RevWaldo writes "The International Olympic Committee filed a copyright infringement claim yesterday against YouTube for hosting video of a Free Tibet protest at the Chinese Consulate in Manhattan Thursday night. The video depicts demonstrators conducting a candlelight vigil and projecting a protest video onto the consulate building; the projection features recent footage of Tibetan monks being arrested and riffs on the Olympic logo of the five interlocking rings, turning them into handcuffs. YouTube dutifully yanked the video, but it can still be seen on Vimeo. (Be advised; there is some brief footage of bloody, injured monks.)"
It wouldn't surprise me if the legal situation at YouTube was that they yank any clip against which there is a properly filed copyright complaint, and that they follow up later on the actual applicability of copyright law.
I think the telling point as to whether they cave to pressure from the IOC and China will be when their lawyers have a chance to review the footage and determine that there is nothing infringing going on, if they put the video back.
I'm setting a calendar event to go back and look for it in three days, and am ready to judge the G-folk harshly if they're unwilling to stick up for this obvious expression of free speech.
Google has removed videos critical of the Pakistani government at that government's request, and has many more shameful examples of political cave-in under its belt.
Youtube's not just tilted in relation to China/IOC's shenanigans here, they've regularly shown bias in what they'll delete on the pro/anti-George Bush, pro/anti-Islam, pro/anti-terrorism, and pro/anti-$cientology fronts.
Hell, they even give random people grief [theregister.co.uk] whenever some jumped-up 2-bit shyster attached to a media company comes calling.
If the post on the Pakistani government's stuff is "5, interesting" there's no way the following post deserves "-1, Flamebait" except that someone with an axe to grind decided to abuse the mod system early.
Vimeo has very restrictive terms about actually owning your content. However, once you have satisfied their requirements for original content, Vimeo is very protective of the First Amendment rights of its content creators. Vimeo was the safe refuge for Wise Beard Man and his Scientology critic videos.
Vimeo is also technically superior to YouTube, GoogleVideo, Revver, Ning, and any other.FLV sites. Sound is better. Picture is clearer and less blocky. They can handle video that is higher definition than 480p.
http://www.vimeo.com/ [vimeo.com] . I don't know anyone there, I don't own their stock, I don't work for them. However, they are the superior solution and Deserve To Win. (tm)
It won't be back up. If it does depict the five interlocking rings as the summary states then the IOC will aggressively attack it as infringing. The IOC does not let five interlocking rings fly, no matter the context. Ever. This will be no different. It has nothing to do with the Tibet/China angel - it's purely about the five interlocking rings. Had the video not had that imagery, I'm certain it'd be fine (from the IOC standpoint, at least).
If I had to guess, I'd say this would be a perfectly acceptable use of the five interlocking rings: parody. IANAL, of course... but if what these guys did isn't protected, it damn well should be. The IOC can go fuck themselves if they don't like it.
. Limiting their liability is something they are legally required to do for their share holders.
They are required to accurately represent the business to the shareholders. But if they said "Google/YouTube will fight for freedom of speech first, profits second", then they would have to live by that standard. I don't know what the rules on changing the nature of the company are, but stockholder value does not have to be the overriding concern. In fact, in some cases it cannot be (see the Microsoft offer to Yahoo!).
All companies are required to limit their liability. Shareholders can take managers to court if they willfully reduce the value of the company's shares.
Keeping copyrighted material on your site, knowing you will be sued and almost certainly lose would surely come under the term willful.
Saying something like:
... [we] will fight for freedom of speech first, profits second...
That could also come under the term willful.
Also, companies can make any statement to their customers they like. They don't have to live by them. Their only nod they make to the customer is via the marketplace and a few trading standards costraints. If the customer stops buying, they change what they are doing.
In terms of your other assertion, that trademark allows absolute control of images like the Olympic rings, that is not true. US trademark law has a provision called the fair use defense [wikipedia.org], where trademarks can be used to criticize or analyze. This doctrine allows this video [youtube.com] to be posted on YouTube though it contains many of Disney's trademarks and copyrights.
