiar with different things, and as he says - once you read the articles it becomes apparent. So if you read the articles then you know it's a parody, and if you don't read the articles then what is Walmart concerned about... he's saving them bandwidth. ;)

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    39. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think one of the biggest problems with the DMCA is that *you can't even find the actual text of it*. Granted, I've (only) spent 10 minutes trying to find it using Google, with keywords of "DMCA" or *DMCA text", but I'm only finding reports of findings & such...

      I would think that if I was trying to find the actual text of something, it would be the FIRST item in the list.

      Remember, knowledge is power. Those in power don't necessarily want people to be informed.

    40. Re:Foolish boy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      someone please explain why my perceptions are way off.
      Because your reading of the statute is selective. You're ignoring the part about the "amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole." You are also ignoring the court's interpretation of the statute, which has already spoken to the issues brought up by this incident.

      The important standard here is necessity. Did he copy more than was necessary to conjure up the original site in the mind of the audience? Yes, I believe he did. There is no legitimate reason he had to use the exact same graphics and layout, rather than graphics which were merely similar (laziness not being a legal defense.)

    41. Re:Foolish boy... by Phisbut · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Your right, looking at the screenshots, you wouldn't notice that it was a parody until you were reading the articles.

      If you don't read the articles, then you think it's a legitimate WalMart website. Then what? Since the images are WalMart's own images, it doesn't harm WalMart that you see those images, does it?

      It's only the content of the articles that could potentially harm WalMart, but when you read them, you quickly realize that it is a parody, therefore it's no longer copyright infrigement.

      Either way, there's no harm done to WalMart, or at least not in a way that their lawyers can work on.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    42. Re:Foolish boy... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      As another poster has noted, you're thinking of trademark issues, not copyright issues.

      The four factors for copyright fair use (which parodies generally rely upon) are at 17 USC 106. From what it sounds as though the purported infringer here did, I think it would be a fair use, in that he was basically taking what he needed to in order to draw the associations for his parody, without providing a substitute for the original. (This is a gross summation of the real analysis, but I don't want to get into the nitty gritty)

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    43. Re:Foolish boy... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Trade you. ;)

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    44. Re:Foolish boy... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      That would be a really bad idea. After all, most lawsuits are based in honest disputes. You'd be severely penalizing the loser for what might be mere bad luck, and not bad faith.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    45. Re:Foolish boy... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Those are examples of what might be fair use, but they're just illustrative. Nothing says that criticism is always fair.

      The four factors enumerated in the statute are the important part. You need to read the language written there more carefully.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    46. Re:Foolish boy... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      Actually this is not all that clear.

      Trademarks cannot act as a quasi-copyright or quasi-patent. It is not unusual for trademarks on copyrighted works or patented inventions to be lost upon the expiration of the other rights. E.g. the Shredded Wheat case.

      The trademark might last on shirts, but for entertainment services, books, movies, etc. a Mickey Mouse trademark would probably hit the public domain in a big way if the Steamboat Willy copyright ran out.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    47. Re:Foolish boy... by Temsi · · Score: 1

      Isn't that the whole point? It would certainly do away with frivolous lawsuits.

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    48. Re:Foolish boy... by Xebikr · · Score: 1

      if the Steamboat Willy copyright ran out.

      ... Which it never will.

    49. Re:Foolish boy... by Temsi · · Score: 1

      I probably should have made it more clear, that I'm not for it being a blanket policy. Frankly, I'm against all blanket policies, as they usually mean you're not required to think about the situation at hand.

      But, if it was within the judge's realm, not just to dismiss a case with prejudice, but to add to that the option of slapping the cost of the lawsuit on the plaintiff, it would be a far better solution to frivolous lawsuits than putting a limit on potential damages.

      Moreover, it would give a small company the opportunity to recover after having been sued by a giant corporation whose only goal was to tie them up in court until they went broke, so they could grab their patents for next to nothing. Today, even if a corporation loses or the judge throws out the case as frivolous, the small company can be irreparably crippled due to the legal costs - both financially and in time spent. While they today have the option of suing the giant corporation to try to get their legal fees back, in many cases they're beyond repair financially and can't afford another trial... something the corporation depends on.
      With this option, they could live to work another day.

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    50. Re:Foolish boy... by teromajusa · · Score: 1

      not-certain != frivolous. There's a lot of room for uncertainty in the law, not to mention the human factor (disposition of the judge, quality of the lawyers etc).

    51. Re:Foolish boy... by G00F · · Score: 1

      Ok you say that, but I don't see anything that says that.

      Could you enlighten us lazy people with how you came to that conclusion?

      Not bashing you, but would be nice to have some facts.

      --
      The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    52. Re:Foolish boy... by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      Google is wonderful for these types of things. Here's a top rated result:

      Highlights Generally: [...] In general, limits Internet service providers from copyright infringement liability for simply transmitting information over the Internet.

      Section 202 of the DMCA describes this.

    53. Re:Foolish boy... by Temsi · · Score: 1

      again, not what I was saying...

      while this would certainly cut down on frivolous suits, it could also curtail risky suits... which may or may not be a good thing.

      Like I said. Not a blanket rule, just having it as an option for the judge...

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    54. Re:Foolish boy... by torokun · · Score: 1

      I'm not a big trademark buff, but from what I hear, it's definitely going to pass.

  3. This is waaaaay overblown... by FortKnox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is getting way to much press. Lemmie put it to you this way:
    Walmart Foundation: www.walmartfoundation.org
    Parody Site: www.walmart-foundation.org

    Walmart is NOT bitching about this.

    He basically has a site where people probably stumble onto when they are trying to go to a legit site. Walmart's ONLY beef was that he was using their images.

    I can't tell you how we ALL have known since the web was invented that you don't steal other peoples graphics. Sure, there may be some grey area with parodies, but its the same thing we knew when we were just getting into making HTML.

    But, since this kid wants press, he starts using "CENSORED BY THE DMCA" so we'll all cry fowl.
    He rolled the dice and lost... and all it was was over the stupid graphics.

    I say, "its an art class, how about making PARODIES of the IMAGES too?"

    No extra publicity in that, though...

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    1. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Funny
      I say, "its an art class, how about making PARODIES of the IMAGES too?"

      WalMart don't like his site using their graphics? Well, I'm sure some good Slashdotter will soon post a link to the image he should put up instead... I'm sure WalMart won't like their customers inadvertently staring into the Great Gaping Hole O' Horror, but hey, it's not their image, so screw 'em!

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    2. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Tuffsnake · · Score: 0

      FOWL!

    3. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Eradicator2k3 · · Score: 5, Funny

      he starts using "CENSORED BY THE DMCA" so we'll all cry fowl

      Uhmm....Chicken! Albatross! Swallow (African and European)! Emu! Canary! Oh, you meant foul.

      --
      Mr. T pitied this fool on 27 July 1992.
    4. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by NtroP · · Score: 0
      You work for Walmart don't you?

      I think I know you... You're that tall, skinny greater with the bow-tie!

      --
      "terrorism" and "pedophilia" are the root passwords to the Constitution
    5. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by schon · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Walmart is NOT bitching about this.

      You're right, they're not bitching, they're having their lawyers shut the place down.

      Walmart's ONLY beef was that he was using their images.

      Which is irrelevant, as (according to Section 107 of the US Copyright act) it was fair use:
      Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified in that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright.

      Parody is both criticism and commentary.

      there may be some grey area with parodies

      Uh, no. There is no gray - it is very much black and white.

      he starts using "CENSORED BY THE DMCA" so we'll all cry fowl

      And rightly so. His First Amendment rights are being violated.
    6. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Even if he did copy their graphics and logos and so on, their lawyers asked the entire site to be made offline.

      How is that fair? By all means, use the DMCA and whatever other laws to request that he remove the offending graphics. But remove the site from public access? That, too, is crossing the line.

      Also, IANAL, but aren't parodies deemed fair use?

    7. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by FortKnox · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I actually detest Walmart and all it stands for, and my current client (i'm a contractor) is one of their direct competitors.

      I just hate it when people overhype crap to get attention.

      --
      Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    8. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2, Informative
      You've got it backwards.

      Parody Site: www.walmart-foundation.org

      Walmart is NOT bitching about this.

      That's the part they should be bitching about because people could get mislead into thinking that it's the actual WalMart site. The URL should be changed.

      I can't tell you how we ALL have known since the web was invented that you don't steal other peoples graphics. Sure, there may be some grey area with parodies, but its the same thing we knew when we were just getting into making HTML.

      Every week Saturday Night Live uses the exact intro graphics and theme music from other shows that they are paodying. I guess nobody told them that they can't "steal" other peopls' graphics. That's probably because they actually *can* "steal" other peoples' graphics if it's a parody.

    9. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Dude should've called his site something like "mywalmartfoundation.org" and changed the graphics. Then Wal-Mart would still be mad, would likely still huff and puff, but they wouldn't have a leg to stand on.

      I bet OSTG would have a problem if someone came up with a parody site called slash-dot.com, and used the same graphics.

    10. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by jvv62 · · Score: 1
      Every week Saturday Night Live uses the exact intro graphics and theme music from other shows that they are paodying. I guess nobody told them that they can't "steal" other peopls' graphics. That's probably because they actually *can* "steal" other peoples' graphics if it's a parody.
      Actually I suspect they ask permission. A friend of mine worked as an assstant to the producer many years ago, and one of his tasks was to contact the owners of copyrighted or trademarked materials and ask permission to use them on the show. Most of the time folks were pleased to get the exposure.
      --
      -John Van Voorhis
    11. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Threni · · Score: 1

      > His First Amendment rights are being violated.

      Looks like the URLs are pretty similar to me. Perhaps that's the problem, only the lawyers thought it'd be easier to shut him up if they went after the images.

    12. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Threni · · Score: 1

      > so we'll all cry fowl.

      Cluck cluck clUUUUUUUUUUUCK!

      Oh, you meant 'foul'! My..uh, I mean your mistake!

    13. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Not only is it criticism and commentary, but this is a student engaged in an activity directly related to scholarship, so that's three counts in his favour.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    14. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by jvv62 · · Score: 1
      If he can show that his use is non-infringing and that the Walmart Foundation lawyers should have known that then 17 USC 512(f) (a later part of the section cited in the cease and desist letter) states:
      (f) Misrepresentations.-- Any person who knowingly materially misrepresents under this section-- (1) that material or activity is infringing, or (2) that material or activity was removed or disabled by mistake or misidentification, shall be liable for any damages, including costs and attorneys' fees, incurred by the alleged infringer, by any copyright owner or copyright owner's authorized licensee, or by a service provider, who is injured by such misrepresentation, as the result of the service provider relying upon such misrepresentation in removing or disabling access to the material or activity claimed to be infringing, or in replacing the removed material or ceasing to disable access to it.
      [emphasis added]
      So he will be able to get his lawyer fees covered by Walmart.
      --
      -John Van Voorhis
    15. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Walmart's ONLY beef was that he was using their images.

      Which is silly. A copyright case would be DOA in court if the guy bothered to fight it. Indeed, his site could go back online immediately simply by presenting a letter to the effect that, "I, soandso at this address certify that I am making fair use of the graphics under the parody exception to copyright law. Restore the site." If the ISP refused to restore the site, they'd actually be breaking the law!

      Walmart should have gone after the trademark issue. They actually has a legitimate case here for trademark infringement. There are no protections in trademark law for using someone's trademark for parody.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    16. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I tend to think that the use of original images without altering the images means: 1) Wal-Mart had a right to ask him to use other images and 2) he's a pretty poor art student with feel for parody.

      I graduated from an art school, and I bet anything that he was hoping to have his site shut down so that he could gain publicity and a little notoriety through controversy. Crappy artists LOVE controversy, because it lends false legitimacy to otherwise lazy work. (Not all controversial art is lazy, but a lot of lazy work milks controversy.)

      I would also bet that he has an over-zealous teacher telling him that sticking up that notice that replaced his original parody also makes for great art. Art teachers love to live vicariously through their students.

      I feel as though it's lame to do your best to get censored, and then make a big fuss out of it when you DO. And, again, he wasn't really censored, Wal-Mart merely asked him to remove pictures. Someone with imagination or skill would have then put up his own. It's just so much easier (and garners more undeserved attention) to cry censorship.

      I hate Wal-Mart, but I can't fault them for this. I can't wait until the current trend in fine-art shifts, and we get some artists with some real ideas.

    17. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      His First Amendment rights are being violated.

      Well, no. He had the option under the DMCA to file a refutation requiring that the site be put back online pending the resolution of any lawsuit that Walmart wished to file. He chose not to.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    18. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are you suspecting if you have second hand knowledge of their methods? Either you're making your source up or you don't trust him very much.

    19. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Maffy · · Score: 1

      Uh, no. There is no gray - it is very much black and white.

      I'm not a lawyer. I suspect you aren't either.

      As I understand the situation, the author of the website wrote new text but copied many of the images. The parody was of Walmart's website's text, not the images.

      How much is covered under parody? Does section 107 permit copying of images that are not parody but are related to content that is?

      I don't know. Do you?

      I'm not suggesting that Walmart's lawyers are right or that the courts would uphold their complaint but I suspect the law is not as black-and-white as you suggest.

      Matt

    20. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      They may *ask* for permission, but are not required to get it. Ala "Weird Al" and "Coolio".

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    21. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by dr_dank · · Score: 3, Informative


      Uh, no. There is no gray - it is very much black and white.


      Not quite. Remember the case with Penny Arcade and American Greetings? They made a parody of their Strawberry Shortcake in the style of an American McGee's Alice game.

      IIRC, it wasn't protected as a parody since they weren't parodying Strawberry Shortcake, but using that character to parody something else (American McGee, in this case).

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    22. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by pete-classic · · Score: 5, Funny

      As it turns out, the distinction between foul and fowl is an albatross for many.

      -Peter

    23. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by uberdave · · Score: 1

      Weird Al (well, his record label people) did ask for permission, and his people told him that he had it, even though Coolio didn't, in reality, give permission.

    24. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by uberdave · · Score: 1

      If the ISP refused to restore the site, they'd actually be breaking the law!

      What law? I don't think the ISP is under any legal obligation one way or the other. It is entirely at their discretion whether they wish to host a site or not.

    25. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Booooooooo!!

    26. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by The+Dobber · · Score: 1


      Go Emu, Go Emu !!

    27. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by schon · · Score: 1

      As I understand the situation, the author of the website wrote new text but copied many of the images.

      Correct.

      The parody was of Walmart's website's text, not the images.

      No, the entire site was the parody. By your logic, if I write and record a parody of a song by changing the lyrics, can I be sued for copyright infringement? After all, the parody would be they lyrics, not the music, right?

      Does section 107 permit copying of images that are not parody but are related to content that is?

      Ye. When determining if something is a parody or not, you take the work as a whole, not individual pieces.

      I suspect the law is not as black-and-white as you suggest.

      I disagree. Parody is not an infringement of copyright (black and white.) Deciding whether something is a parody is another matter entirely.

    28. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      But at least he's able to spell simple words like "Greeter", you simple minded fuckhead.

    29. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      >How is that fair?

      Due process of law, presumably with every opportunity to have hearings, no requirement to take any action without a court order, jury trials, opportunities for counterclaims, etc.

      There's also the opporutnity to surrender your rights upon receiving the first piece of correspondence from adverse counsel, and give up your right to due process of law.

      If you live in a state that guarantees you a hearing on these matters, then have the hearing. Get a jury on it.

    30. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      What law?

      The one we're talking about. The DMCA.

      The ISP is under a legal obligation to take down the site upon receiving notice from the folks alleging infringement. They're under the same obligation to restore it after receiving notice from the alleged infringer. If they fail to do either one, they're liable under the provision in the DMCA.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    31. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      And the procedure is clearly "on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard'." Do you really expect a student to be conversant enough in the DCMA to defend against Walmart? That's the dampening effect on free speech. Sure you have it, if you also have the time, funds and expertise to excerise it against other private citizens who just happen to own capital.

    32. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      I actually detest Walmart and all it stands for

      So you like high prices, low selection and very few stores to go to, all of which are closed for most of the day?

      :)
      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    33. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by jcsehak · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but it looks like section 107 applies to copyrighted work only. It doesn't say anything about trademarks, which have different rules.

      --

      c-hack.com |
    34. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

      And boy did THAT blow up in American Greetings face. The NEXT parody was directly aimed for the genitals...

      I am sure that American Greetings is going to think long and hard about the results the next time...

      Ratboy.

      --
      Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
    35. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His First Amendment rights are being violated
      A bunch of lawyers and a judge say different. But hey, you probably know more about the law then they do.

    36. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Allen+Zadr · · Score: 1
      My recollection is that Penny Arcade simply didn't have the requisite 10000 to 25000 it would have taken to fight the cease and desist.

      http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?date=2003-04 -14&res=l

      --
      Kinetic stupidity has a new brand leader: Allen Zadr.
    37. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by YomikoReadman · · Score: 1

      Go back through their archives, they pulled that due to legal pressure and their inability to protect themselves at that point in time. It was protected by section 107, however if you don't have the resources to pursue a defense, then your best other option is to simply capitulate, which is the case here. IMO, they were parodying an American Greetings character in the style of American McGee, and see nothing wrong with that. American Greetings simply didn't like the idea of their character appearing in such a manner. Ultimately, it's the exact same thing that is happening here; an entity is being parodied in a way that the copyright owner does not want to see them portrayed, and is using their legal mass to put it down. I stopped supporting American Greetings after that incident, and I'll stop supporting Wal-Mart after this one. My 2 cents.

      --
      I have no regrets, this is the only path.
      My whole life has been "UNLIMITED BLADE WORKS"
    38. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by lbmouse · · Score: 1

      They grey area is who gets to judge if it is parody, criticism, and/or commentary? I could rip someone's site off to sell my product and cry "parody" when they come knocking.

      If the student had at least made some sort of disclaimer effort, the line would be much sharper in this case.

    39. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Ignorance of one's rights has always had a dampening effect on the exercise of one's rights. That's hardly the law's fault.

      This guy registered a domain and set up a web site. I'd hope he has enough intelligence to do a Google search on "dmca notice my rights". The third link is http://www.chillingeffects.org/notice.cgi?NoticeID =232 . The bottom has a FAQ list, the last quesion of which is, "What are the counter-notice and put-back procedures?"

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    40. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by CyberSp00k · · Score: 1

      So what he created was a web site 'emu'-lation?

      --
      Spiritus ex Machina
      "The universe is not only stranger than we imagine, it's stranger than we CAN imagine."
    41. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes... one that was hard for WalMart to 'swallow'.

    42. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      (according to Section 107 of the US Copyright act) it was fair use
      Only by a very naive reading of the law, which selectively omits certain parts such as:
      In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include [...] the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole
      Looking at the page as a whole, those two images take up 50% of the screen area. This by itself calls fair use into question. It would be hard to deny that he used considerably more of the site than was necessary to make his point.

      Furthermore, if the law views these two images as distinct copyrighted works, separate from the page as a whole, fair use would likely not apply for two reasons: 1) he used the images in their entirety, and 2) he was not attempting to parody the images themselves.

    43. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      He chose not to.
      I think that should read "He could not afford to". Or do you think that if he filed an amateur refutation that it would really get him anywhere?
      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    44. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. But Coolio could not sue even though permission was not given. Weird Al stated that he never does parody songs without permission, and has, for example, not done a parody of Prince's 'Purple Rain' (I think) for this reason.
      He further stated this is not a legal requirement, just an attempt to keep relations between him and the music industry on good terms.

