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Copyright Law Used to Shut Down Site

driptray writes "The Sydney Morning Herald reports that an Australian mining industry group has used copyright laws to close a website that parodied a coal industry ad campaign. A group known as Rising Tide created the website using the slogan "Rising sea levels: brought to you by mining" in response to the mining industry's slogan of "Life: brought to you by mining". The mining industry claimed that the "content and layout" of the parody site infringed copyright, but when Rising Tide removed the copyrighted photos and changed the layout, the mining industry still lodged a complaint. Is this a misuse of copyright law in order to stifle dissent?"

3 of 206 comments (clear)

  1. well.. by mastershake_phd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well at least parody is still legal in the US. Is anyone else surprised how repressive Australia and the UK can be?

    1. Re:well.. by axxs · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Read my post here : http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=225234&cid =18244686

      We got a very legal notice I assure you, as per the copyright act schedule.

      We aren't trying to 'toe the line', in fact, we are a very progressive collective of activist geeks.

      And we have also received similar with a government agency using the DMCA to do the same with another site, in the past 2 weeks, where the server farm host was threatened with the DMCA, and thus us with them threatening to take down the server if it was not removed. it was a parody image of a logo. The logo was changed, because there is just not the funds to mount a legal battle in the US over this.

      twice in a few weeks ..

      DMCA / This law .. pretty much the same. The point is, here it is being used to quell dissent and used by folk with money against those that don't have the resources to even organise legal responses quickly. They are being abused.

  2. No Copying, Thus No Fair Use Needed by skywire · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The discussion here has immediately moved into the area of parody fair use. A quick comparison of the sites in question reveals nothing that even approaches being a copy or derivative work. The text and artwork are original. Unless Australian law allows a phrase such as "brought to you by mining" to be copyrighted, this whole fair use tangent is beside the point.

    --
    Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety.