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by bitwize
1626 days ago
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Good. Like it or not, anticircumvention measures are black-letter law in much of the world. In the USA, producing or distributing software designed to circumvent DRM can subject you to civil and criminal penalties. According to 17 U.S.C. section 512, it is not necessary for the material itself to be infringing in order for a DMCA notice to be valid. If "an activity using the material" is infringing, the material must be removed upon receipt of a takedown notice. Therefore, it is likely that takedown notices are as legitimate for material that violates Section 1201 as they are for copyrighted material. This is copyright law working as intended, nothing more. |
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You cut off a few words that probably carry real meaning:
> "does not have actual knowledge that the material or an activity using the material on the system or network is infringing;"
So there's a (somewhat ambiguous) restriction that the only activities this clause is concerned with are those happening on the system or network operated by the service provider that wants safe harbor protection against liability for their users' infringement.
And to determine what activities can qualify as copyright infringement, you have to look in section 501 and the other sections it references; section 512 does not alter the definition of copyright infringement, it just adds nuance to who can be held liable for infringement.