      I, for one, always make my legal decisions based on Weird Al quotes.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    45. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by uberdave · · Score: 1

      Yikes!

      "That site infringes my copyright. Take it down!"
      "No, it doesn't. Put it back up!"
      "Yes it does. Take it down."
      "No it doesn't. Put it up."
      "It, like, so infringes"
      "Nuh-uh, does not."
      "Yes it does!"
      "No, it doesn't"
      "Yes"
      "No"

      ... and the ISP is under legal obligation to follow all this? That's crazy.

    46. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      Walmart should have gone after the trademark issue.
      I thought that Trademark was industry specific. For example, couldn't I create a pillow company and name it Microsoft (becaue my pillows are micro-soft) since I am not in direct competition with MS? I also thought you could use a Trademark as long as you did not derive any income from that Trademark. For example, say I was able to get the domain name www.microsoft.org. As long as I didn't derive income from that site, wouldn't I be OK?

      I also thought that people were allowed to use a Trademark in many situations. For example, couldn't I create a publication about McDonald's(tm), and publish it with the tradmarked term McDonald's(tm)?

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    47. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by fireboy1919 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ah yes...I can see how that applies.

      Just as the images of Strawberry Shortcake were being used to parody something other than Strawberry Shortcake, the trademark images of Walmart are being used to parody something other than...wait a minute...

      They're parodying Walmart with images of Walmart. I call Red Herring on you, Dr Dank. This is a pretty clear example of classic parody.

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    48. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

      Ignorance of one's rights has always had a dampening effect on the exercise of one's rights. That's hardly the law's fault.

      Then what's the deal with Miranda v. Arizona? Perhaps DMCA-invoking companies should be required to notify their targets of avenues of recourse?

      That might be a good idea, and it might not. I'm no legal expert.

    49. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by dr_dank · · Score: 1

      Point taken. I was thinking along the lines of Walmarts trademarks being used to parody corporatism in general, but then again, Walmart pretty much embodies corporatism in general.

      Red herring? I prefer shennanigans!

      Now wheres my broom?....

      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    50. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you like high prices, low selection and very few stores to go to, all of which are closed for most of the day?

      And you like buying cheap goods from China, made by prisoners, slaves, and children? You like taking food out of the mouths of Americans?

    51. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by SomeGuyFromCA · · Score: 1

      no, it only happens once.

      <copyright owner> hey isp, site such-and-such infringes my copyright. take it down.
      * isp takes it down
      <site webmaster> i hereby affirm that site such-and-such does not infringe their copyright.
      * isp puts it back up
      <copyright owner> hey isp, site such-and-such infringes my copyright. take it down.
      <isp> no, the site owner affirmed it doesn't. go sue him. we're out of it.

      --
      if the answer isn't violence, neither is your silence / freedom of expression doesn't make it alright
    52. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Ioldanach · · Score: 1

      Nope, the one complaining gets one take-down request, the one being complained against gets one put-back request. After that, the courts have to issue a ruling of some sort to force a change in status. Unless someone folds, of course.

    53. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      I thought that Trademark was industry specific.

      Sort of. It often works that way in practice, but its not how its defined.

      Shell Gasoline, for instance, can't win a suit against Shell Beachware but they can win against a Shell Auto Maintenance.

      On the other hand, Exxon can win against just about everybody because Exxon is a made-up word that doesn't exist anywhere else.

      couldn't I create a publication about McDonald's(tm), and publish it with the tradmarked term McDonald's(tm)?

      Yes. Maybe. Infringement is in how you use it. If you published a parody "McDonalds' Cookbook" you'd probably be infriging. On the other hand, the movie "Supersize Me" was very obviously not infriging even though it referred to McDonalds constantly.

      I'm not sure, but I think label=infringement while reference=not infringement.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    54. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL, but it looks like section 107 applies to copyrighted work only. It doesn't say anything about trademarks, which have different rules.

      And if you read the fucking takedown notice, you'll see that it doesn't mention trademarks once, but it does refer to the guy's use of copyrighted pictures.

      And if you look at the name of the law that was invoked, you'll notice that it isn't the "Digital Millenium Trademark Act".

      So, in fact, Wal-Mart's lawyers seem to think the question is one of copyrights, and that's what the parody exemption covers too. So section 107 is relevant.

    55. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      You have to say:

      1. This is my name and address.
      2. I certify under penalty of purjury that the material is not infringing.
      3. Signature.

      That's it. The formula is easy to find on Google. This ain't the dark ages where data mining was restricted to specialists. Anybody can Google.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    56. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by monophaze · · Score: 1

      Here is the lawyer from the letter if you are interested...
      JANET F. SATTERTHWAITE :)

    57. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by AstroDrabb · · Score: 1
      Anybody can Google.
      They sure can. However you do have to know what to Google for. For example, if you just Google for refutation the results are not that helpful. Trying copyright refutation or DMCA refutation didn't help much either. Also, I doubt most non-lawyers are familiar with the DMCA or copyright law and what is allowed under those laws. I think most people would be scared off.
      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    58. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by kleinux · · Score: 1

      I wonder what this did for his grade?

    59. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by johnny+cashed · · Score: 1

      But Coolio had no standing to sue. Coolio "ripped" off Stevie Wonder's Pastime Paradise. When I say ripped, he used the chorus (slightly altered) and the melody. He added his own lyrics. I'm sure that Mr. Wonder was paid, so it really isn't infringement. Weird Al could have just dealt with Stevie Wonder I'm sure, because one could argue that his parody could have been based on Pastime Paradise. After all, Weird Al added his own lyrics and used the same slightly altered chorus. Coolio has no standing in this case. But I'm no lawyer.

    60. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Artifakt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I like high prices. I like buying hardware at a local store that competes with Walmart. I like the local hardware store being closed after 5:30, even though the sink may have started leaking at 9 PM. I like getting up at 2 in the morning to empty a bucket, on a weekend, waiting for that other store to open, so I can pay 50% extra for the part I will need.

      Why? Because that store carries other parts Walmart just won't carry. That little store has a guy who will do some free fixing and adjustment on my chain-saw just to sell me a new chain now and then, and when I needed a file to sharpen it, that store had one in stock that was 'right', not 'halfway close'. That store will sell me one washer or Woodroffe key from a bin, and for the washer, Walmart wants to sell me a pack of a dozen with a dozen-minus-one sizes I don't need, while for the Woodroffe key, Walmart wants to sell me a blank stare. Go compare a section of Walmart with a specialty store that sells just that section, and that 'low selection' is 'on the other foot'.
      I can save money at Walmart now. When that drives the little hardware store out of business, I will spend all that money I saved, and a whole lot more, doing things like hiring a professional to completely replace that window with the busted crank, instead of replacing a simple assembly myself, because only a few full-time pros can now afford to keep the parts for thousands of different windows in stock, and the only way they can make money is to charge for more repairs than are strictly needed.
      I'm one of those jack of all trades guys. I build my own PCs, do my own carpentry, plumbing and wiring, rebuild my transmission, and even have liscences and paperwork for some of these skills. The only time I turn a car, a plumbing job, or electrical work over to a pro is when it would take me more than my time's worth, and they are actually cheaper. Walmart is pushing out the supplyers I need to keep this up, and even the original poster's claim to detest Walmart and all it stands for doesn't seem too strong. Frankly speaking any more politely than that about Walmart feels about like saying "This pesky Multiple Sclerosis is getting in the way of my laying a new tile floor in the bathroom and I find that a trifle inconvenient.".

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    61. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by black+mariah · · Score: 1
      By your logic, if I write and record a parody of a song by changing the lyrics, can I be sued for copyright infringement? After all, the parody would be they lyrics, not the music, right?
      Yes, you can be sued. Unless you change the music substantially. Ever notice how Weird Al's music isn't ever exactly the same as the original recording? It's to distinguish between his work and the original so no confusion is possible.
      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    62. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by black+mariah · · Score: 1
      It was protected by section 107
      No. No it was not. It was satire, not parody. They were using Strawberry Shortcake to make fun of American McGee. Had they used Strawberry Shortcake to make fun of... well... Strawberry Shortcake, that IS parody. Using one subject to comment on another subject is satire. Using a subject to make a commentary on same is parody. Subtle difference, but one is protected and one isn't.
      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    63. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right, they're not bitching, they're having their lawyers shut the place down.

      No, they're not.

      They simply issued a letter stating that they would take legal action if their graphics were to continue to be used. The graphics were removed...end of legal action.

    64. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      You are reading the wrong part of the statute. You need to look at the four factors. They're what's determinative, not the preambular text.

      This is evident if you even read what you quote:

      Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified in that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright.

      Given the plain language there, the examples are examples of fair use for the purpose of comment, for example.

      Comment that was not a fair use is entirely possible as far as the statute is concerned.

      So again, the four factors control. Given that the courts are unanimous on this, and they're not without some influence as to how things work out in the end, you might want to try again, with a proper analysis this time.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    65. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      No, you can't. The music is different because he rerecords it. Al is not a good example for parody though, since he just gets permission, and doesn't rely on his rights.

      A parody relies on taking material from the original in order to invoke it. A parody of something is pointless if you can't tell what it's a parody of.

      Taking the music is part of the same deal as the lyrics -- you can't parody without it.

      Of course, not all parodies are fair uses, but they frequently are, if they really are a parody, instead of just using the word like a talisman.

      As for confusion, that's a trademark issue, not copyright. Plus you screwed it up: it's similar enough that the music, divorced from the lyrics, would be confusingly similar. But you have to view the parody as a whole, and as a whole, a parodic song isn't confusing generally.

      I swear, it's just amateur hour in here today.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    66. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by russotto · · Score: 1

      I tend to think that the use of original images without altering the images means: 1) Wal-Mart had a right to ask him to use other images and 2) he's a pretty poor art student with feel for parody. Congratulations. You've just ruled out the entire medium of collage.

    67. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by russotto · · Score: 1

      Um, no. What a DMCA counternotification basically says is

      1) Hey, big company lawyers, SUE ME! I'm RIGHT HERE!

      Then, if they sue you, the ISP has to pull the images in advance of the resolution of the case anyway.

    68. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by YomikoReadman · · Score: 1
      I beg to differ with you on that, and as it were, there is a rather prominent court case involving SNL that agrees with me.

      excerpted from this case:

      The song "I Love Sodom," as well as the sketch of which it was a part, was clearly an attempt by the writers and cast of SNL to satirize the way in which New York City has attempted to improve its somewhat tarnished image through the use of a slick advertising campaign. As such, the defendant's copying of the song "I Love New York" seems to come within the definition of parody. The plaintiff, however, relying upon MCA, Inc. v. Wilson, 425 F.Supp. 443 (S.D.N.Y.1976), and Walt Disney Productions v. Mature Pictures Corp., 389 F.Supp. 1397 (S.D.N.Y.1975), contends that, while the sketch may have parodied New York City and its problems, it had nothing to do with, and did not parody, either New York State and its "I Love New York" advertising campaign or the song "I Love New York" itself. As a result, the plaintiff asserts that the copying of its song constituted an infringement upon it and not a fair use.

      Satire, while not parody in and of itself, is a legitimate form of parody, albeit on a much narrower scope than that which you describe. However, that narrow scope dose not exclude satire from being parody.

      Cheers.

      --
      I have no regrets, this is the only path.
      My whole life has been "UNLIMITED BLADE WORKS"
    69. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Sancho · · Score: 1

      The problem is that they were criticizing the "I Love New York" campaign, which uses the song "I Love New York". As such, they were operating within section 107.

      Penny Arcade was using Strawberry Shortcake in a parody of American McGee.

      You may recall that American McGee created a dark game revolving around Alice in Wonderland. Alice in Wonderland, though the original story is a dark parody itself, has become more of a lighthearted story through Disney's version. Most people think of that version when they hear the name. As such, PA was showing what could eventually happen if McGee continues in this line of thinking, by taking a popular children's icon and transforming it into something dark.

      Unfortunately, they chose something which is not in the public domain. They were not parodying Strawberry Shortcake, so the use of Strawberry Shortcake images and the name did not fall under section 107.

    70. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by black+mariah · · Score: 1
      They were not parodying Strawberry Shortcake, so the use of Strawberry Shortcake images and the name did not fall under section 107.
      We have a winner!
      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    71. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by YomikoReadman · · Score: 1
      I see where you're coming from, but I still disagree. The way I recall the comic, they were mocking American Greetings, much in the way that the PoliSci student was mocking Wal-Mart, yet using the style of American McGee. So, going by your own analysis of this matter, if anyone has reason to gripe, it's American McGee, and he didn't say a word.

      Now, when you look at it like that, they're still not operating within Sec 107, but with regards to American McGee, not American Greetings, who like the 'I Love New York' campaign, was left without a leg to stand on.

      --
      I have no regrets, this is the only path.
      My whole life has been "UNLIMITED BLADE WORKS"
    72. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      I figure I got a DMCA notice and I want to know what my rights are. So, I Googled "dmca notice my rights." No special knowledge of the DMCA in that search, right? The second link was to a chillingeffects.org article. The bottom of the page has a DMCA FAQ for which one of the questions is, "What are the counter-notice and put-back procedures?"

      I dunno, maybe not just anybody can Google after all. Maybe I have some magic that lets me figure out how to ask Google questions. Really though, it seems to me like an awfully simple question to get an answer to.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    73. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Sancho · · Score: 1

      I'm really trying to figure out a reason that a web comic dedicated to video games would be mocking American Greetings. In any style.

      Went through the archives and found this:

      Seeing the new McFarlane "Twisted Land of Oz" toys got us thinking about American McGee's Oz, about which fairly little is known. We do, however, have some insights on his next project.

      I'd completely forgotten about Oz being the purpose of the satire. But there you go. From the context of the news article, I think it's fairly clear who PA was mocking.

      You can even scroll further down the page to see what the other half of PA has to say about the subject--again, he mentions McGee, not American Greetings.

      Making something gross or sexual or both is probably the easiest thing in the world to do. Just look at the margins of any 7th graders homework. You will find plenty of doodles on par with anything McGee has produced. American has said that his new game OZ will stay fairly true to the books but it will be "darker". It's sad that is the best he can come up with. American has the opportunity to take these well known and loved stories and re-imagine them for the world of video games, a medium with unlimited possibilities. When he made Alice I gave him credit for taking the story in a new direction even if it wasn't a terribly interesting one. Now with OZ he's doing the same thing and it shows that Alice was not some creative masterpiece. This guy is just a pervert and this is all he knows how to do. It's like he has some kind of huge fucking machine. Beloved stories and characters go in one side and junior high quality goth crap comes out the other.Yeah, Yeah McGee, we all know you are very angry. You should save yourself some fucking time and just wear a T-shirt that says "I am dark and brooding".

      If that isn't a clear cut explanation that they were Satirizing McGee using American Greetings, I don't know what is. McGee took Alice, turned it dark. McGee then too Oz, made it dark and sexual (or at least added a BDSM-style element). In my mind, PA looked for the most childish thing they could, found Strawberry Shortcake, and made fun of McGee by turning it into a dark, sexual comic.

    74. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by fingerfucker · · Score: 1

      His First Amendment rights are being violated.

      When are you finally going to get it? The First Amendment prevents your government (namely via congress) from abridging the freedom of speech.

      If you continue to claim that First Amendment rights of the guy were violated, it certainly wasn't by WalMart. It would mean you are claiming DMCA is unconstitutional, which is a totally different matter.

      So don't drag WalMart into the First Amendment issues with this. WalMart is just using the law to their advantage, which they legally have every right to do. Blame your government for passing idiotic laws and act: vote or revolt.

    75. Re:This is waaaaay overblown... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I just now noticed your comment, so... I doubt very much you'll read this.

      How on earth does my comment have -anything- to do with collage? A collage involves taking several images and arranging them to make a completely new and (here's the important part) altered whole.

      This parody isn't the same as a collage, and therefore I don't think your analogy works. You could possibly argue that changing the textual content alters the meaning of the image, and therefore alters the image itself but... I think you're sort of stretching there.

      I stand by my original post.

  4. From TFA by Kagura · · Score: 0, Redundant

    "The goal was to make the site look like it could be a real site from a company like Wal-Mart, but have text that was so ridiculous that anyone who read it would realize that it was absurd," Papasian said in a statement on his revamped Web site. "If anyone believed it to be a real Wal-Mart site, that is only a testament to the degree of absurdity that exists within corporate America today."

    Wal-Mart claimed Papasian violated copyright law and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act by improperly using images from the real Wal-Mart Foundation's Web site -- http://www.walmartfoundation.org./

    Papasian said he closed the site for five days so he could remove the offending graphics. In place of the images, Papasian has put the word "censored."

    1. Re:From TFA by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      The kid may have the letter of the law on his side, but I think he is morally wrong. I think the very goal he stated is just plain wrong. He set out to find a domain name that looked like it might belong to Wal-mart, then fill it with images which he took from their website (which is wrong in the internet community) and then made the text look absurd. If you want to make a site against Wal-mart, get one similar to walmartsucks.org. If you just want to do a classroom project, then don't publish it on the web. Do it on an internal server.
      I wonder if he would mind if walmart found his personal website, ripped off all his images and spouted a bunch of crap on a similarly named website?

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    2. Re:From TFA by bigpat · · Score: 1

      "then fill it with images which he took from their website (which is wrong in the internet community)"

      And where exactly did slashdot get the image of Bill Gates in the Borg shot? Or any one of the other images? Copying an image, etc and using it on your site is fair use in news, parody and commentary.

      Even in "the internet community"

  5. I was under the impression... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That not only were parodies protected in the U.S., but that educational programs were also granted special protection. Anybody know how much it costs to move to Canada?

    1. Re:I was under the impression... by Shalda · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Walmart is only objecting to the use of their logos, not the parody itself. This is a farily reasonable request. No one has actually been sued, WalMart simply had their lawyers send out a Cease and Desist letter. They probably send out several of them every day. WalMart is well within their rights to demand this. While the parody site was intending to make this look as much like an official WalMart site as possible, the can run afoul of trademark law. The right thing to do is to parody the WalMart graphics as well. Not a lawyer, but WalMart is probably in the right on this one.

    2. Re:I was under the impression... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Incorrect on almost every point - you were right that no one has actually been sued (at least not yet).

      The site has a link to the letter WalMart sent. It was not a Cease and Decist letter, it was a DMCA takedown notice. It was sent to the ISP to yank the site off the net. There was absolutely no mention of Trademark that I saw, and even if there were it still would not be trademark infringment to use a trademark in a parody. WalMart will be lucky if they don't get smacked down with a countersuit, this was a flagrant abuse of DMCA takedown proceedures.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  6. And no archive.org either by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Damn, for once the Internet Wayback Machine let me down -- no entries for http://www.walmart-foundation.org./

    --
    get a free laptop

    1. Re:And no archive.org either by Mark+Programmer · · Score: 1

      It's not quite as good as a Wayback archive, but you may be able to find part of what you're looking for in Exhibit 2 of the cease-and-desist itself, so thoughtfully provided by Mr. Papasian:


      http://www.walmart-foundation.org/walmart.pdf

      --

      Take care,
      Mark

      There is a solution...

    2. Re:And no archive.org either by metlin · · Score: 1

      Did you bother looking at the website?

      He's put up a link to the older website.

      Here is a copy of the old website that Walmart wanted removed.

      He's given a link to it on the very first page, in fact.

    3. Re:And no archive.org either by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 1

      No, not quite. That's the one that he modified to comply with the C&D order. I was kind of hoping to see what it looked like before he made those changes.

      As one of your sibling posts points out, there are screenshots (black and white) in the C&D order itself, so that's good enough for me.

