Canadian Anti-Piracy Firm Caught Infringing Copyright
An anonymous reader writes: Canipre, a Montreal-based intellectual property enforcement firm, yesterday issued a press release announcing an infringement monitoring program designed to take advantage of the Canada's new copyright notice-and-notice system. Yet a new report indicates that the company may itself be engaged in copyright infringement, with a director's blog posting dozens of full-text articles from media organizations around the world, often without attribution and some that are subscription-only content."
"Do as we say, not as we do." History repeating itself, they're trying to get more customers to run what basically will amount to an extortion racket.
"Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
Hypocrisy on the net, in politics, or in real life is about the most common "scandal" you can find. But its fun click-bait.
"We're okay. It's not copyright infringement. It's theft."
once before when they first appreaed on the scene? Something to do with their website and the desing or something.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
It means he couldn't have reasonably thought it was free to distribute. So no excuses.
The copyrighted infringement items removed and links supplied.
Less than a page of text it must of been a huge article with the infringements included.
"Caught in Infringement"
"...may itself be engaged in copyright infringement..."
I guess the headline was deemed to be more eye-grabby.
to Quebec.
Surely this is "fair use" isn't it? ;-)
...Re-blog a handbag...
This isn't the first time canipre have been identified as "thieves":
http://news.slashdot.org/story/13/05/15/2110243/anti-infringement-company-caught-infringing-on-its-website
I believe it's time we throw the book at these commercial pirates. They clearly aren't learning from their mistakes!
Ok, there's a lot of nonsense on here about Hypocrisy... but I suspect he didn't even realize he was infringing.
But there's still plenty of room for getting him good here. Often the people they claim are pirates don't know they're pirating either... but they don't think that's an excuse. And your grandma ends up torrenting that movie for 6 months and thousands of people download it... they think those are all violations as well.
So Slashdot his site... hundreds of thousands of people read those "pirated" news articles... then demand he compensate the original authors...
Is the point that the two-faced bastard had to work harder to infringe?
Yes, that's exactly the point. Some people believe, erroneously, that putting material on a public web site voids the copyright. However, in order for the web to work, clearly there must be some form of implicit licence when you put material on a public site or no-one would be allowed to lawfully download it so they can view it. That argument does not hold for content that is hidden behind some sort of registration scheme or paywall, where typically there would be explicit terms for accessing the material that you must actively accept.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
Because usually when that happens there is a footnote acknowledging the original source.
Not sure about Canada, but in the USA the fines for infringement can be significantly larger for 'wilful infringement', which means that you must prove that the infringer knew that what they were doing was in violation of the relevant laws. If you distribute something that you were under the impression was in the public domain, or licensed in such a way that would permit distribution in the way that you are distributing it, then the penalties are typically lower. If you are an organisation responsible for telling people about copyright law and the stuff that you are infringing needed a subscription to access, then there's no defence against accusations of wilful infringement.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
I am shocked, shocked to find that copyright infringement is going on here!
I'm sorry, but I would like to stand in friendly relations to you but ratchet up the rhetoric where it needs to go on this kind of stuff.
"...suspect he didn't even realize he was infringing". No. Just no. But before we get to the big ticket reason why, let's go to an extremely important edge case why.
Look at YouTube. Look at the multi millions of things posted by random accounts. (Who really identifies with handles like grap3fruuit77 anyway?!) Account posts a song, let's say it's Justin Bieber, because this is a Canadian story and I'm sure he has a fan up there. Up goes the song, and the comments say: "I don't own this song! I'm just posting it!"
We should get a slashdot researcher to get 10,000 of these people into a sports stadium on an off day and ask them all "Sure. You don't own it. So why did you post it?" ... Because we're in the middle of an unspoken civil revolution that is subconsciously trying to evolve the meaning of copyrights. It just feels different because it's Not A Cat Picture and/or Not On Facebook.
Now let's look at this guy. He's a "Managing Director, Operations" for a copyright attack dog. Of *course* he realizes he's infringing. He just believes he's above petty little laws for peons. And for a time, he might be.
We need a quiet little voice for the people with big bucks to take these specific kinds of cases, where the copyright guys break their own rules, and pound them into the ground. No settlements, and keep after them if they play shell-company-monte.
Sure, random mid execs in a grain and textile company, whatever. Managing Directors for Operations for copyright attack dogs, no.
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
There's an implicit license that you can view the articles and download everything in the course of viewing the articles. Saving a copy for yourself (say by printing to PDF) would be valid fair use. So would quoting a section of the article and linking to it. However, copying the entire article and posting it without even giving the courtesy of attribution is bad form and major copyright infringement. (It could be considered plagiarism too if the posting made it look like he was the author given the lack of attribution, but I don't know if there are any criminal penalties for plagiarism.)
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.