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The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan just ruled that YouTube will have to defend itself from a Viacom lawsuit in court. Viacom sued YouTube in 2007 for $1 billion, alleging that it was responsible for the huge amount of copyrighted material that was uploaded by YouTube users. Back in 2010, a lower court ruled that YouTube was protected from liability for what its users do because of the company compliance with DMCA procedures. Under the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, YouTube must remove offending videos when they ;re notified by copyright holders that this content exists. According to the new ruling, YouTube can ;t just tu
stanley cup rn a blind eye and hide behind DMCA: A reasonable jury could find that YouTube had actual knowledge or awareness of specific infringing activity on its website, a two-judge panel said in a 39-page decision. The outcome of the case will hinge entirely on wheth
stanley cup er YouTube knew that all of this copyrighted material was out there and what knowing actually means. While YouTube is very good about taking down material when asked to do so, Viacom is likely to argue the company should take a more active roll in identifying content for removal. [Businessweek]
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If you live in Seattle and use a Windows Phone 7 handset, you ;re one of about 40,000 people that can take advantage of Amazon new AmazonFresh mo
stanley taza bile application [Windows Marketplace]. AmazonFresh is the retailer grocery delivery service. It only available in Seattle and only available on the Windows Phone platform as a native app. iPhone owners can order through a mobile-optimized web page, but what fun is that. The free Windows Phone app was developed by Metia/Seattle and lets you place grocery orders directly from your phone. Sweet. [Geekwire via Microsoft] You can keep up w
stanley cup ith Kelly Hodgkins, the author of this post, on Twitter.
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