It wouldn't surprise me if the legal situation at YouTube was that they yank any clip against which there is a properly filed copyright complaint, and that they follow up later on the actual applicability of copyright law.
I work for a web hosting company and thus have some exposure to this type of thing.
In a nutshell, you're entirely correct. Under the DMCA, providers are required by law to remove the "offending" material upon receipt of an infringement notice. If they don't, they become liable for infringement as well. No real proof of ownership is required, the author of the notice simply has to say it belongs to them. When we receive one of these, all we do is suspend the concerned account, forward the DMCA to the customer, and then our job is done.
The only thing that makes the DMCA bearable for us is the fact that we're off the hook if our customer decides to unsuspend the account and make the content available again after receiving the notice. From then on, it's a legal battle between the alleged copyright holder and the alleged infringer.
In this case (depending on how draconian YouTube/Google decides to feel today), the user can simply re-upload the video to YouTube and if the alleged copyright holder wants to battle it further, they have to use the legal system to get subpoenas, court orders, etc for further action. (But of course IANAL, so feel free to poke holes in my understanding of the DMCA here.)
Mostly. The "unsuspend their account" is really a counter-notification [cmu.edu], and it works on all websites. The thing that's intended to stop misuse of the DMCA is that takedown notifications and counter-notifications are done under penalty of perjury, and that if the accused believes they're in the right, that the default state before a court hearing is that the content stays up (because of the three steps 1) takedown notice, 2) counter-notice, 3) accuser files a lawsuit, #1 and #2 are very quick, so if it's ultimately headed to #3, the content is only taken offline for the brief time between #1 and #2).
Actions like this by the IOC need to hurt (or at least make fear hurt) the sponsors of the events.
Here is a sample letter I am sending (I will customize it for each business I actually work with, listing what I will now longer be purchasing.
It is a rough draft, so if you use it, edit it.
I just wanted to let you know, that as a freedom loving citizen of the world, your sponsorship of the 2008 olympic games, and more importantly, proud display of association with the International Olympic Committee is going to prevent me from using your product until any of the following happens:
1) Your company issues an official statement condemning the abuses to freedom by the IOC (this includes, but is not limited to claiming copyright infringement on a critical video that used a clearly satirical alteration of their logo, blocking/allowing to be blocked free internet access to international journalists, and allowing people to be kicked out of their homes in tremendously huge quantities).
2) The IOC behaves better at the next Olympic games.
3) The IOC officially apologizes for the same reasons mentioned in item one.
I hope that my voice is one of many (though I fear I am but one of a few) and that your companies inconsiderate pursuite of a new market ends up costing both prophits and shareholders for years to come.
Woops, almost left my sig that includes my phone number from that email.
If I understand current US copyright law (DCMA, cough) correctly, the IOC can demand that YouTube yanks the clip now. But at least in theory, they do so under penalty of perjury.
The person who put it up can file a counterclaim and say that he believes the video does not infringe any copyright. I think fair use might cover this use of the Olympic Rings, and I'd really like to see the EFF getting behind a lawsuit in such a case.
All right, I'll bite: is China's authoritarian system which brutally suppresses free speech and competing ideas about government any better? Does the existence of a voluntary religion justify subjugating an "autonomous region"? And, to get a little philosophical on your ass, is a religion materially different from any other faith system (like nationalism), and if not, who gets to decide which faith systems the government will crush? Oh, the government you say?
Wait, so... massacring people is more advanced than having an out-of-date religion?
Wouldn't it be better that the caste system be discarded AND China stop trying to be stank hos? Can't they both have faults? Just because you argue that they are "bad" does not make China "good".
It's a shame you had to go too far in your post, because amongst the flamebait you do have a valid point.
Tibet was not by any stretch of the imagination a free, fair nor democratic society before the Chinese invaded. Many of Tibet's citizens are indeed wealthier, freer and healthier as a result of the invasion.