    4. Re:And no archive.org either by metlin · · Score: 1

      Ah, my apologies!

      Didn't realize that's what you wanted. Oh well! :)

  7. Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "The goal was to make the site look like it could be a real site from a company like Wal-Mart, but have text that was so ridiculous that anyone who read it would realize that it was absurd," Papasian said in a statement on his revamped Web site. "If anyone believed it to be a real Wal-Mart site, that is only a testament to the degree of absurdity that exists within corporate America today."

    Due to all the retarded behavior that our fellow citizens exhibit on a daily basis I am never surprised when I see people falling for direct parody.

    I am also not surprised that corporations are allowed to shutdown *what was likely fair use*. Sadly, someday, we will all look back on this and say, "look how free we once were. It survived 400 hits before it was taken down. They didn't even have to approve the webpage before it was posted."

    1. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by meringuoid · · Score: 5, Funny
      Look, don't complain about the corporations. The King, who is appointed by divine right, grants the corporations land, and in exchange they provide him with fighting men in wartime. The corporations in turn grant land to executives, who (in theory) turn out to fight when called upon. In practice, the executives then rent out the land to poor tenant farmers, the serfs, who not only actually do the fighting in wartime but also work the land, paying a portion of their income to the landlord and the Church and keeping back enough to support themselves and their family in moderate means.

      You see how the system works to everyone's benefit? Everything fits together tidily. It's called feuda^H^H^H^Hcapitalism, and it's a good thing, despite what Comrade Tyler and his gang of pinko subversives might have you believe.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    2. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      stupider?

    3. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by fanblade · · Score: 1

      Yes, the creator of the "parody" site says that the site was so obviously phony that you'd have to be an idiot to believe it for a second. Hold on there buddy. Don't just take Dan's word for it. Look at the pdf of the actual cease and desist letter.

      If you look at Dan's website, I see nothing utterly ridiculous about it. The only questionable thing about it is the picture of people with picket signs. But seriously, I wouldn't be surprised if people thought it was the real Walmart Foundation site before following any links. His registered URL is only one character different from the actual site's (he stuck a hyphen between the words). And half of the page's space is taken up by graphics that he copied directly from the actual site. Thinking objectively, I can see why Walmart saw this as misleading.

    4. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by Spazmania · · Score: 2, Funny

      I am never surprised when I see people falling for direct parody.

      As the maintainer of whitehouse.net I can speak to this. You'd be amazed how many irate letters I get about Bush's proposal to paint the whitehouse green.

      http://www.whitehouse.net/index1.html

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    5. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fighting men in wartime

      actually its a bounty offered in advance to anyone willing to bring in a new discovery or writing.

      http://www.greglondon.com/bountyhunters/

    6. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It always amazes me how little everything changes. Hundreds of years of social "advancement" and we are still living in a quasi serfdom while the good citizens or kansas debate whether evolution is a valid scientific threory and whether the fact that god doesn't like homosexuality is grounds enough to deny people rights.

      Will we ever rise above hording goods and looking to the sky for answers?

      --
      evil is as evil does
    7. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Or to put it another way, we still haven't progressed far enough to realize that we don't need a king to tell us what to teach in schools or who we can or cannot marry. The problem isn't the religious right seeking the king's favors, but rather that the king is selling favors to begin with. You're just pissed because they're ahead of you in line.

      If we were advanced enough we wouldn't need to the king to direct every aspect of our lives. If we didn't want our kids going to a school that taught creationism (or evolution), we could send them to a school that taught evolution (or creationism) instead. And if the one church won't marry two guys, there's always another church (or notary public) that will.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    8. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by Kinthelt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's posts like these that deserve more than just a score of 5.

      --

      "Evil will always triumph over good, because good is dumb." - Dark Helmet (Spaceballs)

    9. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by MasterOfUniverse · · Score: 1

      Its said that the parent comment is modded funny and not insightful...

      --
      "There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people."--Howard Zinn
    10. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by MasterOfUniverse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its sad that the parent comment is modded funny and not insightful...

      --
      "There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people."--Howard Zinn
    11. Re:Ahhh, good old fair-use, remember the days? by quarkscat · · Score: 1

      I note that your post has not yet been modded -1 OT, so I must presume that the editors must have found some semblance to reality, if even in some parallel universe.

      Unless I am mistaken, the good old USA has not (yet) reverted to some feudal society -- right now it can more accurately classified as "Corporate National Socialism" (, although that term is somewhat redundant). We have at least 3 more years of "King George II" before the nazism morphs into the feudal society.

      (BTW: With a wee bit of historical digging, it is not too difficult to dredge up where the Bush Dynasty's infatuation with National Socialism began -- grandfather Prescott Bush got into some real hot water over his political leanings.)

  8. Parodies are great, but... by yroJJory · · Score: 2, Insightful

    there are very clear precedents stating what is cool and what isn't.

    Making a parody is cool. Using the original artwork to create your parody isn't.

    Even when making a parody of a song, you must pay royalties on the original and you must obtain permission should you use any portion of the original mechanical.

    If you're gonna create a parody site, you simply cannot snag artwork from the original, and you certainly can't use the company's actual logo!

    --
    Jory
    1. Re:Parodies are great, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Even when making a parody of a song, you must pay royalties on the original and you must obtain permission should you use any portion of the original mechanical."

      No. I refer you to the US copyright act section: 107 Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use, which states:

      "Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted
      work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or
      by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment,
      news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use),
      scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright."

      While it does not explicitly mention parody, that is covered under criticism, comment, or news reporting. This is why John Stewart can show clips of copyrighted works on the Daily Show and not infringe.

    2. Re:Parodies are great, but... by porcupine8 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Even when making a parody of a song, you must pay royalties on the original and you must obtain permission should you use any portion of the original mechanical. Coolio got all upset after Weird Al released Amish Paradise. Apparently, Al thought Coolio had given permission to parody Gangsta's Paradise, but he actually hadn't. But there wasn't really anything Coolio could do legally because it's a parody. Weird Al apologized but didn't exactly take the song off the market. He generally only does parodies if he gets permission out of respect for the artists, not because he's legally obligated to.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    3. Re:Parodies are great, but... by srh2o · · Score: 1

      What precedents do you mean, specifically. Ah I didn't think so.

    4. Re:Parodies are great, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      coolio was paid for the song.

      on the vh1 weird al documentary, al says that coolio had given him permission, but that it was probably an uncool thing for him to admit to at the time (being such a gangster and all at the time). coolio was still paid, and never took him to court.

    5. Re:Parodies are great, but... by totipotentsoul · · Score: 0

      From what I understand, Weird Al asked for permission, which Coolio gave, but once he found out that the music was the only part that money was given to (Stevie Wonder, not Coolio), since Weird Al was getting paid for the lyrics, Coolio got all pissy.

      --
      The best posts are both flamebait and informative.
    6. Re:Parodies are great, but... by Mentaljock · · Score: 1

      Actually Coolio didn't have to give consent, rather, his record label did. Coolio was upset because he was cut out of the loop. His label gave Weird Al permission to use the song, and he was never consulted.

    7. Re:Parodies are great, but... by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Also, according to Weird Al's Behind the Music, IIRC, Weird Al paid Coolio royalties, even though he did not have to. As expected, Coolio calmed down after this development.

    8. Re:Parodies are great, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was no need to get permission from the record label either. There are many court rulings that parody is fair use and not infringment and that there is no need to pay anyone anything. See the Pretty Woman parody case. Wikipedia has a good article on it.

  9. Better case by mattmentecky · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I think the guy would have a better case if the domain names werent so similar.

    Is it reasonable to suspect someone mistaken the parody site for the reason one, a difference in a hyphen? I can't answer that, I dunno.

    But given the average/stereo-typical intellectuality of a Wal-Mart customer.... :-p

  10. Walmart leading by Himring · · Score: 1

    Walmart, now the leader in using the DMCA....

    Small businesses cannot keep up and use the DMCA on a much teenier basis....

    --
    "All great things are simple & expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope." --Churchill
  11. What does the DMCA have to do with this? by TheNinjaroach · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I thought the DMCA protected protection-schemes, not copyright law.. It's not like Walmart put copy-protection on the JPEGs. I didn't think the copyright would apply anyways, wouldn't this site be allowed fair use of the images? It's not like he's trying to compete with them.
    I still hate the DMCA..

    --
    I went to eat some animal crackers and the box said, "Do not eat if seal is broken." I opened the box and sure enough..
    1. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by grungebox · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think it's a safe bet to include DMCA in any C&D letter. Even if it doesn't apply, it's a good legal scare tactic. Everyone's afraid of the DMCA.

    2. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by ulmanms · · Score: 1

      Digital Millennium Copyright Act
      (emphasis mine).

      Basically, there's a provision that protects service providers from being sued for copyright violations if they agree to take down potentially infringing material pending investigation.
      Yes, there's language protecting copy-protection, too, but the copyright safe harbor clause is an important one.
      You can read more about it here
    3. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Basically, there's a provision that protects service providers from being sued for copyright violations if they agree to take down potentially infringing material pending investigation.

      That's half of the provision. The other half is that the service provider must restore the content if the author asserts that no infringement has occurred. They're still protected after restoring the content, but they lose their protection if they don't!

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    4. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are forgetting that they can just cancel your service when they receive a counter notification. There is nothing in the DMCA that requires them to continue hosting your site after you send a counter notification.

    5. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by SiliconEntity · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Right, the DMCA is not what makes this parody site a violation of copyright (if it is). That is a standard provision of other copyright law.

      The relevant part of the DMCA, in fact, is just the opposite. Sec 512, "Limitations on liability relating to material online" provides a means to ESCAPE liability for copyright violation. Specifically, it allows an ISP not to be held liable as long as it follows a certain procedure. The ISP has to publish an address for complaints; upon receiving a complaint from a copyright holder, it has to take down the material and notify the client who posted it; and then the client has the option to contest the takedown order, in which case the ISP has to put the material back up, absent a court order.

      This part of the DMCA is actually end-user- and ISP-friendly. Without it we would see much less support for possibly copyrighted materials appearing online.

    6. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      I've not heard of this actually happening. Do you have an example?

      Usually if an account is going to be cancelled it happens when they look at the material during the first notification and determine that its blatently illegal. ISPs are operated by folks like you and I. They resent DMCA notices and enjoy the opportunity to tweak the noses of the folks sending them when they can do it risk-free.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    7. Re:What does the DMCA have to do with this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Wal-Mart's lawyers feel that JPEG compression = JPEG encryption.

  12. How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy.. by Ckwop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy steps.

    1. Get annoyed at tiny web-site, which gets less than 400 hits a day, (Slashdot gets this traffic in 20 seconds.) which has the audacity to rubbish your brand-name.
    2. Send cease and desist letter to owner of domain and ISP.
    3. Finally, wait for the story to arrive in the main-stream where the site containing the slanderous speach is now linked to be all and sundry and the site now gets traffic upward of 20 hits a second.

    Simon.

  13. Walmart is in a world of hurt... by robyannetta · · Score: 2, Informative
    ...over this. Don't forget, parody is LEGAL:

    http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/comm/free_speech/ hustler.html

    --
    - Just my $0.02, take with a grain of salt, your mileage may vary.
    1. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, using original works (in this case, the graphics from Walmarts site) in your parody is ILLEGAL.

    2. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Walmart didn't shut down the site. They told him to take the images he swiped off their site off the website. HE shut down the site to create FUD for media outlets to attach to. Good thing people read the article to see the real reason, not slashdot's misdirecting hype article that makes you think walmart took down a parody site...

    3. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless the works pertain to the target of your parody. In that situation, courts have ruled more often in favor of the parody.

    4. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by Council · · Score: 1

      Unless the works pertain to the target of your parody. In that situation, courts have ruled more often in favor of the parody.

      I would like to see references on this; I am inclined to disbelieve it.

      --
      xkcd.com - a webcomic of mathematics, love, and language.
    5. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone wrote a parody called "Bored of the Rings" that contained illustrations and character names that were similar, but not identical to Tolkien's original. This was fair use because of parody. If that work hadn't been a parody, if it had been a competing work of fiction, then Tolkien's publisher and estate could've sued (at least for the character names part). So yes, some additional protection is in place for parody. But that doesn't mean you can just swipe the original graphics and plunk them into your work.

    6. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by green+menace · · Score: 1

      They told him to take the images he swiped off their site off the website.

      Wrong, from the cease and desist letter:

      "We hearby request that you immediately take action to disable public access to www.walmart-foundation.org."

      That is not asking them to take the images off, but to shut down the site. I think the site is parody, although as has been said in other posts: Most of us are not lawyers. For me, the bottom line is that parody should be able to take parts from the entire thing being parodied. The sites creator is cool in my book for standing up for our right to do so. Also, even if case law says that I am wrong (which I haven't seen hard evidence of), there is no shame in speaking about how we think it should be. Laws get changed for a reason.

    7. Re:Walmart is in a world of hurt... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Score -1 WRONG.

      Damn Anonymous misinformation. Walmart sent a DMCA down notice to the ISP. HE did not take his site down, Walmart had the ISP rip it off the net.

  14. Look alike graphics would be OK. by Picass0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If he hadn't leveraged any WalMart code or graphics he wouldn't have any problems. He could still do the site if he were to build a look alike from scratch. Some of the graphics he used were Wal-Mart property, and even in parody the use of their graphics would not be legally protected.

    1. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by bugg · · Score: 5, Informative
      I disgree- and in the interest of full disclosure, it's my website.

      The graphics are, granted, the hardest part to prove 'fair use' for, but there is still a fair use case to be made. That's not just my opinion, but also the opinion of the lawyers I have been in contact with.

      The graphics are not being distributed by themselves as such, rather, they are part of the website which is a larger work, and in my view, markedly different from the original. That makes it a derivative work, and as such, protected as 'fair use'.

      There is a lot of mistaken applications of other types of copyright law here. The big difference is I stand to make no financial gain, directly or indirectly, from this site. I don't owe royalties because I don't have profit. I don't need permission because it's fair use.

      --
      -bugg
    2. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by Evro · · Score: 1

      Everybody keeps saying this... you realize that parody has a fair-use exception under copyright law, right?

      http://www.publaw.com/parody.html

      If the guy used a domain that was only 1 character off from a legitimate Wal-Mart domain, and people could reasonably confuse his site with Wal-Mart's, that's another story.

      --
      rooooar
    3. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Dude, you need to check that. Despite your claims of your site being "so absurd that it must be a parody", the truth is that it is very easy to confuse with the original. You used a domain name that's nearly the same, you appropriated trademarks (which aren't protected), you used the exact same graphics, etc., etc., etc. A "parody" that's easy to confuse with the original is not protected!

      Next time do a *good* job of it as call the site "Dull-Mart" or somesuch, and use a matching domain. Also ajust all the images so that they betray the intent of the site (i.e. a parody). Every last line should say something insightful or funny that it difficult to mix up with the original. Someone else pointed to this site as an example of how it should be done.

      Good luck.

    4. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      If you're not violating copyright law, you're almost certainly violating trademark law.

      Under trademark law, if you website is confusingly similar to Wal-Mart's, you could be guilty of trademark infringement.

      If you had changed the marks to make it clear that you were *not* an official officer of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., you might have a case.

      Wal-Mart sued because you were making rediculous claims while proporting to be them. It's damaging to their trademark and confusing to the consumer.

    5. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright on images is held seperately from any combined work they are used in. Since you just copied them you don't have a leg to stand on.

    6. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 4, Informative
      http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?c ourt=us&vol=000&invol=U10426 U.S. Supreme Court

      CAMPBELL v. ACUFF-ROSE MUSIC, INC., ___ U.S. ___ (1994) [ Footnote 17 ]
      We note in passing that 2 Live Crew need not label its whole album, or even this song, a parody in order to claim fair use protection, nor should 2 Live Crew be penalized for this being its first parodic essay. Parody serves its goals whether labeled or not, and there is no reason to require parody to state the obvious, (or even the reasonably perceived).
    7. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by bugg · · Score: 2, Informative
      RTFA.

      Wal-Mart has not mentioned trademarks to date, nor have they sued me. They're using the DMCA, yet my case has strong arguments against copyright infringement based on fair use.

      --
      -bugg
    8. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you ... you might have a case.

      Wal-Mart sued because you were making rediculous claims while proporting to be them.

      Funny how everyone here knows more about your case and your own legal position than you and your lawyers, isn't it?

    9. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1
      Good work.. I did love the site, even with the wally world graphics removed. one thing to keep in mind, with all this "advice" getting thrown around, is that this is slashdot, the same people that said that ipod would never sell!

      The only real, pertinent advice to listen to would be the person that is representing you. On a bit of an aside, you mentioned that this is a school related project, have you talked to your schools attorney?

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    10. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by KillerDeathRobot · · Score: 1

      It wasn't that kind of parody. It was meant to look right at a first glance but become obvious if you actually read the things on the site.

      --
      Thinkin' Lincoln - a web comic of presidential proportions
    11. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Next time you should call it Mall-Wart.

    12. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by js7a · · Score: 1

      Why don't you challenge the take-down letter, then? Deadline expired?

    13. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, this is what we want in America! Only allow free speech in the name of public criticism and parody if the people on Slashdot think it's GOOD free speech, public criticism, or parody.

    14. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      What is this, "Waah, it went over my head so I'm going to sue?"

      Parody is still parody even if you're too stupid to "get it".

    15. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by bugg · · Score: 1

      I'm currently evaluating all of my options.

      --
      -bugg
    16. Re:Look alike graphics would be OK. by js7a · · Score: 1

      Don't forget to go after the law firm in their home town, please.

  15. Yeah thats really bad.. by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

    we're still all going to shop there for low low prices tho right?

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
    1. Re:Yeah thats really bad.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will. My little boycot will do nothing. It will take legislation to fix this. There is no need to punish walmart over this; this is the fault of copyright law.

      Boycoting walmart and their low, low prices would punish only myself.

  16. WalMart's Import Policy by bigtallmofo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It looks like WalMart imports more than just cheap goods created by virtual slave labor from China.

    Now they're further hurting our trade deficit by importing clamp-down tactics from the Chinese communist government!

    --
    I'm a big tall mofo.
    1. Re:WalMart's Import Policy by The_Quinn · · Score: 1

      Blaming wal-mart for exercising the law is like blaming your English teacher for how boring "War and Peace" is. Wal Mart didn't write the law, it is only asking for enforcement of the law.

  17. not a huge deal by grungebox · · Score: 1, Informative

    Karma burning....I mean, I hate Wal-Mart more than any other company in the world and have not been in a store in almost a year, nor will I ever set foot in one again. That being said, it's not a huge deal, is it? After RTFA, it seems that all the kid had to do was take down some of the offending images, which are copyrighted anyway. Likewise, I can't use Slashdot's logo and crap without permission. Granted, they probably wouldn't care, but not caring != legal. I might be wrong, so I'm sure someone will correct me.

    1. Re:not a huge deal by hypergreatthing · · Score: 1
      If you read a couple of the posts above i believe you can use Slashdot's logo without permission to create a parody.

      I'm thinking that most people aren't lawyers themselves and have no idea or the wrong idea how copyrights work since legal text is hard to come by and RIAA/MPAA/DMCA information is talked about everyday.

      I mean there's a lot of people who think that copyright infrindgement is stealing, so go figure.

    2. Re:not a huge deal by corran__horn · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, when I create a site that parodies people like you who post on slashdot (and the paranoid culture and driveling writing on slashdot), I can use the images from slashdot. I probably wouldn't do this, as you understood that you could be mistaken, but you were modded up to +3 informative while being mistaken.

