Fox Issues DMCA Takedown To Google Over SF Chronicle Article… Claiming It Was The Movie 'Chronicle' (original) (raw)
from the on-the-penalty-of-perjury dept
So, Google just revealed its copyright takedown transparency report and it’s turning into the gift that keeps on giving. We’ve already discussed how it shows Microsoft DMCAing links that remain in Microsoft’s own search engine… and now reader David Sanger points us to another amusing one. On March 14th, apparently BayTSP (one of the more well-known “anti-piracy” firms), working for Twentieth Century Fox (a News Corp. company), demanded the removal of a link to SFGate.com.
SFGate? That’s the website for the San Francisco Chronicle — the main newspaper in San Francisco. So what was infringing? According to the DMCA notice (which says the filing came from Irdeto, the company that acquired BayTSP last year), insisted that what was actually at that link was:
“The copyrighted work at issue is the film “Chronicle”, which is owned by “Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation”
Now, wouldn’t that be something if the SF Chronicle was distributing the movie Chronicle illegally? But, of course, that’s hogwash. The truth is that BayTSP and Fox screwed up. The SFGate article is now back online and you can see it’s just an editorial about how SF Muni (the local public transit authority) should let students ride for free. That has nothing, whatsoever, to do with the movie Chronicle. What’s amazing is the word “Chronicle” doesn’t even show up in the article. It obviously shows up elsewhere on the page. After all, it is the website for the SF Chronicle.
Of course, in filing this DMCA takedown, BayTSP — who is a “trusted user” of the takedown system — swears upon the following statements:
I have a good faith belief that use of the copyrighted materials described in all notifications submitted through the Program as allegedly infringing is not authorized by the copyright owner, its agent, or the law.
The information in all notifications submitted through the Program will be accurate, and I swear, under penalty of perjury, that with respect to those notifications, I am the copyright owner or am authorized to act on behalf of the owner of an exclusive right that is allegedly infringed.
That’s clearly bunk, however, since nothing on that page is even remotely related to the movie Chronicle. How do you have a “good faith belief” that there’s infringement when you clearly didn’t even take the briefest second to look.
Filed Under: chronicle, dmca, sfgate, takedown
Companies: baytsp, news corp, twentieth century fox