The Dalai Lamas have suppressed many things over the centuries and have protected their dictatorship bloodily. It's all about money and power. Even now, the current Dalai Lama preaches "simplicity," and the opportunity to buy his latest overpriced book on "simplicity."
A Free Tibet will be a great thing. But neither the Chinese nor the (self-appointed) Tibetan Government in Exile are in anyway truly interested in that.
Not to justify what the Chinese government does and not to say that a new Tibetan government could be a democratic one adhering to human rights, but the previous leadership in Tibet indeed was more than just a tad theocratic and therefore not democratic at all. However, Wikipedia will tell you that it is debated how bad the caste system really was.
Still, as I said, that is besides the point since it was before 1950. And as a German I'd like to say: I would not want to be judged by my country's history pre 1950 either.:-S
Yes it was pre-1950 but there was never a democratic government in Tibet. If China pulled out tomorrow what would happen in Tibet? One has to wonder. I remember when Germany was reunified. At first there was great joy and then everybody stopped and looked and thought... Good grief now what do we do! It was a huge mess. Imagine the same thing but without West Germany to help! West Germany had a common heritage with East Germany to say the least and had decades of democratic government, freedom, economic reform, and economic growth. That was a best case scenario and it was still a long and complicated process.
I'd probably also point out Shinto as well. Shinto was the state religion of Japan and the "divine right of the ruler" was used as a mechanism of state control back in World War II. That doesn't mean it's adherents today advocate a return to the Pre WWII government with all that such entails, or that the actions taken under such a mantle would be condoned by modern shinto practitioners today.
But apparently that is not something you'll let stop you from having opinions on it?
"The Buddhists" are not some coherent group. And just because a religion teaches righteous behavior, that is no guarantee that those ideals will actually be followed. Power corrupts, and just because you're supposed to be a Buddhist does not make you immune to that.
Etc., etc. Now, the fact that Tibet was formerly ruled by an oppressive, fanatical, and theocratic regime characterized by slavery doesn't make what China is doing now correct.
However, from the perspective of someone fighting for human rights, claiming that it was some sort of "peaceful paradise" can only undermine positive efforts.
Acknowledge that life in pre-China Tibet was absolutely terrible for the average person, acknowledge that life for the average Tibetan has improved dramatically in terms of education, quality of life, etc., and then, from this more realistic position, demand more.
Propping up what is understood by anyone knowledgeable about Tibet as a myth only hurts efforts to improve human rights and religious freedom in China.
The problem with getting "The Story" on pre-1950 Tibet is that most of the information comes from two groups: The Chinese who wish to paint it as a caste system where the Lama caste mercilously ruled over the population with an iron fist; and the Tibet government in exile who want to paint the Chinese as an oppressive government mercilously ruling over the population with an iron fist.
The closest thing I have found to an independent review is this skeptoid article [skeptoid.com].
And for laughs, and an opinion not tilted by propaganda from either side, but maybe a little biased, is this Penn & Teller B*llsh*t bit [youtube.com].
The responses to the above from the Free Tibet crowd tend to go something like "But *THIS* Dalai Lama was a good one! He would have ruled with justice and compassion." Well, okay, maybe he really would. But history has shown us pretty conclusively that absolute monarchies tend to have more wicked than wonderful rulers.
Pardon the nitpick . . . I don't think that word is right. It appeared in a comedy film as a word-geek riff on secret societies and conspiracy theories. The word itself is wrong (which is the joke) because it is a build-up on triumvirate, latin for "three men". Penta, however, is a Greek prefix for 5. I think you are looking for something more like "quintumvirate".
There are two different logos shown in the video, one being the 5 rings as handcuffs in black and white, which should be protected under fair use. But at the beginning of the projection, there is a full color illustration of the IOC's trademark 5-rings.
Now, if someone where to clip out that 1/2 a second of frames and re-post the video, I would be hard pressed to defend the IOC's actions.