      I must note that this only applies in the US, as parody is protected here, whereas it is not in other countries. See PubLaw for a better description. (I found this by google BTW)

      --

      If people can connect to one another even the smallest of voices will grow loud.
      --Serial Experiments Lain
  18. Re:In Soviet Wal-Mart by CokeBear · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apparantly, its not just Soviet Russia. It happens in the USA now too. Quite sad, actually, that the cold war was fought for 50 years against a totalitairan regime, only to win, and take on some of the elements of that regime ourselves.

    --
    Reality has a liberal bias
  19. Walmart by Manan+Shah · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I think Walmart gives an example of why 100% pure capitalism is a bad thing. Walmart tends to lower the standrd of living in many of the communities it moves in, and increases the unemployment rates. Even when their practices are perfectly legal, they tend to hurt many of the small businesses in the community. Free market, you say? Well, if 'free market' lowers the standard of living for so many people, then the concept is flawed. A lot of free market supporters use the same fervor as the socialists/communitsts do when defending their idealogy and fail to realize there is no such thing as a perfect system. I am still a Libertarian, but some Wal-Mart fan-boy's need to calm down and analyze exactly what they are supporting.

    1. Re:Walmart by Anita+Coney · · Score: 1

      "Wal-Mart fan-boy's need to calm down and analyze exactly what they are supporting."

      Cheap DVD players for me. No future for my kids.

      --
      If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
    2. Re:Walmart by 241comp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      To be honest, it's NOT WalMart that causes this (if it even really happens). It is the customers who do it to themselves. If we are all so price-conscious (read: cheap) that we shut down all the local shops in our home town... let's just say that we reap what we sow. The tragedy of the commons and all that jazz.

    3. Re:Walmart by jtaylor00 · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. People need to understand that it is not possible to have both low prices and high wages in every industry. If you want lower prices on everything then take a lower wage, otherwise don't complain when work goes overseas. You can't have it both ways.

  20. Logos are like dynamite by Hao+Wu · · Score: 1

    Sure, one can use explosives in any context, so long as it's part of a political statement. It's free speech!

    --
    I suggest you read Slashdot
  21. Of course by PIPBoy3000 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Of course the student would want to draw attention to this. One person's "overblown" is another person's "needed publicity."

    I'm guessing that if this went to court, it would be thrown out as this site is fairly clearly a parody site. This allows considerable freedom in copying images, ideas, logos, and so on.

    Much like the Gone with the Wind publisher battling The Wind Done Gone, it can be fairly counterproductive for large corporations to try and fight these parodies. They do nothing but draw unwanted attention to their rather nasty behavior.

    1. Re:Of course by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing that if this went to court, it would be thrown out as this site is fairly clearly a parody site. This allows considerable freedom in copying images, ideas, logos, and so on.

      Did you see the screenshots from the Cease and Desist letter? It's not quite the "parody" the author is making it out to be.

  22. Hmmmm....... by 8127972 · · Score: 1

    WalMart can't nail him for being critical of their company (one of many who are it should be noted), so they use the DMCA to get him. All the really have done is increase his visiblity. I've sent his URL and the /. link to at least ten people since this was posted on /. and I am certian that others will forward my e-amil as well. I suspect others will do the same. Now he's got the attention a a much bigger audience.

    Perhaps they should have left him alone. Then this wouldn't be an issue to them.

    --
    This is my opinion. To make sure you don't steal it, it's covered by the DMCA.
  23. Good censorship quotes by digitaldc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Literature should not be suppressed merely because it offends the moral code of the censor." ~ William Orville Douglas (1898-1980) US Supreme Court associate justice, 1935-75, professor of law at Yale
    "Censorship ends in logical completeness when nobody is allowed to read any books except the books that nobody can read." ~ George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950) British playwright & novelist
    "The Internet treats censorship as a malfunction and routes around it." ~ John Perry Barlow (1947-) Wyoming cattle rancher, a lyricist for the Grateful Dead
    "I believe in censorship. After all, I made a fortune out of it." ~ Mae West (1892-1980) American comedienne from "My Little Chickadee," 1940.
    "Censorship is almost systematically the weapon of first resort for governments in uncertain political situations. So not only are the famous writers and bold journalists in danger; at every level of public and private life, the freedoms to think, read or write are denied. In the absence of a free press, other human rights abuses flourish unabated. Nothing is reported, criticized, questioned. The example of imprisonment, torture or execution imposes a further silence. A blindly obedient mob mentality is encouraged, driven by extremist religious or ethnic loyalties. The citizens do not know what is happening. Fear and ignorance permeate discussion." ~ Marian Botsford Fraser
    "Censor: A self-appointed snoophound who sticks his nose in other people's business." ~ Bennett Cerf
    [quotes from zaadz.com]

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Good censorship quotes by qval · · Score: 1

      The problem with these quote sites is that they don't provide you with context. Justice Douglas said the first quote in the dissenting opinion on a 1950's case about mailing lewd images or something (who has time to read court cases, mebbe some prelaw student can chime in). In any case, while this quote may be inspiring, the sentiment it evokes in us slashdotters was not shared by the majority of the court and so should not be taken as evidence that our freedoms were more sacred back then...

    2. Re:Good censorship quotes by tootlemonde · · Score: 1

      Justice Douglas said the first quote in the dissenting opinion on a 1950's case about mailing lewd images or something

      The case was Roth vs. United States (1957). Douglas' dissent is here.

      This quote from the majority decision sounds like a similar stirring defense of free speech even though it upheld the constitutionality of the law that convicted Roth:

      The fundamental freedoms of speech and press have contributed greatly to the development and wellbeing of our free society and are indispensable to its continued growth. Ceaseless vigilance is the watchword to prevent their erosion by Congress or by the States. The door barring federal and state intrusion into this area cannot be left ajar; it must be kept tightly closed, and opened only the slightest crack necessary to prevent encroachment upon more important interests.

      The "slightest crack" in question was whether obscenity, as defined by contemporary community standards, was protected as free speech. Douglas said it was but the Court majority said it wasn't.

      It's worth noting Douglas' dire warning, to wit: "the test that suppresses a cheap tract today can suppress a literary gem tomorrow. All it need do is to incite a lascivious thought or arouse a lustful desire. The list of books that judges or juries can place in that category is endless."

      His concern has turned out to be unfounded. The community standard test has drastically expanded the scope of permissable obscenity until today only child porn fails the test. Under Douglas' logic, it too would be protected.

    3. Re:Good censorship quotes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>"The Internet treats censorship as a malfunction and routes around it." ~ John Perry Barlow (1947-)

      That's nuts! Al Gore wasn't even born in 1947!

      (yeah yeah, I know. It's his birth date)

  24. Do the teachers at the lefty propaganda mills... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ...ever get tired of their students kicking the same over-kicked puppy dogs? Is there any desire or reward for going against the left-wing groupthink that might naturally occur amongst art students? Won't many of them move on to providing layout and graphics for evil corporations? Doesn't this merely perpetuate the myth that no individual has personal responsibly for CHOOSING to shop at wal-mart, eat at McDonalds or believe in a mythical superbeing? Sounds like they're just producing another generation just as holier-than-thou and judgmental and unaccepting of personal choice as the right-wing idiots that infest our government.

    Other Web sites designed by students for the class included a parody of a fitness campaign by the fast-food restaurant chain McDonald's Corp. and a site satirizing "700 Club," religious broadcaster Pat Robertson's television show.

  25. No Credibility by ImTwoSlick · · Score: 1, Insightful
    If anyone believed it to be a real Wal-Mart site, that is only a testament to the degree of absurdity that exists within corporate America today.

    This guy lost all credibility with this one statement. What does the ability of someone to mistake this site for a real one have anything to do with absurdity within corporate America? This guy is just spouting off rhetoric. Plain and simple.

    1. Re:No Credibility by stealth.c · · Score: 1

      What does someone mistaking it for a real site have to do with the level of corporate America's absurdity?

      Clearly he means that the lengths to which companies like Wal-Mart will go to spin something as positive for themselves would be comic parody if we lived in a sane society.

      Fortunately for all corporate behemoths, most Americans have been fashioned by TV into such brainwashed intellectual sloths that they'll believe practically anything.

      Therefore, if anyone believed it to be a real Wal-Mart site, it is indicative not only of the intensity of current corporate doublespeak, but also of America's expectation to hear such nonsense.

    2. Re:No Credibility by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      Well, you could argue that if average people believe that a large corporation would post pictures of a protest against themselves and claim that it's building community spirit, then they must believe it because corporations do idiotic things like that regularly, so it doesn't seem strange.

      Me, I'm more likely to think they believe it because average people are idiots.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    3. Re:No Credibility by hplasm · · Score: 0

      I think it should read "Corporate America"

      --
      ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
    4. Re:No Credibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This guy lost all credibility with this one statement.

      Actually, this guy already lost all credibility when he said if anyone believed it. I mean, once he said that, it was all over. I was prepared to suspend disbelief, but then he questioned whether one person might believe one thing. Now it's not about Walmart eroding the standard of living in the US: it's about one kid misusing one clause.

      And no, I'm not a shill for Walmart. Maybe.
  26. Will anti-phishing laws be similarly used? by G4from128k · · Score: 1

    Using the law in unintended ways is nothing new. Although nothing has been done about this yet, I suspect that anti-phishing legislation could also be used by a corporation to shut down parody sites. Depending on how the law is worded (misworded), it could become a crime to make a site the "looks like another site."

    Although the courts may, eventually, rule in favor of the parody site, the legal costs to defend the site mean victory for those who would resort to barritry.

    --
    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
  27. Wrong on Song by Allen+Zadr · · Score: 3, Informative

    No... if you want to commercially MARKET a parody of a song, you must pay royalties and obtain permission. If you want to simply make a parody, and give it away - there's nothing to stop that (unless you find financial gain from that parody).

    --
    Kinetic stupidity has a new brand leader: Allen Zadr.
    1. Re:Wrong on Song by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      "If you want to simply make a parody, and give it away - there's nothing to stop that"

      Wrong. Even free distribution is considered distribution under copyright law.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    2. Re:Wrong on Song by mattjb0010 · · Score: 1

      Wrong. Even free distribution is considered distribution under copyright law.

      The post didn't say that it wasn't distribution, just that there is a difference in fair use between commercial and free distribution, as detailed here

    3. Re:Wrong on Song by Allen+Zadr · · Score: 1

      Thank you. The best citation I could find was in Weird Al's FAQ (which didn't seem worthy).

      --
      Kinetic stupidity has a new brand leader: Allen Zadr.
    4. Re:Wrong on Song by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. That was a particular piece of US case law I was unfamiliar with.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    5. Re:Wrong on Song by Vip · · Score: 1

      No, you don't require permission.

      Weird Al Yankowic makes his living doing parodies.
      He only gets permission as a *courtesy*. He does not have to, as evidenced by "Amish Paraise" which was a parody of "Gansta Paradise". The author, Coolio, was opposed to Weird Al using it, and told him so.

      Wires crossed, Weird Al misunderstood "No." (?!?)
      "Amish Paradise" was released (IMO, one of the more amusing videos I have seen) and Coolio was livid. Coolio couldn't sue, as all Weird Al does is parodies, which is fine by copyright law.

      Vip

    6. Re:Wrong on Song by Allen+Zadr · · Score: 1
      Woa. Wrong here too. He got his permission from the song writer... Stevie Wonder*. And pays his royalties. Coolio backed up on Stevie Wonder's work, and Weird Al did the same. Coolio got all bent out of shape, but he really has zero legal ground to stand on because it was not his song to sell.

      Bottom line... if Weird Al doesn't get permission, then he can't charge money for the song. Thus he always has permission. It's just that lines are easy to cross in the world of "hip-hop" sampling.

      Weird Al had expected that his people would have cleared it through both Coolio and Stevie Wonder, but they hadn't, as they simply followed the ASCAP catalogue back to the owner, instead of actually asking the artist who was actually being parodied as well.

      *Pasttime Paradise by Stevie Wonder, released on his "Songs in the Key of Life" album, 1976.

      --
      Kinetic stupidity has a new brand leader: Allen Zadr.
  28. Is the Wal-Mart Foundation a legit non-profit? by Ktistec+Machine · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From the article: "An interesting aspect of the cease and desist is that it was signed by a lawyer who wrote that she was acting on behalf of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. This statement unintentionally emphasizes one of the main points that my parody was trying to prove all along: The Wal-Mart "Foundation" is nothing more than a front group for Wal-Mart Stores Incorporated, and should not be confused for a real charitable non-profit."

    1. Re:Is the Wal-Mart Foundation a legit non-profit? by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      The Wal-Mart "Foundation" is nothing more than a front group for Wal-Mart Stores Incorporated, and should not be confused for a real charitable non-profit.

      First, I think it's pretty obvious that the WalMart Foundation would be heavily connected to WalMart; the name is a bit of a giveaway.

      Second, even though its a subsidiary, so what? If it is run independently, has a proper NGO charter, and actually does some good I can't see a problem. And considering that many charities spend around one third of their income on advertising for donations (Oxfam and Care for example), setting up your own charity which doesn't need to advertise for donations (or can piggyback on existing promotion campaigns) is vastly more efficient dollar for dollar than opting for an existing charity in terms of help reaching those who need it.

      Third, large companies generally only donate to charities if they get something out of it (beyond tax deductions). Companies using charitable organizations to promote themselves is nothing new or surprising, it happens even when the charity and the sponsor are not connected in any other way.

      All the quote does is prove that WalMart Stores Inc owns the artwork, so their lawers deal with it; no surprises here. It gives no insight into the corporate structure of either the Stores or the Foundation, it tells us nothing about the level of independence or the effectiveness of the charity. It certainly doesn't tell us it isn't a "real" non-profit organization, since that has more to do with how they operate than who their lawers are.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
    2. Re:Is the Wal-Mart Foundation a legit non-profit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      should not be confused for a real charitable non-profit.

      Charities and non-profits are different types of entities.

    3. Re:Is the Wal-Mart Foundation a legit non-profit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second, even though its a subsidiary, so what? If it is run independently, has a proper NGO charter, and actually does some good I can't see a problem.

      In the real world (ie, where you don't have billions of dollars to throw at courtrooms) it would fail to be recognized as a separate entity legally. ESPECIALLY if its employees are shared with another organization.

      I went through this with a company I helped start up. We wanted to create a holding organization to license all the IP out to an implementation organization, so that if the implementation organization was sued, it could be sacrificed without losing our IP and a new organization could be formed. We came to find out that we'd need to basically double our size... Each company would need completely separate board of directors and leadership, a majority of the employees of each company would have to be directly hired and employed by the company, and so on.

      Anything less and a law school student could have broken the corporate veil, according to our lawyer.

      Of course, corporation laws vary state by state in the US, so maybe thats just here. If someone sued this "Wal-Mart Foundation" I'm sure they'd quickly figure out which state they needed to claim their corporate headquarters were in to get the most legal protection. Hell, they'd probably claim they're from Bermuda.

      I'm sure the lawyers Wal-Mart hired would be happy to sit in court and tell everyone they were donating their time to the foundation. (Is it volunteer work if your boss tells you to do it?)

    4. Re:Is the Wal-Mart Foundation a legit non-profit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post is an informed and well-reasoned departure from the hysteria. No wonder it hasn't been modded up.

  29. Shopping at Wal Mart... by Le+Marteau · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... always makes me feel cheap and sleazy. Like it's something I shouldn't be doing. One of the many reasons I like shopping at Wal Mart.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
  30. Not Star Wars Fans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Star Wars fans, "stay on Target". And who among us doesn't know that quote?

  31. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Evro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wal-Mart does not care about this kind of bad PR. The people who would find this type of action detestable are not Wal-Mart's target demographic. Wal-Mart has continually eaten bags of poop in the mainstream media over their staunch opposition to unions and the way they've destroyed most mom-and-pop type stores, but this hasn't translated to lost sales for them, because the people who shop at Wal-Mart care about one thing, and one thing only: low prices. As long as this suit doesn't lead to higher prices, Wal-Mart will come out of it financially unscathed.

    --
    rooooar
  32. I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Walmart tends to lower the standrd of living in many of the communities it moves in, and increases the unemployment rates.

    Cite. And not some ideology website with manifestos.

    1. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ditto.
      I googled some studies and all "say" this happens but dont offer a single shred of data.
      Put up or stfu.

    2. Re:I call bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Another big problem with Wal-Mart is their record of "old boy" discrimination against women. Women account for the majority of their employees, but only a small percentage of store management. And the numbers gets worse up the executive hierarchy. Of course, they *do* have a woman spokeperson to deny the charges (good thinking).

      Also they're well known for their union busting tactics (closing stores that become unionized for "unrelated" reasons), although this isn't a hot button for me.

      -not the OP

  33. It isn't Boring Boring by PIPBoy3000 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, it's not a particularly good parody perhaps. If I were doing it, I'd subtly change the images for amusement value.

    My latest favorite parody is Boring Boring, a parody of Boing Boing.

    How about we just give him a C+ for his school assignment and keep the lawyers out of it?

    1. Re:It isn't Boring Boring by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      It's not just "not a good parody", it's crossing the line of what is acceptable. People don't seem to understand that Parody protection is not a basic right. It's an interpretation of fair use clauses that makes for very shaky ground. If you're going to parody, you need to make damn sure that you do a good job of it. Using trademarks (not fair use), registering the domain "walmart-foundation" instead of "walmartgoodworks", and creating a site that can easily be confused with the original all add up to laywers making easy money off of you.

      If his teacher has any sense, (s)he will sit the boy down and explain the tricky legal issues involved in doing a parody, and how to do it right. (e.g. Start with something *funny* and use it to make a point, maybe?)

    2. Re:It isn't Boring Boring by VivianC · · Score: 2, Funny

      If his teacher has any sense, (s)he will sit the boy down and explain the tricky legal issues involved in doing a parody, and how to do it right.

      Sure because I always seek legal advice from art school teachers. You might have found a group that knows less about the law than most Slashdot posters.

      --
      Viv

      Gmail invites for ip
    3. Re:It isn't Boring Boring by nuremon · · Score: 1

      Well, I think the new site is a good parody. I particularly appreciate the Labor Bingo Game that invites you to go through the store and attempt to find items from various third-world countries so that you can scratch them off on your Bingo card. I just hope the game of Bingo isn't copyrighted...

    4. Re:It isn't Boring Boring by bugg · · Score: 2, Informative
      The Labor Bingo Game was actually the inspiration to build the entire site. It was in the site- and prominently advertised on the front page- that was threatened by the DMCA.

      Just clarifying, in case anyone thought I added that after the takedown notice.

      --
      -bugg
    5. Re:It isn't Boring Boring by afidel · · Score: 1

      Did you READ the website? Sure, the screenshot makes it look very similar to the real walmart foundations website, that's part of good parody, to conjure the image of the origional. The CONTENT of the parody site makes it obvious that it's a parody, unless you are a complete simpleton. A good example is this paragraph from the About Us page:

      "Implementation
      Wal-Mart's approach to community involvement is unique, because we're able to screw communities over and yet they seem to love us anyway. Even many people who think we're evil shop here anyway. Our prices are that irresistible! Then there are groups of people who think they're causing change by "boycotting" us, when they don't even tell anyone why they boycott us, and choose instead to spend their money at Target and Best Buy- do you think those guys are any better, just because they're smaller? If they were our size, and if you keep shopping there one day they might be, they'd be just as destructive."

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  34. Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everytime when I read things like that, I'm glad to live in good old Europe... but for how long?! Here the Think Tanks become more and more powerful, too.

