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"Pixels" DMCA Takedown Even Worse Than We Thought

ForgedArtificer writes: So we all know about the Pixels takedown on Vimeo, and that it was pretty bad in a lot of ways. But did you know that they took down the short film that inspired the movie? Turns out, the 2010 Pixels, which was taken off Vimeo due to copyright notice, was responsible for inspiring the entire Adam Sandler flick. Unlike Sandler's film, it's critically-acclaimed and has won awards. Talk about kicking someone when they're already down. First Patrick Jean gets to watch them violate his work and now they're claiming that his work violates theirs.

20 of 272 comments (clear)

  1. Opportunity by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is an opportunity. Anyone who knows anyone in the media should make it a point to make a story out of this -- it plays as big guy robbing, then kicking, the little guy. An opportunity for the little guy to get their head above water, which -- at times -- can work out surprisingly well.

    Of course, we know that's not what's happening; this is rote behavior by uncaring people resulting in unfortunate collateral damage.

    It's just as wrong, but it isn't based on specific intent.

    Copyright, patent and trademark -- all broken as hell.

    And I say that as someone who makes a significant income from all three.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re: Opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, I know what I'm going to do. Pirate this movie. I hadn't planned to do so, but now I will, it and a dozen, no three dozen others.

      Except the Waterboy. That movie is punishment enough.

    2. Re:Opportunity by mysidia · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There should be a class-action lawsuit from all content creators affected against the DMCA letter spewing company AND the studio who hired them for gross-negligence And copyright abuse.

      They should seek to have creator's copyright interest in the new film struck down by the courts.

    3. Re:Opportunity by bmo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but it isn't based on specific intent.

      You're kidding, right?

      Copyright trolls and the publishers that love the concept know exactly what they're doing.

      There is no punishment for even malicious DMCA takedowns. It's "kill them all and let God sort them out" behavior.

      --
      BMO

    4. Re: Opportunity by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

      You want to pirate an Adam Sandler movie? That is like cutting your nose off to spite your face.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    5. Re:Opportunity by Forever+Wondering · · Score: 4, Informative

      IIRC, if someone files a takedown notice under the DMCA for a given work at a given website, the author of the work can file a counter notice under the DMCA with the website. Unless the original filer is willing to sue, the work can be restored. The DMCA does provide penalties for filing baseless/frivolous DMCA notices. And, the author can sue the filer.

      The reason for the "hair trigger" effect is that if a DMCA notice is filed with a website, the website must remove the work quickly, or risk losing its "safe harbor" protections. To restore the work, the takedown must be withdrawn or the counter filed with the website.

      In this case, if the Sandler film is too similar to the 2010 short film, it could be considered a derived work. That is, violates the copyright of the 2010 work. That would mean boatloads of cash for Patrick Jean.

      That all said, DMCA abuse is obviously rampant.

      --
      Like a good neighbor, fsck is there ...
    6. Re:Opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Revenue, not profits. Never go after Hollywood for profits, there never are any.

    7. Re:Opportunity by Cito · · Score: 4, Informative

      You can't win

      I had a YouTube video removed over similar issue.

      I filed counter claim. I got served by some law office , I don't have money for lawyer, I tossed their paperwork in trash, I kept filing counter claims, I got a court date in California, but I'm in Ga. :-P

      I just ignored them, eventually YouTube got tired of taking down then restoring then taking down then restoring so they deleted and gave a strike on my account which a strike bans you from monetizing for 1 year.

      Oh well

    8. Re: Opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      The master plan is to download it, put it on a spare harddrive somewhere and let it be. That'll deprive the movie company of at least one full ticket price of money.

      If enough people do this, none of which will ever actually watch the darn thing, the movie company will go bankrupt due to the losses incurred.

      According to the movie companies' logic, that is.

      And that logic is correct, is it not?

    9. Re: Opportunity by DrXym · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The studio has probably figured a way of converting illegal downloads into a tax writeoff. If you want to hurt the studio, just ignore the movie entirely. It doesn't exist.

    10. Re:Opportunity by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Funny

      I have found that the best tactic is to not only file counter-notices, but to then file your own DMCA take-downs against their content. Unfortunately some large companies are apparently immune to DMCA notices on YouTube, but many are not. For example, Sky News's live feed was taken down when their own parent company filed a DMCA notice over their coverage of the GOP debate.

      Fight fire with fire. If they are claiming a clip you used isn't fair use then there isn't much you can do, but if they are claiming that some content you made is too similar to their own content then clearly that's because they are infringing your rights and you should scrub their shit off the internet for them. Hit the YouTube account, their social media accounts, their web host. There is no penalty for DMCA claims that don't stand up, so go nuts. Personally I like to rate-limit the notices, so that as soon as they deal with one another comes along and they have to file another counter notice. Only noobs file one notice with 100 URLs, when you can instead file 100 notices for 100 days. A trivial perl script can even automate the process for you.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  2. Counter DMCA notice by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The situation seems ripe for him to file a DMCA notice against all of Columbia's official film sites and materials. He can prove his film existed before Columbia's was even started, and he has Columbia's admission (in their DMCA notice against his work) that their work is similar enough to his for infringement to occur.

