Media News - Thursday, July 03, 2008
Judge orders YouTube to give all user histories to Viacom
Google will have to turn over every record of every video watched by
YouTube users, including users' names and IP addresses, to Viacom, which
is suing Google for allowing clips of its copyright videos to appear on
YouTube, a judge ruled Wednesday. Viacom wants the data to prove that
infringing material is more popular than user-created videos, which
could be used to increase Google's liability if it is found guilty of
contributory infringement. Viacom filed suit against Google in March
2007, seeking more than USD 1bn in damages for allowing users to
upload clips of Viacom's copyright material. Google argues that the law
provides a safe harbor for online services so long as they comply with
copyright takedown requests. Although Google argued that turning over
the data would invade its users' privacy, the judge's ruling
described that argument as 'speculative' and ordered Google to turn over
the logs on a set of four tera-byte hard drives. The judge also turned
Google's own defense of its data retention policies - that IP addresses
of computers aren't personally revealing in and of themselves, against
it to justify the log dump. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has
already reacted, calling the order a violation of the Video Privacy
Protection act that 'threatens to expose deeply private information.'
The order also requires Google to turn over copies of all videos that it
has taken down for any reason. Viacom also requested YouTube's source
code, the code for identifying repeat copyright infringement uploads,
copies of all videos marked private, and Google's advertising database
schema. Those requests were denied in whole, except that Google will have to
turn over data about how often each private video has been watched and
by how many persons. (Wired.com)
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