    Perhaps I will move to the jugle and bekome an hermit ;-)

  35. Exhibit 1 by spac3manspiff · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft Internet Explorer"

    This should be enough to discredit the Walmart.

  36. Re:Do the teachers at the lefty propaganda mills.. by meringuoid · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Is there any desire or reward for going against the left-wing groupthink that might naturally occur amongst art students?

    'Scuse me? You want professors to offer a reward - presumably, higher marks - for producing specifically right-wing propaganda?

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  37. If this parody is legal... by hal2814 · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...then I'm take every copyrighted song and movie I own and make a "parody" where I add a humorous cymbal crash at the end of the original work. Then I can legally distribute my "parodies" of the songs and music.

    1. Re:If this parody is legal... by NetNifty · · Score: 1

      IIRC a parody has to be clearly different than the original to be considered a parody.

    2. Re:If this parody is legal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you a student? He is. If you're not you're going to have a much harder time calling for fair-use.

    3. Re:If this parody is legal... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      IIRC a parody has to be clearly different than the original to be considered a parody.

      Well then, since he was using images directly coppied off the Walmart Foundation site it was clearly not a parody then.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    4. Re:If this parody is legal... by bugg · · Score: 4, Informative
      Clearly you've never visited my site. Unless you're suggesting you just looked at the pretty pictures, and didn't bother to read it.

      The text was flamingly obvious. I said things like (paraphrasing) "we're just undoing a very small portion of the damage we do to communities, because it promotes our image and is a great write-off."

      --
      -bugg
    5. Re:If this parody is legal... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Unless you're suggesting you just looked at the pretty pictures, and didn't bother to read it.
      The text was flamingly obvious.

      Well, to me the issue here is the pictures themselves, not the text. So yes, I am "looking at the pretty pictures". If you copied them directly off the foundation website and didn't modify them in any way, it looks like you would (for starters) be violating WalMarts trademark (such as the Wal*Mart and Sams Club Icons). They legally have to defend any violations of said trademark or they can lose it. If you had changed those, that would be a start. For example, The "Giving, Helping, Doing" Could have been replaced with "Taking, Hurting, (something else here)". "Wal*Mart, Good, Works" replaced with "Wal*Mart, (Bad/Evil/Something),Hurts. Next time, actually change what the images are. Same for the rest of the images.

      To me, to be parody it can over all look similar, but everything in it still has to be different and created by you. Copying the images off and only changing the text doesn't meet parody to me.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    6. Re:If this parody is legal... by LastNickAvailable · · Score: 0

      Images considered individually are copies, however the site as a whole is quite different, I think this is what should matter.

    7. Re:If this parody is legal... by houghi · · Score: 1

      "we're just undoing a very small portion of the damage we do to communities, because it promotes our image and is a great write-off."

      That is not parody, it the truth. The parody was on the wallmart site.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    8. Re:If this parody is legal... by bugg · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wal-Mart, so far, hasn't said anything at all about trademarks. The cease and desist sent to my ISP was a DMCA takedown notice, and was about copyrights. Haven't heard anything about trademarks yet. Use of copyrighted material- what they went after me for- is protected as 'fair use' for parody site, in my opinion (and also the opinions of some of the lawyers I have been in contact with).

      --
      -bugg
    9. Re:If this parody is legal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you've never visited my site. Unless you're suggesting you just looked at the pretty pictures, and didn't bother to read it.

      The text was flamingly obvious. I said things like (paraphrasing) "we're just undoing a very small portion of the damage we do to communities, because it promotes our image and is a great write-off."

      Guy, I'm no legal expert, but isn't it generally a bad idea to talk about pending legal actions like this in the public (I assume that you're going to be fighting this). You said yourself in a previous post: "The graphics are, granted, the hardest part to prove 'fair use' for". If you believe yourself to be in the right and are planning on fighting this, then you probably shouldn't be admitting this stuff in a public forum.

    10. Re:If this parody is legal... by atfrase · · Score: 1

      No, you're missing the point.

      Fair use re: parody has nothing to do with being funny. In fact, "parody" is not explicitly defined as fair use (nowhere in US law does it say that "parody", i.e. something a reasonable person would call "parody", is inherently fair use just because it could be called "parody"). Parody is (historically, usually) considered fair use because it involves "commentary" and "criticism", which are explicitly defined as "fair use" in US copy right law (sect. 107 is posted several places in this thread).

      Adding a cymbal crash to a song probably wouldn't be considered "commentary" or "criticism" by any judge or jury. Using a previous work's style and changing it's content in order to comment on/criticize the original work or the original work's author, as is (IMHO) clearly the case here, probably would be considered "commentary" and "criticism".

    11. Re:If this parody is legal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't you try and oppress his right to free speech with your FUD!

    12. Re:If this parody is legal... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Well, to me the issue here is the pictures themselves, not the text.

      The legal issue is the work, which would be the website as a whole.

      violating WalMarts trademark

      Using a trademark in a parody is not trademark infringment. Heck, you used WalMart's trademark (WalMart) in your own post. That was not trademark infringment. Perhaps an over simplification, but trademark infringment is when decieve people that you *are* the trademark holder. If the site is copyright fair use on parody grounds then almost by definition you'll pass any trademark test, trademark infringment primarily rests on likelyhood of confusion in the public which parody already addressed.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    13. Re:If this parody is legal... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      That is not parody, it the truth. The parody was on the wallmart site.

      That's the very nature of the best parody: To state the truth and make the original parody itself.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  38. Lefty or just tired of consumer-oriented everythin by digitaldc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    CHOOSING to shop at wal-mart, eat at McDonalds or believe in a mythical superbeing?
    Sometimes there is no choice, the town has one WalMart and the rest of the small businesses go under leaving you no choice in where to buy -or- you must travel far away to go to a small independent shop.
    Greed is the driving factor among everything these days, the competition is brutal and the labor is cheap....is this a lefty view? or just a rational one?

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  39. Re:Lefty or just tired of consumer-oriented everyt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the hell are these stuudents doing in a university art class? Is it for the love of learning? Or earning the papers to join the job market to participate in the consumer-oriented everything?

  40. The site by bLindmOnkey · · Score: 1
    1. Re:The site by akeyes · · Score: 1

      You forgot the '-' in the URL, the one you gave us is for the real site, not the parady.

  41. I'm surprised... by crl620 · · Score: 1

    ...that they haven't tried to take down other sites yet.

    Take this one: http://walmartwatch.com/
    They have way more publicity and even had an ad in the New York Times.

    1. Re:I'm surprised... by night_flyer · · Score: 1

      im guessing the difference is, with walmartwatch, it looks like an activist site, while walmart-foundation.org, the only difference between it and the real site is a "-"

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  42. Re:Do the teachers at the lefty propaganda mills.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You seem to believe that there is either left-wing or right-wing propaganda, that you must choose one or the other. I don't think professors should be rewarding any particular agenda. They should be rewarding reason, rationality, and thoughtfulness in their arguments. Instead professors seem to reward groupthink, which in this country, seems to be shoehorned into either progressive or conservative. There is no room for the individual view. You must choose one of the two camps.

  43. Somewhat OT by $1uck · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why the biggest criticism of wal-mart isn't the fact that everytime you shop there you are supporting the world's largest communist dictatorship. Which is truly Ironic considering that their biggest criticism happens to be their "business practices" to which the "right-wing" conservative answer is always find a better business model and compete better "thats how capitalism works." To underscore what should be obvious its not capitalism bringing you those low low prices instead is a repressive (ultra-left-wing communist style) dictatorship.

    1. Re:Somewhat OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps we should start by listing what you have that is NOT built in China?
      PC?, laptop? TV? DVD? Car stereo? Mac's?
      Projector? Ethernet switch?

  44. Re:Do the teachers at the lefty propaganda mills.. by bartyboy · · Score: 1

    As opposed to left-wing propaganda? Give me a break. Most professors are unionized or have tenure or both. These are both left-wing institutions that the professors are very interested in upholding, hence the indoctrination of their students with similar ideas.

  45. ot: please keep the spamming in your sig... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...so those of us who don't want to see it can turn it off.

  46. The DMCA is NOT piperazine by crovira · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The use of the DMCA in ANY expression of free speech is so bogus that attempting to use the courts for such purposes should result in the automatic suspension of the laywer's licence.

    The DMCA was NOT designed for the purpose of stifling free speech. (We have libel laws and slander laws for that. :-)

    Some humourless lawyer would argue that his client is afforded every protection of the law. I would argue that the DMCA is NOT a protection under the law.

    The case is like arguing that you can ONLY have ONE of anything. Reproduction of anything at anytime for any purpose would be outlawed.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  47. Microsoft Wipe by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1


    "If Microsoft made toilet paper it would be called Butt Wiper." Brian Briggs

    If Microsoft made toilet paper it would be called Microsoft Wipe. Microsoft would then consider that other uses of the word wipe were possibly infringing on their trademark.

  48. Re:The (WRONG) site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    duh

  49. Not to mention that Gangsta's paradise. by johnny+cashed · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is a rework of Stevie Wonder's Pastime Paradise. Who is taking from whom here? Of course, I'm sure Stevie was duly compensated.

    1. Re:Not to mention that Gangsta's paradise. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      Who is taking from whom here? Of course, I'm sure Stevie was duly compensated.

      Maybe they were hoping he wouldn't see it.

  50. Point, click, shoot... by http101 · · Score: 1

    Well, the dumbass was using their graphics! He shot himself in the foot! If you're going to setup a pardoy site, use your own damned work. It looks like what pissed Walmart off was his use of their images. Go buy a camera, shoot the pics, use Photoshop and put your own work on the site. *cough, cough, rip-off* It's just that easy.

    --
    -- Game Developers: Stop porting badly-textured games from crappy console systems!
    1. Re:Point, click, shoot... by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Sure, he can use their graphics, as long as they're different enough. As other posters have written in here, the right to parody is protected. As long as the site was easily identifiable as parody he can copy all he likes AFAIK.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    2. Re:Point, click, shoot... by awhelan · · Score: 1

      Exactly, this was the issue with JibJab.com
      The "This Land is Your Land..." tune and chorus was copied directly from Woody Guthrie's song. Since it was obviously a parody, (which this site was also) the court ruled in JibJab's favor citing fair use. That case alone should be enough precedent to get this thrown out of court.

    3. Re:Point, click, shoot... by http101 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention it was an absolutely hysterical parody! In this case, he used the original documents and only changed maybe 2 items on the entire site. Use of the original Mal-Wart images is what caught their attention. I hate to say it, but it would have been less trouble to hack the Mal-Wart site and left a "733t Hax0r 0wN5 j00" message. Less paperwork, less litigation, and overall, just less work.

      --
      -- Game Developers: Stop porting badly-textured games from crappy console systems!
  51. The enemy within? by ItsIllak · · Score: 1

    If I didn't know better, and I do know that /. doesn't necessarily have the most well read readership, I'd swear that the huge number of people claiming that you can't use images in a parody were evidence of infiltration by someone trying to cloud the issue....

    Or maybe I'm just paranoid, we can always hope that's the case I guess.

  52. Reminds me... by Veinor · · Score: 1

    Al Franken's book , 'Lies and the Lying Liars who tell them' got him sued by Fox for copyright violation. Fox got laughed out of court. I believe that it's actually copyright violation if people could believe that it's the WalMart Foundation web site, but I'm not a lawyer.

  53. Walmart and syndicates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Talking about WalMart... They are closing the store of Jonquière (Saguenay) (my town) because the employees created a syndicate... They said that the store wasn't profitable.

  54. Re:Do the teachers at the lefty propaganda mills.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, because there is no right-wing equivalent of tenure. Every single right-wing person, AT ALL, lives or dies by their own merits and is NEVER guaranteed any support from a host organization.

    Give me a fucking break - look at W for a counterexample to your religion. This insidious leftist tenure system is just formalized nepotism - something which everyone is "guilty" of. Besides does in some cases do a good job of promoting intellectual freedom (and often it fucks up severe, but what else is new?).

  55. It's low wages that does this! by SwedishChef · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, people shop at Wal-Mart because of low prices but the reason they have to shop low prices is that their wages have gone down (in real terms) over the past 30 years.

    As an example, my wife graduated from HS in 1974 and her first job was at paper plant. The job was union and paid $7 per hour and worked 40 hours a week. This, mind you, for a HS grad with no college and no special skills in a small city north of Seattle. By the time she left that job (in 1980) she was making over $10 per hour and getting full medical.

    Then wages went into the toilet. Now kids are lucky to get a $7 job (at Wal-Mart) and work 20-hours a week.

    In 1974 you could buy a house ($35,000 for a 3br/2ba home in the Seattle area) with a $7/hour job. In 2005 houses there average $250,000. Try buying one of those right out of HS.

    So ya... people shop for cheap prices but only because we don't have much of a choice any more.

    --
    No one ever had to evacuate a city because the solar panels broke!
    1. Re:It's low wages that does this! by NetCynicism · · Score: 1
      Yes, people shop at Wal-Mart because of low prices but the reason they have to shop low prices is that their wages have gone down (in real terms) over the past 30 years.

      This is an example of misuse of economic statistics. Yes, real income has fallen, but since 1980 real disposable income is up 50% because real prices have fallen a lot faster than real wages, your examples notwithstanding.

      People don't shop at Wal-Mart because they have to; we're a lot richer than we were just 25 years ago. People shop at Wal-Mart because they're cheap and convenient and we'd rather spend some of that vastly increased disposable income on other stuff... booze and hookers, in my case.

    2. Re:It's low wages that does this! by Feynman · · Score: 1
      In 1974 you could buy a house ($35,000 for a 3br/2ba home in the Seattle area) with a $7/hour job.

      Yeah, and a "nickel will buy you a steak and kidney pie, a cup of coffee, a slice of cheesecake and a newsreel... with enough change left over to ride the trolley from Battery Park to the polo grounds."

  56. not smart by SpongeBobLinuxPants · · Score: 1

    Does Wal-Mart(tm) really want to offend their primary customer base, college students? What are they going to do with all that ramen and easy mac if people start boycotting them?

  57. Copyright, Not DMCA by John+Hasler · · Score: 0

    > Wal-Mart used the Digital Millenium Copyright Act
    > to temporarily shut down...

    No. They used the threat of a copyright infringement lawsuit to shut the site down. The hosting company used the DMCA to render itself immune. Without the DMCA Safe Harbour provisions the site would not have been put up to begin with.

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    1. Re:Copyright, Not DMCA by russotto · · Score: 1

      Nope. Prior to the DMCA was the Netcom case, which protected sites as well as the DMCA, but without the horrendous takedown requirements.

      Even before Netcom, hosting providers didn't pre-screen their customer's content, so it would have been put up anyway.

  58. SARCASM (for the humor impaired) by nutrock69 · · Score: 2, Funny

    - And rightly so. His First Amendment rights are being violated.

    Didn't you hear? The US government has officially declared that the first amendment must have been a "typo". They argue that it would have been easily edited out if they had used a program like Microsoft Word, but it wasn't so easy to edit once they had it down using ink and paper...

  59. How is parody of WalMart copyright infringement? by Hamster+Lover · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It's been mentioned all through this thread that section 107 of the Copyright Act allows for fair use of copyrighted works for criticism or comment. What I don't think people are getting is how is the web site supposed to achieve parody without expressing the elements of the WalMart charity web site such as logos, design, etc. The very nature of parody REQUIRES copyright infringement to meet its aims.

  60. It's *parody,* people by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Libel applies whereever you attribute something in writing to someone who does not hold that belief. It is always legally actionable.

    Check out the Flynt case, before the Supreme Court. Said libel also has to be *believable.* Hence, when Flynt published things about Falwell's mother's, ah, *taste*, it was found to be parody because no one in their right mind would believe it.

    That's kinda what parody is.

  61. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by DigitalCrackPipe · · Score: 1

    "slanderous speach"
    No. First of all, the site was a parody, not a news site. Slander/libel doesn't apply to parody. Second, written materials would fall under libel, not slander.

  62. No it doesn't by MattW · · Score: 2, Informative

    Deere & Co v MTD Products, Inc was a competitor modifying Deere's mark in a 'humorous' way in order to both mock and identify the competitor for commercial purposes. It was a commercial message rather than the social commentary that one generally envisions when one thinks of satirized protected marks.

    The Dallas Cowboys, Inc v Pussycat Cinema is, *again* a commercial case where "Debbie does Dallas" producers were enjoined from referring to the sports team in promotion of the film. Even trying to call that satire is a thin defense to begin with.

    There are 3 tests commonly used to test the use of a trademark, however, see L.L. Bean, Inc. v. Drake Pubs., Inc., 811 F.2d 26, 31, 33 (1st Cir. 1987), where the First Circuit court protects the use of a trademark against an antidilution claim almost solely on the basis of the use being noncommercial. To quote: "The Constitution is not offended when the [Maine] antidilution statute is applied to prevent a defendant from using a trademark without permission in order to merchandise dissimilar products or services. ... The Constitution does not, however, permit the range of the antidilution statute to encompass the unauthorized use of a trademark in a noncommercial setting such as an editorial or artistic context".

    See also:
    Yankee Pub. Inc. v. News America Pub. Inc., 809 F. Supp. 267, 279 (S.D.N.Y. 1992)
    Simon & Schuster Inc. v. Dove Audio Inc. 936 F. Supp. 156, 164 n.4 (S.D.N.Y. 1996)


    I don't see how the comments on libel are even relevant. The site was a parody and received a C&D only because of their use of trademarks. They did not allege libel, at least according to that story, and such a claim might also have to be evaluated in the context of political or social parody.

    *Anything* is always legally actionable; that doesn't mean the cause of action is likely to prevail, and Wal-Mart was certainly unlikely to prevail in this instance.

    This post is not meant to constitute legal advice; if you need advice for a specific legal situation, consult an attorney.

    1. Re:No it doesn't by homer_s · · Score: 1

      The Dallas Cowboys, Inc v Pussycat Cinema is, *again* a commercial case where "Debbie does Dallas" ....
      Where can I get a copy of this video? It is for, em... DMCA research purposes....

  63. Warms my heart by mark_jabroni · · Score: 2, Insightful
    After so many artists pushed for the DMCA (and other oppressive copyright laws) to be enacted, few things make me as happy as seeing an artist get crushed by the laws his fellows fought to create.

    But what I enjoy even most is when this leads to the conclusion that it's because of the powerful corporations that these sorts of evil things happen.

    This is the progressive circle of life. Progressives decide the establishment has a problem. Progressives pitch legislation that sucks to solve the problem. The legislation is enacted and then (shocker) it starts to suck. Progressives then use legislation sucking as proof that the establishment has a problem. Progressive pitch new legislation that sucks even more. Elton John starts singing ...

  64. Re:Microsoft Wipe (bad taste warning) by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 2, Funny

    If Microsoft made toilet paper, it wouldn't actually remove anything but merely spread it around until everything is covered with a uniform layer of feces. Just like Internet Explorer...

    --
    Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
  65. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by bigpat · · Score: 1

    "because the people who shop at Wal-Mart care about one thing, and one thing only: low prices. As long as this suit doesn't lead to higher prices, Wal-Mart will come out of it financially unscathed."

    well, I think they care about the perception of low prices more than actual low prices. The low prices that they care about most are those of it suppliers.

  66. Yes. by mfh · · Score: 1

    Yes Wall Mart is a charitable non-profit. All of their profit goes to helping little old ladies retire better.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
  67. I thought you had some Freedom of Speech left by octal666 · · Score: 1

    but it seems that freedoms in the USA are no longer a priority. I've read many works of the last two centuries written by europeans that envied the freedoms of the USA, now it seems the American Way is the way of the dollar, not the way of Freedom and True Democracy.

    --
    DON'T PANIC
  68. actual walmart foundation website by thegalacticcadet · · Score: 1

    i like the header on the actual walmart foundation website, written in appropriately troglodytic language. "walmart good. works. man make fire."

  69. Keep 'em coming... by localman · · Score: 1

    Let's keep these lawsuits coming. The more this happens the faster this crap will get to the Supreme Court and shot down.

    Cheers.

  70. Vote Papasian Vice President, Student Body Finance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/dpapasia/

    \. got played; You can't buy this sort of publicity. At least not as an undergrad @ CMU.

    He might have lost the election worse than his battle w/ wall-mart... but there's always next year.

  71. Easy to fix this problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't copy the images. Copy the links to the images. Then all he is doing is providing links to the walmart images. Then there are no copyright issues ;-) All he needs is to do something like this:

    <img src=http://graphics.samsclub.com/wmimages/goodwork s/recent_events.jpg border=0>
  72. How fitting... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that a Microsoft ad would appear in a Slashdot submission for a Walmart article. And with sound to boot.

  73. Re:Lefty or just tired of consumer-oriented everyt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Greed has always been the driving factor. Competition has always been brutal.

    Do you expect to get paid the most for your efforts? Do you buy at the cheapest prices you can, or the most expensive? My problem with the lefty view, is that they believe the choices they make in labor and consumerism are more moral than the choices others make. They talk like they're are so above the capitalist consumer culture, when they are as deep into it and profitng from it as anyone.

  74. If you didn't vote straight Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yous ASKED for this! The only party that will repeal the unconstitutional DMCA is the Libertarian Party, the Party of Principle.
    ___________________________________
    A vote against a Libertarian candidate is
    a vote to abolish the Constitution itself.

  75. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

    That doesn't really make sense, though- because they could've saved money on legal bills by not bothering with this guy (keeping prices low), AND avoided the bad publicity.

  76. The wonders of inflation.... by isotope23 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Your post hits the primary problem our nation has, inflation.

    It is so sad that people in this country do not realize they are being ripped off. Under our current economic system, inflation screws the poor and middle classes. It is essentially a RECURRING tax on savings.

    For example : try putting in the 7.00 per hour wage from 1974, then compare it to today.

    $7.00 per hour in 1974 would be roughly equivalent to making $27.00 per hour today.

    But it gets worse. Any money you try to save, is also worth less over time. The interest you earn on a bank account needs to make at least the level of inflation just to stay the same in terms of purchasing power.

    It seems people are just plain clueless about how they are being royally screwed by the governments economic policies.

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    1. Re:The wonders of inflation.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's more at work than inflation. For starters, certain costs like food and energy conveniently get excluded from core inflation calculations. Ostensibly this is to avoid distorting the short-term picture (which is true) but I'd also bet that over the past 30 years inflation in food and energy averages well above the "core" average--even if it's subject to greater variation.

      Also, the $35k home in Seattle in 1974 would only be worth $138,651.12 today if you only accounted for inflation. But GP is right, the average home is $250k and where I live in eastside Seattle tiny homes go for $300k. The $425k home I live in (no, I don't own it) is only $425k because it's directly on a busy street. Two blocks over and it'd be $500k.

  77. Mod parent troll. by muellerr1 · · Score: 1

    What are you talking about? Progressives fought against the DMCA. It was the moneyed interests controlling the conservatives who wanted the DMCA.

  78. Mod Parent Up! by ratboy666 · · Score: 1

    It's an insight. It's funny. It poignant.

    Ratboy.

    --
    Just another "Cubible(sic) Joe" 2 17 3061
  79. Even better... by Allen+Zadr · · Score: 1

    http://www.penny-arcade.com/news.php3?date=2003-04 -21 A little more than half way down the page.

    --
    Kinetic stupidity has a new brand leader: Allen Zadr.
  80. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by smorpheus · · Score: 1

    That's BS, Walmart over the last two years has done nothing BUT try to improve their image, but they keep shooting themselves in the foot, with asinine actions like this one. Seriously 400 hits a day, and you slam the website down the toilet. This guy is on a COLLEGE CAMPUS it doesn't get swept under the rug. He has a giant student body inherintly behind and supporting him to make as much noise as he can. and if you don't believe about Walmart's PR push here's some source: http://www.prwatch.org/node/2911 These guys will never see another dime from me, and with the number of people who agree with Walmart's creed of "How can good deals be bad for America"(the parenthetical being, of course: *no matter what the cost*) makes me wonder if the country doesn't deserve the economical quagmire it's digging itself into.

  81. Re:The site is gone in google by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

    The cache got updated very quickly

    I guess Walmart got a little help...

    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
  82. Did Wal-Mart read the rest of the law? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (e) Limitation on Liability of Nonprofit Educational Institutions.-- ... (A) such faculty member's or graduate student's infringing activities do not involve the provision of online access to instructional materials that are or were required or recommended, within the preceding 3-year period, for a course taught at the institution by such faculty member or graduate student; http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/search/display. html?terms=512&url=/uscode/html/uscode17/usc_sec_1 7_00000512----000-.html IT seems that if this was used for an art class and hosted on univeristy servers, there is no way Wal-Mart would even have a case. Wal-Mart is just pulling the scare tactic to scare the University ISPs and students away from a lawsuit. IMHO there should be a law that keeps companies from threatening people with lawsuits just to get the person to do what they want. Though it would be extremely hard to prove it was a scare tactic. The other category that this would fall under would be Fair Use. Being that he didn't copy all of the original Wal-Mart website, he would have fair use by copying certain elements of it, unless each image that he used was copyrighted individually. In that case, he should change a slight detail in the images, and then once again they would qualify for fair use. Then of course you have parody... Al Franken proved that with his book "Fair and Balanced" vs. Fox.

  83. People vs. Larry Flint by should_be_linear · · Score: 1

    Exectly the same case as in "People vs. Larry Flint" movie... Except this guy will hardly have money to bring his case to the highest court.

    --
    839*929
  84. OK, can you spot the parody by hey! · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Won't many of them move on to providing layout and graphics for evil corporations?

    OK, check out the trademark at this site.

    Some artist decided to stick it to the man, however the man is so dense he hasn't noticed he was being mocked for, what, seventy years now?

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:OK, can you spot the parody by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Woah. I've seen the logo before, but have never stopped to look at it.

      One would hope that it was merely overlooked for years. Otherwise, it could have been a call to arms...

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  85. WalMart Culture = Epitome of Retarded Behavior by KnarfO · · Score: 1

    Due to all the retarded behavior that our fellow citizens exhibit on a daily basis I am never surprised when I see people falling for direct parody.

    I've met a few of the Execs who work for Wal-Mart, some of whom are not much brighter than the people they exploi^H^H^H^H^H^H employ. My guess is that they're genuinely concerned that a great many folks who go looking for Wal-Mart on the web would completely miss the joke of this guy's site and take it as legit.

    Just as Aurthur C. Clarke said: "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." The same principle applies to literature and art...Any sufficiently advanced form of comedy is indistinguishable from the nightly news.

    (See The Daily Show with Jon Stewart)

    --


    "Creativity is allowing ones self to make mistakes. Art is knowing which ones to keep" - Scott Adams
  86. Let's all sing along... by argent · · Score: 3, Funny

    D-M-C-A... just watch out for the D-M-C-A

    Young man, young man, are you listening to me?
    Young man, young man, even this parody is illegal.

    1. Re:Let's all sing along... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry for my pitiful attempt at ascii art,

      |o) /'o'\ (o_ /o\
      `I` `I` `I` `I`
      / \ / \ / \ / \

  87. Jesus would help. by ourcraft · · Score: 1

    If our judges all had a personal relationship to Jesus wouldn't that help? A judiciary that understands blasphemy when they see it, will be able to understand that personal property in the "intellectual" sphere means you can critisize us when you can afford it. Excuse me? I said shut up.

    More seriously, a free country is worth protecting. Think of what your fathers and mothers gave up during WWII. What they they willing to sacrifice to protect democracy for you, their children, and your children too. But what are you doing?

  88. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because the people who shop at Wal-Mart care about one thing, and one thing only: low prices

    Just a slight quibble. There have been numerous stories about Walmart and their competitive edge and while price is a factor, many consumers site convenience a lot more than price OR selection.

    Toys R Us is being killed by Walmart even though TRU may be cheaper in a lot of respects and have a LOT more selection. But the fact that they can buy the Christmas gifts while having tires installed is a huge factor, even though they might not have the PINK dress Barbie.

  89. Re:Do the teachers at the lefty propaganda mills.. by Valar · · Score: 1

    Left wing? Considering that most of the traditions and norms of university life, including tenure date at least back to the enlightenment (when conservatism was invented [though back then it was called 'liberalism' because it was liberal compared to the philosophy of the time] and our type of liberalism had not yet been invented) there is a strong argument that tenure is a right wing program. In fact, it exists partially to protect professors from those who would seek to silence their views (by firing them).

  90. Before you complain about injustice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Did you actually look at the exhibits in Walmart's complaint PDF (http://atdt.nu/walmart.pdf)?

    This has nothing to do with injustice. If you're going to make a parody, it has to be clear that it's a parody. I don't think the phony articles he had on his page were nearly obvious enough.

    Let me put it this way: his parody didn't read like the Onion, it read like someone copying a site trying to slight and entice the original owner. Consider it before you start going on the EFF warpath about Walmart in this case.

  91. Tragedy of the Commons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tragedy of the Commons refers to the assertion based on utilitarian theory that public (common) property inevitably leads to waste. How does that have anything to do to with this topic?

    1. Re:Tragedy of the Commons by 241comp · · Score: 1

      Um, no, it does not have to do with waste but with individual interest (short term) being in conflict with the common good (long term). Most often in the abuse of resources. The tragedy of the commons tells us that "when individuals use a public good, they do not bear the entire cost of their actions. If each seeks to maximize individual utility, he ignores the costs borne by others." The economy in general (your small-town's local economy) is public property. Essentially what I was saying is that we shop at WalMart because we do not weigh the entire cost to us and others in the long term when we do so. We do not take care of the economy (public property) because it belongs to everyone so it is someone else's problem.

  92. Courts by DirtyFly · · Score: 2, Informative

    He, I used to believe that taking everything into court happened just on TV series ... guess I was WRONG. Wasn't it in ancient rome where lawyers couldnt receive payment for their services ?
    Jorge Canelhas
    Are you a Retro Computing Fan ?
    http://example.com/

  93. But what *is* a parody by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But a parody has to be a parody on the original work, NOT simply a statement about the author of the original work.
    Copy a painting of picasso, but with 5 eyes on one side of each face is a parody. Copy a painting of picasso and add textballoons where each face says: "Wallmart sux" is not a parody, and is a copyright infringement.

  94. Rocking all over the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting. Same shit happened to us here in Norway. We started up a parody of Dagbladet (Norway's biggest internet newspaper) called Vagbladet with a logo similar to theirs: It used approximately (but not exactly) the same color and font. They immediately sent their lawyers at us, demanding that we change our name AND our logo. Didn't require us to take the site down, though. We folded. Our lawyer adviced us not to, but we did anyway. So we didn't risk a lot of $$$ and were still able to continue making fun of them.

  95. walmart sucks by iowa119900089 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So I will not shop there. Target also sucks so I will not shop there either. It's amazing how I can find what I want off the internet or from a grocery store or smaller shops around town. It is easy not to shop at WalMart so why bitch and scream. Just don't go there.

  96. Something else at CMU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well it's good to see that something else goes on at Carnegie Mellon besides robots and computers...

  97. Scare tactics by edraven · · Score: 2, Interesting

    He wasn't forced to take down his website or change anything in it, as near as I can tell from the article. He was frightened into doing it. From my experience, lawyers for corporations first draft a scary letter telling you what they're going to do if you don't cease and desist. They send this letter regardless of whether they have any legal right to follow through on those threats for the simple reason that people who don't know their rights as well as a lawyer does will often back down. They assume that a lawyer knows the law and won't make threats they can't back up. But why litigate when you can mug some people through the mail?

    Back in the day, I put up a website called "The Saint Peterbilt Steel Erection Church of Christ". For reasons that are lost in obscurity. I received a C&D from lawyers representing Paccar, the company that owns Peterbilt Trucks. They claimed images on the page (which I had made myself) were similar to the Peterbilt logo, and they would take legal action to protect their trademark. Well, I panicked. Then I researched and found out what my rights are. Then I took a look at the images, and decided I could make them look nicer and at the same time a little less like the Peterbilt logo. That served both our purposes, so I went ahead and did it. Then I sent them a letter stating that the site was parody and therefore protected, that I'd made a concession in altering the images to make them less similar to the protected trademark, and that was pretty much all they were going to get. I offered to include a verbal disclaimer on the site if they felt there was a possibility people would get confused and think that Paccar Inc. was a sponsor or somehow affiliated with The Saint Peterbilt Steel Erection Church of Christ. Their response was, "No, that's fine." My site was down for all of... not at all.

    1. Re:Scare tactics by mabu · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you think about it, he's pulling a "Wal-Mart" on Wal-Mart by sensationalizing the legal oppression the corporation is trying to bear down on him. It's a propaganda battle; it's yet another ironic symbolism of the constant conflict between little guys and big corporations, and the little guys make up for lack of resources with ingenuity.

      You're right about his legal rights, but if he simply refused to change the site, he couldn't fully capitalize on the unfair and ironic imposition of Wal-Mart's legal intimidation tactic. Brilliant move changing the site if you ask me.

  98. Why smart executives don't legally harass parody by Simonetta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When a huge corporation promotes itself as having a 'cleaner-than-thou' image, and then muscles down on someone who mocks this image in a tiny inperceptable forum, they often will generate a backlash in the media; the alternative media if not the major outlets.

    Then the parody gets recognized far wider than it would have from its initial presentation. This brings recognition to the parodist and simulates discussion on the practices of the corporation and the contrasts between its business practices and its manufactured image. Smart business execs usually know this and will work to avoid publicity amplification. Walmart execs tend to be more mean than savvy.

    Perhaps the clearest example of this publicity effect is the Disneyland Orgy which would have disappeared as an urban legend if clueless Disney execs had not have gone batshit when it appeared and mounted a huge effort to destroy it. As you can see, it lives now on the web forever. It still is pretty funny.

  99. KKKmart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I knew I made this image for a reason

    http://obscurethoughts.net/temp/kmart.jpg

  100. You don't fight a C&D... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My recollection is that Penny Arcade simply didn't have the requisite 10000 to 25000 it would have taken to fight the cease and desist.

    A Cease and Desist has no actual legal status. Anybody can send out a C&D letter. I could send you one for your post. C&D's are like googles: they do nothing.

    If they figured that AG would not have actually sued, they could have wadded the thing up and thrown it away. If AG didn't actually file legal proceedings at that point, then no cost would have been incurred.

    Whether or not AG would have actually filed is up for debate, but my point is that until you get a letter that basically says "Hello! You are being sued!" you don't really have to pay a dime for defense.

  101. Wow, that's kinda scary. by TheSpoom · · Score: 1
    Apparently that parody has been targetted with a DMCA suit as well, but more importantly, check the bottom of the letter:

    I declare, under penalty of perjury, that the above is accurate, that Mr. Doctorow and BoingBoing are the intellectual property (copyright) owners of our material and that I am authorized to act on behalf of Mr. Doctorow and BoingBoing.

    Very truly yours,

    Fred von Lohmann
    Electronic Frontier Foundation


    I thought these people were fighting for better things.
    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
    1. Re:Wow, that's kinda scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the date shown in the permalink is april 1st.

    2. Re:Wow, that's kinda scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was the whoosh I just heard the BoringBoring joke flying over your head, or was it your sarcastic response flying over mine?

  102. Legal or right? by bja23 · · Score: 1

    I would like to point out something that seems to have been glazed over. Whether or not Wal-Mart has a legal standing to shutdown this site is debatable. I would like to think that the site, regardless of what graphics he used, was a true parody. But I'm not a lawyer and I won't speak or debate on the matter. Regardless of the law, it still isn't right. When a corporation is allowed to bully someone into a situation without any hearing on the matter, legality makes no difference. Just my 2 cents but this is not a question of law, rather a question on how we allow the government to be run through the creation of those laws. If we feel that this is wrong, then it is our task as citizens to make it wrong. Those politicians and judges work for us, not Wal-Mart! We need to remind them of that fact. Through parady, votes, news, or anything else we can get our hands on.

  103. Leno & Letterman are out of business.. by mnemotronic · · Score: 1
    And anyone else that uses parody, sarcasm, or metaphore. The DMCA has got to go. Any politician that supports it has got to go.

    And in the spirit of SlashDot's new "big obnoxious ad " ....






    Death to DMCA. Time to start using Adblock.

    --
    The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
  104. this kid isnt so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the kid probably also learned that negative publicity is better than no publicity. by getting his site media attention from having it 'banned' by walmart, its probably gained him 1000 times more hits than his little art project ever would have gotten by itself.
    good idea if you ask me, but yeah, should have made his own images.

    1. Re:this kid isnt so stupid by chucks86 · · Score: 1

      He probably should have thought about putting ads on his site beforehand... at least enough to pay for the courses he's taking.

      --
      Help a poor college student. Send a couple cents via paypal to chucks86@gmail.com
  105. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You forgot
    4. Link goes on Slashdot
    5. Site get's slashdotted, result, melted server
    6. ????
    7. Profit! ;)

  106. Wal-Mart's history of distorting facts by mabu · · Score: 1
    From perusing the sites it's pretty interesting the stuff you find. On Wal-Mart Watch they claim 70% of the store's products come from China, and Wal-Mart's own propaganda site, Wal-Mart "Facts" their response to this is a nice right-wing style two-step:

    Myth: 70 percent of the merchandise sold at our stores comes from China.

    Fact: The special interest group who makes this claim doesn't tell you where it got that statistic. In actuality, Wal-Mart's business with U.S. suppliers remains strong and healthy. In 2004, Wal-Mart spent more than $137 billion for U.S. products and services sold at our stores. A single company with sales of that magnitude would rank #5 on the Fortune 500. You can count on this fact, too: The products and services from US suppliers sold at Wal-Mart stores provide good jobs to more than 3.5 million employees at 68,000 suppliers in states across America.


    I'm so sick of corporate propagandist distracto-babble. If the "facts" dispute the "myth" that 70% of Wal-Mart's products don't come from China, why not say it? Why sidestep the issue, yet still call it a myth and talk about how much money you pay suppliers? Stupid, intelligence-insulting corporations.
  107. Some info about the creator of the website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is his personal/political website: http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/user/dpapasia/

  108. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are a fool.

    Walmart gets 100 Million shopper visits a week(stat from 2002, probably more now), and they cross every demographic: urban/sub-urban/rural, high/low/middle income, black/white/etc. Walmart wants to appeal to everyone, and for the most part, they do. Wal-Mart's "target demographic" is everyone. Lots of my friends love to scream about how bad walmart is, but they shop there anyway.

    Wal-Mart has learned that as much as we bitch and moan about their labor practices and whatever, we'll still shop there if we think they have the lowest prices.

  109. Walmart probably doesn't own the pictures by WH · · Score: 1

    In general, a large corporate licenses its pictures for use from professional photographers. Thus, walmart would normally not own the photographs being used in the parody site.

    Because Walmart or any company that licenses photographs normally does so based on the number of impressions expected, the abuse by the photographs by a parody site could cost them real money.

