The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has condemned Viacom's demand that YouTube remove 100,000 videos from its site because it believes that much of the material does not violate Viacom copyrights. The free-speech advocacy group said that videos entirely unrelated to Viacom were removed under the order, ranging from independent films to home movies.
It is not the blatant mistakes that the EFF is most concerned about, however. The group believes that many of the videos are likely to fall under the category of 'fair use'. 'Fair use' is a legal concept that allows for the protection of programming such as satire, critique and educational videos from copyright claims. "If they are making these kinds of blatant mistakes, who can tell how many fair uses of Viacom content they also targeted in their 100,000 takedowns? Hundreds? Thousands?" said the EFF.
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News source: vnunet
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