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Record Label Infringes Own Copyright, Site Pulled

AnonCow sends in a peculiar story from TorrentFreak, which describes the plight of a free-download music site that has been summarily evicted from the Internet for violating its own copyright. The problem seems to revolve around the host's insistence that proof of copyright be snail-mailed to them. Kind of difficult when your copyright takes the form of a Creative Commons license that cannot be verified unless its site is up. "The website of an Internet-based record label which offers completely free music downloads has been taken down by its host for copyright infringement, even though it only offers its own music. Quote Unquote Records calls itself 'The First Ever Donation Based Record Label,' but is currently homeless after its host pulled the plug."

7 of 282 comments (clear)

  1. Well. by Warll · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wouldn't be all that surprised to hear that this is just the host's way of kicking off a heavy bandwidth user.

  2. Re:There are plenty of hosts out there by SpacePunk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't see any reason that the site owner couldn't contact the feds, and charge the ISP for data theft. If it were me, I'd look into something like trademark dilution also since the ISP is hosting ads on the domain name.

  3. sounds fishy by spir0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    the story does remind me of something eBay tried years ago -- they took down auctions of people selling their own software or software for linux because the auctioneers didn't have licenses from Microsoft.

    however, this story sounds a bit fishy. I believe that the ISP pulled his site because it's highly likely they're retards and see any online music as pirated, but I'm suspicious of his having lost his own copies of the files. Did the other musicians in any of the bands not have copies? Didn't any of them burn onto CDs to give to their friends, or to play in their cars?

    I think this is creative marketing. When the site goes back up, he'll get loads more hits to his site, and make a bunch of pity sales and more people have now heard of him and his bands. Epic Win.

    --
    The reason girls and Windows users don't understand UNIX is because all the documentation is in Man files.
  4. Sounds like pressure from the RIAA by gelfling · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It sounds like some suits from the RIAA worked over the weekend to study the nuances of the RoR and narc'd the company to its own host.

  5. Evite once rejected my logo... by mi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is a feature on Evite.com, which lets you associate your own icon with your "account". Obviously, using copyrighted images is prohibited.

    Well, the geniuses at Evite have deleted my logo, which I created in Paintbrush back in 1993 (before switching to Unix for good), because — they thought — it can't possibly be my own creation...

    Well, ass-covering, ignorant dimwits working for a corporation... Spit-spit-spit...

    Years later, the same image is forcibly deleted by Wikipedia — where it was only used on my own user-page.

    The idiocy spreads...

    Maybe, there is some artistic merit to that poorly-drawn cat on a castle wall? Should I try selling it or something?

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  6. Re:And people say by unlametheweak · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm wondering if the RIAA told on him. I'm wondering if I decide to write a poem and post it on my Website; will I then have to pay to have a lawyer formally copyright it for me. I suppose it would be useless for me to even start a blog in that case.

  7. Copyright infringment continues by ramriot · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It seems that the ISP ix is itself propagating copyright infringement. The landing page they put up for 'Quote Unquote' includes advert links to copyright infringing sites. Perhaps someone should find out if ix is a sub-hoster and then send a DMCA takedown notice to their host. As it turns out they own their own DNS server, so it seems unlikely.