    I don't agree with the DMCA but it's not fair to cost any business money by using unlicensed images.

    In the end, the photographer that does own the license could most likely have filed for a felony copyright infringement case without using the DMCA. In my opinion, the person using the images without a license got off easy.

    WH

    1. Re:Walmart probably doesn't own the pictures by WH · · Score: 1

      Heh.. geez my English was terrible in that response. I'm not a scammer.. really I'm not.. :P

    2. Re:Walmart probably doesn't own the pictures by planetoid · · Score: 1

      it's not fair to cost any business money by using unlicensed images.

      If I'm reading this right, all we have to do to bankrupt Walmart is to put pictures they have on their webpage on a series of parody webpages?

      ...ladies and gentleman, you know what to do now!!

      --
      Slashdot requires you to wait longer between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.
  110. jbanes@gmail.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please send me gay porn

  111. Freenet? by Fjornir · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't see a dump of this on TFE -- anyone have a copy they can insert?

    --
    I want a new world. I think this one is broken.
  112. It's more than just DCMA by unassimilatible · · Score: 2, Insightful
    They took all the images right off of the Wal Mart site. It's copyright violation, pure and simple, not "censorship."

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:It's more than just DCMA by aphor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That distinction only makes sense if there is a distinction between logos copied off the web site and logos faithfully reproduced by hand using some graphics software and a pen and tablet. Let's say they looked pretty recognisable, obviously referring to the retail giant, but they were a bit off in many dimensions, and they were an original work? Can a publisher or advertiser push DMCA on an artist if their work gets cut up and pasted into a collage?

      The real issue here is that the DMCA C&D adds more to the art than the simple act of parody! The "CENSORED" graphics are more demonstrative of conflict, which is the real purpose of the art anyway.

      --
      --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
    2. Re:It's more than just DCMA by m50d · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The US used to have this thing called "fair use" where copying that would otherwise be infringing for the purpose of parody was legal. Wonder what happened to that.

      --
      I am trolling
    3. Re:It's more than just DCMA by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      If they didn't want any problems, they shouldn't have taken the images directly from Wal-Mart's website. Pretty fucking simple thing to do, isn't it?

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    4. Re:It's more than just DCMA by Flendon · · Score: 2, Informative

      No it is a Fair Use parody. If that isn't obvious enough for you try Section 107. Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use of the US copyright law:
      In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include -
      (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

      The site clearly falls into the nonprofit educational category.

      --
      chown -R us ./base
    5. Re:It's more than just DCMA by CritterNYC · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The US used to have this thing called "fair use" where copying that would otherwise be infringing for the purpose of parody was legal. Wonder what happened to that.

      The MAFIAA has successfully killed most fair use through technological methods coupled with laws like the DMCA. Add in a dose of SLAPPs (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation) and the Walmarts of the world can do whatever the hell they want to you.

    6. Re:It's more than just DCMA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can a publisher or advertiser push DMCA on an artist if their work gets cut up and pasted into a collage?

      Copyright still applies, even if its cut up and pasted into a collage. Not sure what the DCMA effect would be; perhaps it adds the death penalty...

    7. Re:It's more than just DCMA by m50d · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Just like it's pretty fucking simple to shut up and let yourself be taxed without representation, hand over the jews you were sheltering, etc. It doesn't matter that there was an easier way to do it, he has the right to do what he did.

      --
      I am trolling
  113. Re:jbanes@gmail.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't I already explain to you? That doesn't work! You're posting at 0. Which means that the search engines won't pick it up, and that it won't be archived for posterity. How stupid are you trolls, anyway?

  114. Get the f-ing facts straight by wsanders · · Score: 1

    RTFA:

    - Site was not shut down, it was "modified" because he stole pictures off MalMarts web site.

    - He might have even gotten away with it if he'd just deep-linked to their pictures, instead he whines "oooh mommy I've been censored by the DMCA, waaaah!"

    - He's a media student, he shoudl know how to take his own damn pictures. Grade - "D".

    --
    Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
    1. Re:Get the f-ing facts straight by http101 · · Score: 1

      More like Grade 'F' since his balls are now in a sling. He tangled with Corporate America, he's going to lose.

      --
      -- Game Developers: Stop porting badly-textured games from crappy console systems!
  115. This was a class project. What was he thinking? by lcsjk · · Score: 1
    The student chose a website name almost like the Wal-Mart name. He (or she) then made it look almost like the Wal-mart website. This was a college class. It was not necessary to put it up for the world to access. Although it might or might not fall under the DMCA or be copywrite infringement, there was not reason to do what he did.

    Perhaps he or she could write a letter to the ISP to get the case dropped or changed, but I suggest changing to a different website name.

  116. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  117. Mod Parent Down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He is incorrect, see other posters on this thread for reasons.

  118. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Eskimore_ · · Score: 1

    Are you saying most everyone is basically a whore to Walmart?

    I feel... I feel so dirty.

  119. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by SirGeek · · Score: 1
    the people who shop at Wal-Mart care about one thing, and one thing only: low prices.

    Wrong. Not ALL people shop there for the pricing. Some people shop there because there is NO alternatives. We used to have other department store chains. Caldor, Lechmere, Bradlees, Zayer, and Ames. They are all out of business. Right now ALL that is left is Target, Wal-Mart, and K-Mart . They do NOT carry the same things. K-Mart doesn't carry 1/2 the items that the other stores did. So now where do I go ? If I need a product, what choice do I have ?

  120. There has to be a copy... by qualico · · Score: 1

    somewhere on the net.

    Post the URL when you find it.
    If I can get spam from offshore ISPs, why can't the site be hosted in these places?

    Spam Tricks

  121. America... by blueadept1 · · Score: 0

    Land of the free?

  122. Real WalMart foundation site reads like a parody by Animats · · Score: 1
    "Water Bottles Produced For Donation"
    "The Wal-Mart "Donated Water" label and program is one of the latest efforts to support our military." ... "If you know someone serving in the military, they may have been one of the first to see a new bottle of water produced for Wal-Mart and SAM'S CLUB purely for donation purposes. With this bright new label it is easy to see that both Wal-Mart and SAM'S CLUB are making the donation."

    That's their idea of a donation? That's advertising, not a charitable donation.

  123. maybe walmart has a case by rjnagle · · Score: 1

    I'm all anti-walmart and pro-reform for copyright/patent/trademark.

    (And you really need to check this saga out, which contains a lot of evidence about law and precedents.

    I seem to remember one criteria being whether averageconsumers would mistake the site for the legitimate walmart site. The screenshots on the PDF certainly give the impression that a person who is not looking too closely might easily make the mistake. The problem was that the parody was too subtle.

    That doesn't get walmart off the hook though.

    --
    Robert Nagle, Idiotprogrammer, Houston
  124. Next best thing to parody: by FoXDie · · Score: 1

    Vandalism! [url]http://www.walmartfoundation.org/url%5D Not that I think a large influx of people on a humble site is vandalism though. :)

    1. Re:Next best thing to parody: by FoXDie · · Score: 1
    2. Re:Next best thing to parody: by FoXDie · · Score: 1

      Ok right... Don't mind me. Nothing to see here... http://www.walmartfoundation.org/ ...stupid phpbb sites...

  125. DMCA Abused Yet Again by CodeBuster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is yet another example of the DMCA being abused to silence legitimate free speech. If any more evidence was needed concerning the unintended consequences of this legislation then surely this most recent incident fits the bill. The DMCA has utterly failed in its intended effects, prevention of wholesale copyright infringement in the digital age, and it has manifested many negative side effects. The copyright infringement which is currently taking place on the file sharing networks is nothing that could not be prosecuted under pre-DMCA copyright law and any notion that hackers in Russia, China, and elsewhere give a damn about what US laws say about circumvention devices, or anything else for that matter, is living in la-la-land. Meanwhile the DMCA has been used to muzzle free expression, stifle innovation, intimidate researchers, negate fair use, impede competition, and browbeat technology companies. The DMCA has done nothing to advance the progress of useful arts and sciences in this country while causing tremendous collateral damage to free speech. The other problem with laws such as the DMCA, which is rarely mentioned, is that unjust, poorly written, and unfair laws breed contempt, even among otherwise law abiding citizens, for all laws and that is dangerous because it strikes against the barrier that separates civilized society from utter chaos and anarchy. One can only hope that the DMCA will eventually be struck down by the Supreme Court, but until that day most people will continue to ignore the unjust provisions of this legislation in the same way that they ignored prohibition and every other law which makes criminals out of honest and hard-working everyday Americans.

  126. Thanks! by aphor · · Score: 1

    It's the occasional comment like this that keeps me coming back to Slashdot and posting my little rants... :)

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  127. Walmart comming to our town by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have a wal-mart trying to come to our community. A group of people set up Save Cedar Mill to try to rally the community to fight it. They are trying to raise money to pay for a trafic engineer and legal stuff.

  128. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Stiletto · · Score: 1

    If I need a product, what choice do I have ?

    Ahh, the hymn of the church of consumerism. Such a sweet sound. Addicted to "product" we all are, and our addiction makes companies like Walmart, Kmart, etc. rich indeed.

  129. Not true by geekoid · · Score: 1

    communities have banded together to prevent wal-mart stored from being built.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  130. not quite by geekoid · · Score: 1

    according to Wierd Al, Coolio did not give permission, but they released it anyways. Coolio had a fit, but the law was quite clear.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  131. bad example by geekoid · · Score: 1

    American Greetinf said it wasn't a parody. For financial reason, Penny Arcade choose not to fight it.
    To be clear:
    That was never tested in court.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  132. gwbush.com by CrkHead · · Score: 1

    Does anyone remember gwbush.com and whitehouse.org? Similar action was taken by our current administration afraid they would confuse voters.

  133. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Wrong. Not ALL people shop there for the pricing. Some people shop there because there is NO alternatives. We used to have other department store chains. Caldor, Lechmere, Bradlees, Zayer, and Ames. They are all out of business.


    And that is the fault of your local community.

    A friend of mind lives in a small town in Washington state and owns a small semi-specialized retail business. Her level of service and variety of high quality products is notable as people drive down from Canada (over 80 mile) just to shop at her store. They are not putting up a Walmart; they are RINGING THE TOWN WITH THREE (two of them are complete). So far the local population has been bitching about "that goddamned wal-mart moving in", yet it seems as though everybody pitching a bitch is shopping at the aforementioned stores.

    So... she's shutting down her retail operation (revenue is down sixty percent since the Wal-Arrival) and has just laid everybody off. She's about to relocate the business to a small warehouse and is specializing in internet only sales of her products. She no longer has a showroom. She no longer has employees. She also has less stress. BUT.. there are five less jobs that paid about 2.5 times what Wal-mart pays (and she carried insurance and retirement for these folks), and less people coming into her town (literally).

    Bottom line is, most people sniveling about Wal-Mart are part of the problem and they don't even realize it. Shop at your local shops or STFU.
  134. On a huge portable sign outside a church in SC by VorpalHamster · · Score: 1

    "Wal-Mart ain't the only saving place." Best part of my trip--to hell.

    --
    If you're telekinetic raise my hand.
  135. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever hear of this thing called the Internet? Apparently people have opened stores on it and you can order products from them by using something called a Web browser.

  136. Re:Vote Papasian Vice President, Student Body Fina by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He ran in LAST YEAR's election. I know that as a candidate I'd pull a publicity stunt months after an election that's already over! Right. /. didn't get played, and neither did anyone else. This is a legitimate parody and a fairly well-executed protest.

  137. My Thoughts on Wal-Mart by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I LOVE Wal-Mart!!!

    disclaimer: I own Wal-Mart stock

  138. Wal-Mart not as bad as once previously thought by charliekowalchuk · · Score: 1

    You know, I've taken many business classes and they have nothing but great things to say about Wal-mart and its successes. Not that this guys should be censored, by no means, it is people like this that keep businesses in check.

    But Walmart and its "evil" practices are by no means worse than any other major retailers. By all the ways Wal-mart does in order to increase its bottom line, couldn't you say the same about K-mart, Meijer, and espesially Sears. Go ahead and throw Amazon.com in on the mix. All this guys arguements agaisnt Wal-mart hold true for many of em.

    My professors have discussed advertising budgets, and the truth is, if you compare marketing dollars to marketing dollars, Walmart uses a third less on their budget than K-mart. And you thought all those commercials were a waste?

    I think it really boils down to Unions. Every complaint I've ever heard against Wal-Mart has something underlying the fact that these unionized retailers can't. Now wether or not, they should unionize, I'll stay out of that, thank you very much. But come on, just come out with it, you hate Wal-mart cause they won't unionize!

  139. Unfortunately.... by Vancouverite · · Score: 1
    This was probably a correct use of the DMCA (much as it pains me to type those words). Here's why I think so.

    When looking at parody as a defense against copyright infringement, there is no hard-and-fast rule. Each judge goes by their own individual imperitives (sense of humor or the absurd, headaches, whatever) in evaluating a parody "fair use" defense for copyright infringement. However, each case that I examined emphasized that the differences between the original and the parody had to be such that no actual confusion would exist. Additionally, most parody cases are ones where the parody looks similar, but does not contain actual copies of copyrighted material, unedited and unaltered.

    This is not the case here.

    Take a look at the PDF of thw parody, compared to the original (as part of the DMCA complaint, linked from the user's site). You will see that, unlike valid parodies, he copied directly, unaltered, the top graphic, bottom graphic, and side newsbar from the WalMart Foundation site. Only the two stories in the center of the page were different.

    A direct copy is, indeed, de jure and de facto copyright infringement. If he had created parodies of these major page elements as well, Wal-Mart would (IMO) have no valid legal reason to complain. However, with the direct copy of more than 50% of the visible page? Personally, I think that's too much.

    This is supported by this article at Publaw on parody and fair use. Specifically, part three of the Fair Use analysis, states:


    The third factor analyzes the amount and substantiality of the copying in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole. The crucial determination is whether the quality and value of the material copied from the original copyrighted work is "reasonable" in relation to the purpose of copying. Regretfully, there is no black and white rule that sets forth an absolute ratio or quantity of words that may be used of the original work that would ensure a finding of fair use. Instead there have been circumstances where a court has found that the use of an entire work was fair use while under different circumstances the use of a small fraction of a work failed to qualify as a fair use. This factor not only evaluates the quantity that has been copied but also the quality and importance of the copied material. The courts when analyzing this factor evaluate whether the user of the original copyrighted material has taken any more of the original work than was necessary to achieve the purpose for which the material was copied from the original work.


    I think that this student just made a mistake, but that mistake caused the creation of copyright infringement, rather than a valid parody. But that's just My Humble Opinion, and what do I know?

    --
    We are the Music Makers, and We are the Dreamers of Dreams...
    1. Re:Unfortunately.... by http101 · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely correct! As you stated, he "stole" graphics from their site. And by saying "stole", I mean he used them unaltered and unedited for a site of his own. By using those works and making them publicly available on a top-level domain, he, without a doubt, is in violation of the copyrights. He's either got some major ass-kissing to do or he's going to do time and/or pay lots of money to MalWart since they're part of Corporate America. The higher up the Fortune 100 ladder you go, the more screwed you are.

      --
      -- Game Developers: Stop porting badly-textured games from crappy console systems!
    2. Re:Unfortunately.... by Xepherys2 · · Score: 3, Informative

      This link to Cornell University's Law School site states (from US Code):

      107. Limitations on exclusive rights: Fair use

      Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 106 and 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching (including multiple copies for classroom use), scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright. In determining whether the use made of a work in any particular case is a fair use the factors to be considered shall include--

      (1) the purpose and character of the use, including whether such use is of a commercial nature or is for nonprofit educational purposes;

      (2) the nature of the copyrighted work;

      (3) the amount and substantiality of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole; and

      (4) the effect of the use upon the potential market for or value of the copyrighted work.
      The fact that a work is unpublished shall not itself bar a finding of fair use if such finding is made upon consideration of all the above factors.

      So in this case, it was not used commercially and parody is a form of criticism, which is protected as fair use... how was he in violation again?

    3. Re:Unfortunately.... by Vancouverite · · Score: 1
      Considering that this question has come up for me in other contexts, I can answer this more easily than I would have been able to before. The violation comes because all four aspects must be considered, not just one, when making the determination of infringement.

      To give an exaggerated example, let us copy the entirity of Star Wars Episode (choose your favorite) into a digital format, and digitally replace the heads of the main characters with other heads (say, famous politician's heads) for the purpos of parody, using advanced CGI techniques to synchronize the motions of the heads with the real motions from the film. Now, release this tour-de-force of parody upon the internet, safe in the assurance that the intent was parody.

      Trust me, LucasArts will sue, and they will win, because you only have one of the four legs of the fair use test - Purpose and Character.

      You clearly have failed the Amount and substantiality test, since you copied the entire film. You fail the Nature of the work test, since it is a commercial product that you are copying. I have no idea what the courts would decide for the Effect of use test, since I have no idea what that effect would be, but a reaonable court could conclude that some sales, at least, had been lost to the parody, which may be sufficient to fail the fourth test.

      Thus, the preponderance of the tests rule towards, not away from, copyright infringement, even though the intent was parody.

      In this case, the link to Publaw and their article on Parody (which was present in my original comment) would have been a good place to look for information. Looking there, you will see a discussion of the "Oh, Pretty Woman" case which, while not identical, is a reasonable parallel with this case. In this case, the four point assessment went as follows:

      • Purpose and Character: Parody is transformative, and even in a commercial context, parody is allowed
      • Nature of work: No help here, "since a parody by its very nature would only be based upon an "expressive" work"
      • Amount and Substantiality: The court cited a "conjure up" test. This "... would deny a finding of fair use under this factor only when the parodist "has appropriated a greater amount of the original work than is necessary to 'recall or conjure up' the object of the [parody]." Here is where this case and the one cited at Publaw differ most greatly, as in this case the copying (IMO) was excessive.
      • Effect upon market: In the sample case, this element was remanded to the court for analysis. In this case, who knows, but there is at least a reasonable possibility of economic harm from a criticism site
      That last bit brings up another point - this is not solely parody, but is also social criticism. How this would affect the court's analysis, I cannot say. But still, there is far more to this than simple "it's parody, so it's allowed".
      --
      We are the Music Makers, and We are the Dreamers of Dreams...
  140. mbangmore@btiger.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    please send me your sister!

  141. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Brandybuck · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Where the hell do you live that you have no alternatives? Even in my tiny rural hometown I've got J.C. Penny's, Ace Hardware, Rite-Aid, and a whole mainstreet of specialty stores. And it has both a KMart and a Walmart. Not a half hour away are Gottschalk's, Walgreen, Mervyn's, Sears and Montgomery Wards.

    --
    Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
  142. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it is sooooooo important to you not to support the big *evil* corporations, then don't support them period ->.

    Instead go visit mom and pop and buy the same goods for more money. Wal-Mart is big because lots of people do support their business practices by shopping there. They are evil because you wish you would have thought of it first.

    Instead of bitching, open your own store that doesn't have such a *evil* business model and see how well you do. You can advertise "Prices going up but all employees have life insurance!" Ha, it I saw that I would know exactly where my money was going and not shop there. Instead Wal-Mart has convinced a large population of unintelligent people to work for next to nothing, not my problem. The fact of the matter is 99% people don't care why the prices are low, and your good morals business will fail miserably.

    Take a course in economics no one anywhere in the line of products if forced to do anything, even the child labor used to produce the goods. If you don't shop their you are telling poor children in third world countries that you would rather them starve or become thiefs/prostitutes than have a less than ideal job. Go to hell. This ends Anonymous Coward's rant!

