In 1998, Congress added Section 512 to the U.S. Copyright Act, creating a set of safe harbors that protect online service providers (OSPs), under certain conditions, from liability for copyright infringement that might occur in the course of specified online activities. Some commentators have viewed two of these safe harbors, sections 512(c) and 512(d), as departing from the ordinary copyright regime by protecting OSPs from claims of direct infringement by the OSP itself, but following the ordinary copyright regime by allowing secondary liability claims against an OSP for infringements committed by users of the OSP’s services. This Article suggests that this view is not entirely accurate.Part I suggests that the safe harbors’ statutory prot...
Section 230 of the Communications Act provides online service providers (OSPs) with immunity from li...
This book chapter considers the liability of entrepreneurs of ‘user-generated content’ (UGC) sites. ...
The lawsuit brought by Viacom and other copyright owners against YouTube underscores the uncertainti...
In 1998, Congress added Section 512 to the U.S. Copyright Act, creating a set of safe harbors that p...
The extent to which online service providers can be held liable for copyright infringement committed...
Any online service provider ( OSP ), including a website operator, that accepts user postings or inc...
Secondary liability remains perhaps the only meaningful remedy for rights owners when it comes to th...
In Safe Harbor for the Innocent Infringer in the Digital Age (Safe Harbor), I argued that certain cl...
For more than two decades, internet service providers (ISPs) in the United States, the European Unio...
The primary goal of this Article is three-fold: (1) to explore the role of the innocent infringer ar...
At common law, contributory infringement for copyright infringement requires \u27knowledge\u27 of th...
Title 11 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 purports to limit the liability of Internet...
With technology constantly changing, the interaction between copyright law and technology is always ...
It is well known that the copy diminishes the individual value of the creation and discourages the e...
At common law, contributory infringement for copyright infringement requires "knowledge" of the infr...
Section 230 of the Communications Act provides online service providers (OSPs) with immunity from li...
This book chapter considers the liability of entrepreneurs of ‘user-generated content’ (UGC) sites. ...
The lawsuit brought by Viacom and other copyright owners against YouTube underscores the uncertainti...
In 1998, Congress added Section 512 to the U.S. Copyright Act, creating a set of safe harbors that p...
The extent to which online service providers can be held liable for copyright infringement committed...
Any online service provider ( OSP ), including a website operator, that accepts user postings or inc...
Secondary liability remains perhaps the only meaningful remedy for rights owners when it comes to th...
In Safe Harbor for the Innocent Infringer in the Digital Age (Safe Harbor), I argued that certain cl...
For more than two decades, internet service providers (ISPs) in the United States, the European Unio...
The primary goal of this Article is three-fold: (1) to explore the role of the innocent infringer ar...
At common law, contributory infringement for copyright infringement requires \u27knowledge\u27 of th...
Title 11 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 purports to limit the liability of Internet...
With technology constantly changing, the interaction between copyright law and technology is always ...
It is well known that the copy diminishes the individual value of the creation and discourages the e...
At common law, contributory infringement for copyright infringement requires "knowledge" of the infr...
Section 230 of the Communications Act provides online service providers (OSPs) with immunity from li...
This book chapter considers the liability of entrepreneurs of ‘user-generated content’ (UGC) sites. ...
The lawsuit brought by Viacom and other copyright owners against YouTube underscores the uncertainti...