YouTube set free: web hosts not liable.

AuthorSuderman, Peter
PositionCitings - Brief article

IN 2007 the entertainment giant Viacom sued Google, the owner of the video site YouTube, for copyright infringement. Viacom, whose holdings include MTV, Comedy Central, and Nickelodeon, sought $1 billion in damages from YouTube on the grounds that it was hosting illegally uploaded clips.

Viacom's case ran into trouble in late 2009, when it was discovered that some of the infringements it had initially alleged were actually anonymous attempts by the company's marketing arm to make certain clips "go viral." Still, neither side disputed the fact that much of the material hosted by YouTube violated Viacom's copyright. But was Google liable for the actions of the millions of users who uploaded illegal material?

The company argued that it wasn't, pointing to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's...

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