  143. What? by tgd · · Score: 1

    Are you saying the average person will spend $10 on something they could spend $7 on once they're making some arbitrary income?

    I don't think thats even remotely the case. In fact, the whole idea is rediculous.

    People want to pay less because you can buy more with the money you have, people don't want to pay less because they're making less.

    Next time you get a 10% raise, be nice to all the stores you shop at and offer to pay them 10% over their stickered price... after all you're making more money, you should be happy paying more.

    1. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're missing the point, i think you're doing so intentionally.

      for those people havn't fully accepted the lies you accept, let's put this misinterpretation out in the open.

      people used to have a choice where to shop because they had more real money.

      now they must look for the lowest prices and passively accept that they're giving money to people they'd rather not be giving money to.

      the "other alternative" is, of course, starving, which sane people don't consider an option.

    2. Re:What? by SwedishChef · · Score: 1

      Are you saying the average person will spend $10 on something they could spend $7 on once they're making some arbitrary income?

      Lots of people do exactly this. Not that they think "Hey, I'm making more so I can buy this device for more" but they make decisions about whether to buy a nice shirt for $25 or a custom shirt for $50. Or they will buy a product from a store that offers better service even though that same product may be more expensive than at Wal-Mart. Or maybe the store is closer. Or the aisles are not crowded with crap or people with kids. Whatever the reason, their income provides the means for them to make these decisions.

      Before wages took a dump in the 1980s a larger percentage of the population (at least in the USA) could do this. Now, because of low wages (in a real sense) most of us decide between Value Village and Wal-Mart.

      --
      No one ever had to evacuate a city because the solar panels broke!
  144. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the alternative to that is to grow your own produce, raise your own livestock, grow your own trees for wood, drill for oil, build your own products, etc. If you think you're so smart, think of other alternaives.

  145. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by bad-badtz-maru · · Score: 1


    Toys-R-Us's issues are an excellent example of Walmart's predatory practices. Walmart told major toy manufacturers that if they wanted their products on Walmart shelves, they'd have to make it very hard for Toys-R-Us to get product from them.

  146. Road Trip by waltsj19 · · Score: 1

    I find it shocking that the author of the site didn't even edit his home address out of the cease and desist order. Anyone up for a road trip?

  147. Re:How to shoot yourself in the foot in three easy by bad-badtz-maru · · Score: 1


    Exactly. Walmart's prices are not lower than competing stores in an ever-increasing number of cases. Walmart really can't get any additional market share (everyone shops there) so one of their few options for revenue growth is to increase prices.

  148. Will we ever rise above hording goods and looking by ChozCunningham · · Score: 1

    No.

  149. WalMart is worse than even than we had all thought by Sjobeck · · Score: 0

    WalMart is worse, and getting more so every day, than we all thought they were a year or two ago when it was revealed that they are the globe's scumiest corporation. Locking people in the stores at night & telling them not to leave unless the building is on fire, paying women crappy wages, never promoting any women, bull-dozing what ever is in the way of a new store even when no one who lives near-by wants the store there, methoidcally working people 33 hours per week so as to not have to pay any benefits, creating an entire new class of working poor who fall on the government entitlement system for support, and making China its sole source of goods at the same time waving the stars & stripes in my face, makes me want to get ill. I love how Repuglicans hate everyone on any sort of entitlement program at the same time they drive their uber-SUV's with flag stickers on the back to WalMart to buy Chinese goods sold to them by people who eat government cheese.

  150. You don't just list one factor by unassimilatible · · Score: 3, Informative
    All four factors must be analyzed, Mr. Jailhouse Lawyer.

    Another factor is the amount of the work used:

    3 - The amount and importance of the portion used in relation to the copyrighted work as a whole;

    Fair use does not allow one to completely copy a Web site images and HTML, nor does non-profit or parody use completely exempt one from infringement liabilty.

    Man, you open-source fanatics really think people don't have any rights in their IP. Fortunately, the US Constitution and US Copyright law disagree.

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:You don't just list one factor by Flendon · · Score: 1

      Yes all factors must be taken into account and considered as a whole. Part three alone does not prove guilt. My referrence to part 1 was merly from the fact that it was the largest most applicable part based on past case rulings. The fact that he used the images unchanged was a poor choice on his part, but acceptable as they were part of a work of parody. His life would have been much easier if he had altered them though.

      And please continue to show your true nature with your unfounded name calling. I use open source yes, but I use MS and other closed source products just as much from both need and convenience. I don't think that makes me a fanatic even if my sig does point out MS anti trust tendancies. I also believe in IP rights, just not the current system of them. Since it is the law I follow it, but that does not mean I have to like it or that I can't work to educate people to promote change.

      If I wrote a book and someone copied it without permssion I would be upset. If I invented something and someone stole it I would be upset. Corporations who spend millions on drugs should have their investments protected to a point. I have had several websites in the past and if images or text on them had been stolen I would be upset. If someone didn't like my site and made a parody I would be upset, but I would let it go. IP has its place, but so does fair use. I am a fair use fanatic if anything.

      --
      chown -R us ./base
    2. Re:You don't just list one factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      Oh no, we don't get upset when someone violates the GPL, really.

      AFAIK constitution trumps copyright, and parody is free speech so :P

    3. Re:You don't just list one factor by LifesABeach · · Score: 1

      Was there a mirror in the back of the parody walmart site?

    4. Re:You don't just list one factor by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1
      Man, you open-source fanatics really think people don't have any rights in their IP.
      You can't have a right to something which does not exist.
    5. Re:You don't just list one factor by Alsee · · Score: 2, Informative

      Fair use does not allow one to completely copy a Web site images and HTML

      In fact it does.

      You can go into business selling derivative copies under Fair Use.

      The law to which you reffer really only says one single thing with binding legal effect, and that is:
      the fair use of a copyrighted work [] is not an infringement of copyright.

      That law, secotion 107, really doesn't impose any other restrictions or limitations. The part I clipped out of the middle was a nonbinding list of examples of Fair Use. The part at the end, the four listed factors, those are also actually nonbinding. They are merely a list of four factors which shall be considered. The courts are free to consider other factors as well, and routinely do so. For example they often also consider whether a use is "transformative". The courts are also perfecly free to give the four listed factors absolutely zero weight compared to any other factor they choose to consider. You can in fact "fail" on all for factors and still be absolutely Fair Use, though it would obviously be an unusal result requiring a rather unusal situation.

      So all the it says as a matter of law is that the fair use of a copyrighted work is not an infringement of copyright. *If* something is Fair Use then all copyright restrictions are null and void. Absolutely anything and everything is permissible so long as it is indeed Fair Use.

      I haven't seen the student's original website, but based on the description is sounds like an absolutely clear cut case of fair use. It does not matter that he copied almost the entire thing if it was done as a parody, and the fact that he did so for a noncommercial purpose overwhelmingly weighs as Fair Use, and the fact that he did so for political / socially signifigant purpose makes it an an absolute slam dunk.

      Wal-Mart's absolutely abused the DMCA takedown procedure to rip first amendment protected speech off of the internet. It is such a flagrant abuse of the DMCA takedown process that Walmart may just be open to prosecution or countersuit. The standard to legally issue a DMCA takedown notice are insanely low, but they are not nonexistant.

      Man, you open-source fanatics really think people don't have any rights in their IP. Fortunately, the US Constitution and US Copyright law disagree.

      I suggest you study the constitution and copyright law, and most specifically the important Supreme Court cases on the subject. I can provide you with links to Supreme Court cases if you actually intend to read them. Cases where the Supreme Court explains there there is no inherent right to have a copyright, that the copyright holder only has the rights explicitly granted to him, explaining that there is no property right in the work itself - that it is the legal bundle of rights that is owned, that Fiar Use exists based on afirmative constitutional rights and that the copyright holder owns no rights in cases of Fair Use because congress does not have the power to create a law granting him rights over it.

      Copyright is a good and useful thing, but it is not property law and you'll get all of the law wrong if you take a backwards property view. To the extent that any work of authorship is 'property', it is fundamentally public property. The initial legal state is unrestricted, public domain. The Constitution allows congress to temprarily take certain rights to it away from the public and grant them to the copyright holder. Violating the rights the copyright holder was granted is indeed copyright infringment. The copyright holder was not granted - and could not be granted - any rights over Fair Uses. Figuring out what is or is not Fair Use can certainly be a complex issue, but you can't even begin to address the issue if you start from a backwards "IP" model view that the work itself is some sort of natur

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    6. Re:You don't just list one factor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IP is an illusion enforced with a gun. What's your point??

  151. True, by isotope23 · · Score: 1

    The CPI formula has been "recalculated" a number of times. Usually to make the figures reflect a rosier picture for those in power.

    I only put the basic idea in the post. I figured it was just a starting point.

    Regarding the current price of housing, we are talking a difference of 31 years, so even a modest underestimation in inflation each year over the past 31 years, compounded, would lead to a great difference in price. I would say that some of the difference is due to appreciation, however I think much more is due to the understated inflation rate.

    Finally, even assuming the CPI is correct, I think it is reprehensible that we take a 4% loss of value per year for granted. It pretty much assures that you lose money if you attempt to save.

    http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_00/blanchard1 21500pv.html

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  152. Re:In Soviet Wal-Mart by rdoger6424 · · Score: 1

    Soviet? No, They're just incredibly EVIL.

    --
    "Hello 911? I just tried to toast some bread, and the toaster grew an arm and stabbed me in the face!"
  153. Simpsons by toy4two · · Score: 1

    Homer and Grandpa worked at "SPRAWL-MART" in an episode and the sign looked pretty close to "WAL-MART" so I guess FOX is next to be sued.

  154. Longhorn parody by syousef · · Score: 1

    Hey maybe we can mash up the Longhorn screens and then we can legally put them up as a paroday.

    Let's start by cutting off the "Shut down.." label on the start menu....oh wait...

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  155. AAAGGGGGGHHHHHHHHH STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If this bothers you, stop shopping at walmart.

    It's that simple.

    Ooooooh, large corporation uses muscle/lawyers to force someone from doing something. Welcome to the world of america inc.

    To have hundreds of replies discussing it ... yawn.

  156. He censored himself. by freality · · Score: 1

    That dude was about as censored as this posting is.

    WAL-FART SUXORS.

    Ok, now, when I get a nasty letter from a Wal-Smart lawyer saying I Suxors.. that's not censorship.

    There are only two agents capable of censoring him: his government and himself. But not his retailer.

    The lawyer is merely spewing vitriol.. suprise, surprise, that's what lawyers make a living at.

    But this art student.. he actually managed to censor himself here.

    He should have just posted the threat, and left a big message like:

    "Wal-Wart is sooo stoopid they threatened legal action. But they know they've got a chance in hell... hence this message."

    See, now that would have been classy. But instead, he's just a poster-child for the weak and self-defeating. Which is still cooler than being a poster-child for an aggressive faceless monopoly like the loser lawyer who got off on writing that letter up. But still.

  157. DCMA, what president was that again? by berenddeboer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Please remind me again what evil president instituted the Patriot Act about which the left continually gets worked up.

    And what president gave us the DCMA, a law that actually affects citizens?

    --
    If I had a sig, I would put it here.
  158. One solution by polyex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I see all this arguing going back and forth about whether what Wal-Mart is doing is legal or not. As if the legality of this issue means anything to you as an individual. People have taken action in the past regardless of whether what they were protesting was currently legal (remember segregation?). If you do not like what Wal-Mart is doing, stop shopping there. Use the golden rule.Stop giving them YOUR money to enable Wal-Mart to do things that you do not like. And stop finding excuses to go there and buy more crap than you really do not need in the name of convenience for you. Take a week away from Wal-Mart and encourage others to do the same, thats your strongest power as an individual.

  159. Heh by mark_jabroni · · Score: 1
    Everytime copyright legislation comes before congress a few musicians and hollywood types show up and and cry, you know, wondering how they're going to feed their families.

    Not to mention that if artists showed even a moderate opposition to the bill it would probably fail. Nobody has much reason to like the record and film industries.

  160. Foul use by hadaso · · Score: 1

    "Fair is foul, and foul is fair: / Hover through the fog and filthy air" (Macbeth, Act 1, Scene 1, By William Shakespeare.)

    (I'm quite convinced I may quote that here. AFAIK as of now it is in the public domain. Slashdot operators: if copyrights are retroactively lengthened to say 500 years after the authors death, please temporarily remove this post until such time as it is once more in the public domain... However, even if it is in the public domain, I might still not be allowed to post it here, because I have used a functionality built into my (actually M$'s) OS specifically to infringe on copyrights, by simultaneously pressing both the ctrl key and the c key, and then simultaneously pressing both the ctrl key and the v key. I guess it is the same copyright infringing technology that was used by the guy who made the Walmart parody. It might be fair use to use the stuff for parody, but the DMCA specifically states that you cannot do it by using technology that might also be used to infringe on copyright! BTW, have you ever realized that you can do the public a favor by shortening the lives of authors? It would also shorten the term of the copyright on their works!)

    1. Re:Foul use by m50d · · Score: 1

      IIRC even the DMCA isn't quite that dumb, it's only if the technology lacks a substantial non-infringing use that you can't use it. If MGM wins against Grokster you may have a point. I agree with you on copyrights though. Life of the author makes a certain amount of sense, though not so much. N years makes sense. Life + N years just seems silly.

      --
      I am trolling
  161. The Constitution disagrees by unassimilatible · · Score: 1
    It is clear in Article I:

    Clause 8: To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

    Or does the religion of open source not believe that the U.S. Constitution is an authority on U.S. law?

    And for those multinationals out there, the U.N. and most countries have passed IP laws and resolutions.

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    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
  162. Please stop impersonating a lawyer by unassimilatible · · Score: 1
    the fair use of a copyrighted work is not an infringement of copyright.

    Fair use is a defense to copyright. A defense is a condition precedent, meaning the burden is on the alleged infringer to prove he is entitled to the defense. The defense requires that all the 4 factors be used. Almost never will a 100% use be deemed fair use.

    The law to which you reffer really only says one single thing with binding legal effect, and that is: the fair use of a copyrighted work [] is not an infringement of copyright.

    No, the law I refer to is extensive, well-settled case law. The U.S. legal system relies on interpretations of statutes by courts, which are just as binding as statutes are, and SCOTUS cases are clear. All four factors must be used (shall means must, BTW).

    That law, secotion 107, really doesn't impose any other restrictions or limitations.

    Again, court interpretations are clear. The U.S. Code is not the only authority in U.S. law.

    The part I clipped out of the middle was a nonbinding list of examples of Fair Use. The part at the end, the four listed factors, those are also actually nonbinding.

    Nonsense. Bullshit. SCOTUS has ruled that they are, in fact binding. Did you not see the Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music case in your cut-and-paste lawyering? The four factors test is well-settled law. Read the links you cite please.

    They are merely a list of four factors which shall be considered. The courts are free to consider other factors as well, and routinely do so. For example they often also consider whether a use is "transformative".

    And the essence of transformative is whether there is artistic change, or literal reproduction of the material. By cutting and pasting copyrighted images, that is not transformative. Add something to the images with Photoshop, maybe. But using all of Wal Mart's images with no change other than smart assed comments on other parts of the Web page is not transformative.

    I suggest you study the constitution and copyright law, and most specifically the important Supreme Court cases on the subject. I can provide you with links to Supreme Court cases if you actually intend to read them. Cases where the Supreme Court explains there there is no inherent right to have a copyright, that the copyright holder only has the rights explicitly granted to him,

    IAAL and I don't need your suggestions on legal education (perhaps you might want to extend your legal education beyond Wikipedia and wishful thinking).

    Regardless of whether copyright is an inherent or a granted right is irrelevant. Copyright is a protected right under the law, and the Constitution requires the Congress to create such rights in Article 1, Section 8.

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    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Please stop impersonating a lawyer by Flendon · · Score: 1

      Just because you have a law degree doesn't mean you are a good lawyer. I doesn't mean you know what your talking about. It also doesn't mean we have to listen to you. Free speech gives you the right to be an ass, but it also gives us the right to tell you to Shut The Fuck Up!

      Also just beacuse something is law doesn't make it right. We have the right to debate its morality and push to have the law changed. Get over yourself.

      --
      chown -R us ./base
    2. Re:Please stop impersonating a lawyer by Alsee · · Score: 1

      I think you were angered by the general tone and/or the central point of what I said... you wanted me to correct me so badly that you "corrected me" an all sorts of things that we agree on. You seem to have misread or misunderstood most of what I said.

      For starters you quoted and replied to:

      >the fair use of a copyrighted work is not an infringement of copyright.

      You're not actually disputing that statement, are you? It's a cut and paste out of the law, just with the example list snipped out of the middle. If something is Fair Use then it's not infringment.

      You "correct" me there by saying:

      Fair use is a defense to copyright. A defense is a condition precedent, meaning the burden is on the alleged infringer to prove he is entitled to the defense.

      True and true. I certainly never said otherwise.

      The defense requires that all the 4 factors be used.

      You're repeating what I said except you changed the word "considered" into the word "used". The law explicitly says "the factors to be considered shall include", so either we're both right or I am right.

      Almost never will a 100% use be deemed fair use.

      Your very wording "almost never" admits that you can completely "fail" that test and still be Fair Use. I said, it is nonbinding. The court merely needs to consider it. They can give it zero weight in light of any other factor they consider to be more important.

      I probably shouldn't waste time squabbling over your use of "almost never", but it's a really bad characterisation. There are MANY times that 100% use is Fair Use. Just off the top of my head there's using a VCR to record 100% of a TV show, making a backup copy of something, format shifting and tons of other personal uses, virtually any scientific use, most cases of educational use, and in many cases of news reporting. 100% use being Fair Use can hardly be considered unusual, much less qualify as "almost never".

      >The law to which you reffer
      No, the law I refer to is extensive


      Groan. Obviously I meant 107 was the portion of copyright law relevant to what you had said.

      The U.S. legal system relies on interpretations of statutes by courts, which are just as binding as statutes are, and SCOTUS cases are clear.

      Right. That was exactly the basis of most of what I said. Supreme Court law.

      Nonsense. Bullshit. SCOTUS has ruled that they are, in fact binding.

      The only binding thing written into law is to consider them. The for points where laid out in the 1800's by SCOTUS, but they are hardly exclusive.

      As I said:
      "The courts are free to consider other factors as well, and routinely do so. For example they often also consider whether a use is "transformative". The courts are also perfecly free to give the four listed factors absolutely zero weight compared to any other factor they choose to consider. You can in fact "fail" on all for factors and still be absolutely Fair Use, though it would obviously be an unusal result requiring a rather unusal situation."

      Obviously the more listed factors you "fail" the harder it would be to qualify as Fair Use. The point is that the four factors from 107 do not actually restrict what can be fair use, they are nonbinding. It is at least possible to "fail" all four and still qualify for some other reason.

      The text of copyright law does not define or restrict Fair Use. Fair Use was established on constitutional grounds, it is a judicial construct. It pre-dates the passage of 107. The congressional record explicitly says that 107 was not intended to expand, diminish, or alter fair use in any way.

      You could strike 107 from law and nothing would change. Fair Use would continue to exist, unaltered. The only actually binding legal effect in 107 is that Fair Use is not infringment. It is a pointless redundant peice of congressional law. It's actually harmful becuase many people now think that te

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  163. Wow, what an intelligent argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Can you use some more profanity and ad hominem attacks?

    LOL, /.'ers and Rosa Parks, fighting unjust laws. Get over yourselves.