    1. Re:Counter DMCA notice by quantaman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The situation seems ripe for him to file a DMCA notice against all of Columbia's official film sites and materials. He can prove his film existed before Columbia's was even started, and he has Columbia's admission (in their DMCA notice against his work) that their work is similar enough to his for infringement to occur.

      Except he doesn't own the copyright to the short anymore, Sandler's production company who made the 2015 Pixels film does.

      Now they made a really crappy movie based on the original short, but they had the legal right to do so.

      --
      I stole this Sig
  3. the original intent by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Interesting

    of intellectual property was to protect the little guy with the good idea from being abused by the big guy with the deep pockets

    the intent has been completely subverted and destroyed and now intellectual property simple serves as another club the big guy with deep pockets can use to rob the little guy with the idea

    the concept of intellectual property, the very notion of it, is completely logically and morally bankrupt, and must die

    now i'm no air head optimist, i may never see it happen in my lifetime. it's a slow change. but remember the printing press led to some radical changes in society. when education became cheap, a middle class grew from the previously illiterate serfs, and this class demanded power, giving rise to modern concept of democracy. it took centuries

    likewise, the internet is going to radically change society. and it will also take centuries for all the implications of a new disruptive technology to work it's way out. just like the printing press

    aristocrats then whined "not fair" like some do today as the changes begin. but on the contrary: the radical changes are all about making it more fair, for more people

    give it time

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:the original intent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      the concept of intellectual property, the very notion of it, is completely logically and morally bankrupt, and must die

      Intellectual property is a false property right, in the same way that slavery was a false property right.

      Eventually, we realized that the freedom of mankind was more important than the financial health of plantation owners.

      And, eventually, we will realize that the freedom of our ideas is more important that the financial health of publishing corporations.

      We live in a strange time in history. We understand that people must be free, but we inexplicably fail to realize that a person is not truly free unless his ideas are free as well. Future generations will look back on us for our barbaric, immoral selfishness -- in the same way that we look back on the American slave trade for their barbaric, immoral selfishness.

    2. Re:the original intent by circletimessquare · · Score: 4, Interesting

      the recent shrink of the middle class is awful. it mostly has to do with morons who think socialism is pure evil and the man with lots of money can do no wrong. this will change as more and more feel the negative economic effects of what kind of society this blindness results in

      the nordic countries and canada show you can guarantee people basic standards of living and still be capitalist. capitalism is not automatically full social darwinism. because you won't let people lose their house because they get cancer, or that we educate people born in the ghetto well, does not mean capitalism has been destroyed and evil socialism wins

      it's a retarded false choice believed by people who never think about this issue and act with an almost religious conviction about economic concepts they don't even understand the fucking basics of. the best societies are a *mix*. capitalist, with social safety nets, or socialist, with a capitalist engine. these societies are richest and happiest. the loser miserable societies are the ones that are ideologically "pure"

      anyway, this all off-topic. this topic is not part of the conversation about intellectual property

      we defeated the plutocrats before, in the gilded age, and got workplace safety, work week caps, end to child labor, etc. next we will get government child care, generous parental leave, good wage minimums, etc.

      we will get that, we really will. the morons are dying off or waking up about the mindlessness of cold war era propaganda about "evil socialism." universal healthcare, cheaper (much much cheaper) and better quality care, as realized in canada, japan, germany, australia, france, etc.: all of our fucking capitalist democratic peers, is not the same fucking thing as the USSR with gulags, even though so many brain dead fucking retards in the usa believe this for some low iq reason

      my point is simply: don't be so spooked and grow a fucking backbone. plutocrats are just rich morons, look at donald trump for example. there's nothing to be scared of, we beat the losers before, we'll beat them again. just beat the fucks and stop being such a defeatist weak piece of shit scared of his own shadow

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  4. Reminds me of the The Hitchhiker's Guide to Galaxy by Darth+Technoid · · Score: 5, Funny

    Reminds me of the bit in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, where ...

    "The simplistic style is partly explained by the fact that its editors, having to meet a publishing deadline, copied the information off the back of a pack of breakfast cereal, hastily embroidering it with a few footnotes in order to avoid prosecution under the incomprehensibly tortuous Galactic copyright laws. It is interesting to note that a later and wilier editor sent the book backwards in time through a temporal warp and then successfully sued the breakfast cereal company for infringement of the same laws."

  5. Not sure what's up, here by dwywit · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just went to vimeo and searched for "pixels".

    Lots of content with "pixels in the title, including the original short.

    Perhaps someone at vimeo woke up, or perhaps someone at entura has been reading /. or other tech news sites.

    Has anyone got a screen grab of that search returning nothing, or DMCA takedown notifications?

    --
    They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
  6. futurama did it by ganjadude · · Score: 4, Insightful

    didnt the futurama episode come out before that movie as well?

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  7. Re:What exclusive rights were bought? by KGIII · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My understanding, from reading a few articles now, is that they licensed ONLY the ability to make a single derivative work. They have no rights beyond their work - including none over the original short.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."