A trademark's purpose is to allow someone selling Coca-Cola to prevent someone else from selling "I can't believe it's not Coca-Cola" and benefiting from the former's good name and marketing efforts unjustly via consumer confusion.
It is not trademark infringement to use a company's trademark to specifically identify that company's product in the context of criticism of that company's actions. Parody or not. I can opine that Microsoft is evil or Windows XP is crap without any fear that I am infringing their trademark doing it.
The video depicts demonstrators conducting a candlelight vigil and projecting a protest video onto the consulate building; the projection features recent footage of Tibetan monks being arrested and riffs on the Olympic logo of the five interlocking rings, turning them into handcuffs.
People, please! This is the Olympics. The Olympics--let's not bicker and argue about who's been brutally repressing who for hundreds and hundreds of years!
On a side note, I used to enjoy this band from Minnesota called The Olympic Hopefuls who are now known [mtv.com] as The Hopefuls due to some legal business and the fact that the IOC is full of lawyers. And you're surprised a video criticizing the Olympics is taken down on the internet?
Dude the Olympic ideal died a long time ago. It is all about who will make millions selling sneakers. Sorry but that is what it has turned into. And in this case it is also to show off to the world that China is a new wealthy world power. So yes I feel that it is totally legit to bring up China's political issues. Trust me if it was in the US and people wanted to protest by blocking the marathon their would be people on Slashdot screaming about Freedom of Speech. As much as I like the Olympics coming to the US maybe they should just make it always in Athens. Or maybe they should pick the poorest country with a good history of Human rights and then all the rich nations chip in to build the infrastructure and give that nation a shot in the arm. Maybe that would bring back the spirit.
According to the screenshot, the video was titled "Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony." It's not about censorship, it's about copyright, and was probably automatically removed based just on the title.
How about accurately titling your video next time? I don't think trying to scam people looking for the opening ceremonies into viewing propaganda for your cause is the best way to get sympathy.
According to the screenshot, the video was titled "Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony." It's not about censorship, it's about copyright, and was probably automatically removed based just on the title.
What, does the IOC have copyright on the word "Olympics"?
I imagine they're objecting to the image of the five colored rings that's shown in the video for a second or two. And if that's the case, this is a total abuse of a copyright infringement claim.
First, you'd think that showing the rings for a time that's probably less than 2% of the entire clip would qualify as fair use. Secondly, there's an issue of free speech. Are we no longer allowed to identify organizations by their logos?
At first I read it as
"YouTube Yanks [as in Americans] Free Tibet Video After IOC Pressure".
Needless to say, I was really confused until I read the description...
The attacks upon monks in Tibet as well as the general lack of human rights in China are a moral abomination that over ride notions of copyright. There is a thing called natural law and every human being has a deep moral obligation to stand up for the oppressed regardless of circumstances.
If anything America and all other nations should be deeply ashamed of allowing any commerce at all with China including Olympics or other sporting events. Cut the phone lines and to hell with any nation that persecutes people over religion.
Changing the Olympic logo into handcuffs, while certainly offensive to some, is clearly protected political satire akin to flag burning. YouTube should be ashamed, and the posters of the video should counter-file that their video is protected fair use.
In 1976 my brother and I literally camped in front of the TV for two weeks to watch the Montreal Olympics. It was the most exciting thing I'd ever seen (and I wanted to marry Nadia Comaneci).
Thirty years later I'll admit maybe I've changed more than the Olympics but I can't get into it anymore. It's a forum for political wankery and sports personality market development. Other countries are allowed in for no other reason than to give the US and the other big countries someone to beat. That may seem unkind, but it's the inevitable consequence of the focus on nationalism at the games. Some people say there should be no national identification at the games, and while it'll never happen, it would be better.
The games seem to me now on par with the Academy Awards, an exercise in marketing and self-promotion for political units and soon-to-be millionaire sports personalities. The big countries that host the games brought the concept of self promotion to the games, which inevitably leads to politics which inevitably leads to protests. They brought this on themselves.
