Take down a troll today!
Dear Clare,
Here's your chance to help EFF topple a troll! Over the past two weeks, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has won the dismissal of two bogus infringement lawsuits filed by notorious "copyright troll" Righthaven LLC. In the first case, a federal judge ruled that Righthaven had no standing to sue an online political forum for a five-sentence excerpt of a news story posted by a user, because EFF sleuthing revealed that Righthaven did not own the copyright. Last week, the court relied on the evidence presented in the first case and dismissed Righthaven's lawsuit against a non-commercial blog that provides prosecutor resources for difficult to prosecute "no body" homicide cases.
These victories are sweet, but Righthaven and copyright trolls like them have filed thousands of additional lawsuits across the country, using the threat of massive damages available under copyright law to pressure defendants into quick settlements. One copyright troll is attempting to subpoena the identities of thousands of BitTorrent users and sue them collectively to minimize their own court costs, while another is targeting alleged adult film downloaders with hopes of exploiting the additional threat of embarrassment associated with porn. We need your financial support to bring an end to this awful business model.
EFF's hard work has provided the facts and precedents needed to dismiss even more lawsuits. Please support EFF today, and help us topple a troll!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Good Day Readers:
We hope you'll contribute whatever you can to San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation. It along with Harvard University's Berkman Centre for Internet & Society are doing leading edge digital research on predatory lawsuits such as copyright and patent trolls, as well as, SLAPPs (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Partication) of which we've had some firsthand experience.
Anyone using the internet could potentially benefit from the legal victories the EFF is winning.
Sincerely,
Clare L. Pieuk
Here's your chance to help EFF topple a troll! Over the past two weeks, the Electronic Frontier Foundation has won the dismissal of two bogus infringement lawsuits filed by notorious "copyright troll" Righthaven LLC. In the first case, a federal judge ruled that Righthaven had no standing to sue an online political forum for a five-sentence excerpt of a news story posted by a user, because EFF sleuthing revealed that Righthaven did not own the copyright. Last week, the court relied on the evidence presented in the first case and dismissed Righthaven's lawsuit against a non-commercial blog that provides prosecutor resources for difficult to prosecute "no body" homicide cases.
These victories are sweet, but Righthaven and copyright trolls like them have filed thousands of additional lawsuits across the country, using the threat of massive damages available under copyright law to pressure defendants into quick settlements. One copyright troll is attempting to subpoena the identities of thousands of BitTorrent users and sue them collectively to minimize their own court costs, while another is targeting alleged adult film downloaders with hopes of exploiting the additional threat of embarrassment associated with porn. We need your financial support to bring an end to this awful business model.
EFF's hard work has provided the facts and precedents needed to dismiss even more lawsuits. Please support EFF today, and help us topple a troll!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Good Day Readers:
We hope you'll contribute whatever you can to San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation. It along with Harvard University's Berkman Centre for Internet & Society are doing leading edge digital research on predatory lawsuits such as copyright and patent trolls, as well as, SLAPPs (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Partication) of which we've had some firsthand experience.
Anyone using the internet could potentially benefit from the legal victories the EFF is winning.
Sincerely,
Clare L. Pieuk
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home