Comcast Threatens TorrentFreak For Posting Public Court Document
Despite being part of public court proceedings, Comcast sent a notice of infringement ordering Torrent Freak to stop hosting a letter linking a subscriber to Prenda Law. From the article: "Comcast has sent TorrentFreak a cease and desist letter, claiming copyright over contents of an article which revealed that Prenda Law was involved in operating a pirate honeypot. Failure to comply will result in a lawsuit in which the Internet provider will seek damages, a Comcast representative informs us. In addition, Comcast also alerted our hosting provider, who is now threatening to shut down our server."
It's a public court document, you don't own it you fucking douche-bag.
Because it's easier for the hosting company to just say "fuck it, not my problem".
This is what happens when the DMCA tells you that if you comply with a takedown, you are off the hook.
The law is written in such a way that the hosting company has no incentive to care.
That nobody seems to be doling out punishments for false takedowns is the big problem -- because apparently you can claim almost anything belongs to you with neither facts nor evidence on your side.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
" Even if TF does win they're still out a considerable amount of cash and time."
If TF wins, then they're entitled to attorney fees and lost money.
That's lawsuit 101. Loser pays.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
False takedowns are a felony that maybe a Comcast lawyer should experience, you know, to be made an example of.
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If you read the actual message they sent TorrentFreak, the ISP isn't as bad as the summary makes them out to be. The ISP said that TF needs to take appropriate action and need to respond back with the action taken. No where did it specifically state that the action had to be removal of the scanned letter.
The ISP isn't in and doesn't want to be in a position where they are the legal department for all their customers trying to determine if each and every notice is legitimate especially in very specific incidents like this. They just want to know that you a. received the notice and b. have taken some action regarding it. That's all they are really concerned about and all they are required to do under the DMCA.
It would be appropriate and satisfy all parties if TF responded to the ISP stating that they contacted Comcast/Cyveillance, asserted their right to use the content under fair use/public domain/whatever, and that it would not be coming down. Appropriate action would be then taken.
Sadly it depends on jurisdiction.
In the US, it is not loser pays unless the judge says so, and it's typically reserved for egregious or malicious prosecution.
Also, even if they get their legal fees back, they're still in the hole until then.
It's a lot like being on a deflated raft and trying not to sink. if you steal some air out of the raft to breathe, and you wind up sinking, it's too late to reinflate the raft.
I would absolutely love to see this go to court. Please, oh please let this go to court. Let Comcast seek damages for your posting of public court documents.
Never going to happen. These clowns (Comcast's lawyers), as soon as they saw the website was contesting it, realised that this particular line of bullshit litigation would be shot down in flames immediately by the first judge who saw it. Its one thing being creative with interpreting laws relating to technology and explaining it to old men with no idea what you're talking about, quite another trying to do the same with legal procedure to a guy who both knows damn well how the law works, and has the power to slap you down if he thinks you're trying to step on his toes.