I was young, but I remember West boycotting the 1980 Olympics in the USSR — Russia's suppression of democracy in Czechoslovakia (military [wikipedia.org]), Hungary (military [wikipedia.org]), and Poland (political [wikipedia.org]) were still fresh, as was the USSR's decision to, once again, prohibit its citizens a move to another country [wikipedia.org].. I could not really understand things then, but I'm disgusted, that the rest of "the Western Civilization" has deteriorated over the years down to the levels of the IOC...
Oh, and the 2014 Winter Olympics will be in Sochi — only a few miles away from Georgia. Is not Putin the coolest [time.com]? He sure is, and now he is hot too...
Commence the "troll" moderations, and "insightful" responses on how the US is just as bad...
Except that this isn't protecting a brand in the marketplace, though arguably Youtube "profits." I'm not sure this would hold up in court. The protesters aren't gaining anything monetarily. If satire is protected why shouldn't protesting?
These people aren't trying to identify anything else as the Olympics. They're trying to say the IOC is complicit with suppression and torture. The Olympic rings are being used to identify who they're supposed to identify, so there's no trademark issue.
The IOC cannot allow unofficial use of the Olympic rings logo, it has nothing to do with supporting or opposing the right of people to protest their condition or the conditions endured by others around the world.
But it's fine to put them on Visa cards and checks. I think the latter diminishes the value of the symbol much more than the former!
Yup, videos of Jihadists killing American Soldiers can stay up. Videos recruiting terrorists can stay up.
Of course videos that are against Jihad MUST be taken down as well.
Gotta wonder about the people at You-Tube, they really seem to hate freedom.
Blah Blah Blah. This is not about the people at Youtube, it's about copyright laws and the DMCA. They didn't take these videos down of their own accord (and neither would they take those others down unless they were against the terms of use or there was a legal requirement to).
The DMCA has long been abused to suppress free speech. Everybody knows it. Nobody cares.
I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Insightful)
It wouldn't surprise me if the legal situation at YouTube was that they yank any clip against which there is a properly filed copyright complaint, and that they follow up later on the actual applicability of copyright law.
I think the telling point as to whether they cave to pressure from the IOC and China will be when their lawyers have a chance to review the footage and determine that there is nothing infringing going on, if they put the video back.
I'm setting a calendar event to go back and look for it in three days, and am ready to judge the G-folk harshly if they're unwilling to stick up for this obvious expression of free speech.
Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Interesting)
Google has removed videos critical of the Pakistani government at that government's request, and has many more shameful examples of political cave-in under its belt.
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This was a good post, not "flamebait" (Score:4, Insightful)
Youtube's not just tilted in relation to China/IOC's shenanigans here, they've regularly shown bias in what they'll delete on the pro/anti-George Bush, pro/anti-Islam, pro/anti-terrorism, and pro/anti-$cientology fronts.
Hell, they even give random people grief [theregister.co.uk] whenever some jumped-up 2-bit shyster attached to a media company comes calling.
If the post on the Pakistani government's stuff is "5, interesting" there's no way the following post deserves "-1, Flamebait" except that someone with an axe to grind decided to abuse the mod system early.
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This is why I like Vimeo so much. (Score:5, Informative)
Vimeo has very restrictive terms about actually owning your content. However, once you have satisfied their requirements for original content, Vimeo is very protective of the First Amendment rights of its content creators. Vimeo was the safe refuge for Wise Beard Man and his Scientology critic videos.
Vimeo is also technically superior to YouTube, GoogleVideo, Revver, Ning, and any other .FLV sites. Sound is better. Picture is clearer and less blocky. They can handle video that is higher definition than 480p.
http://www.vimeo.com/ [vimeo.com] . I don't know anyone there, I don't own their stock, I don't work for them. However, they are the superior solution and Deserve To Win. (tm)
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Informative)
Well IAAL and it clearly is protected speech, and YouTube should grow a backbone.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Insightful)
Mostly true statements. However, this is false:
They are required to accurately represent the business to the shareholders. But if they said "Google/YouTube will fight for freedom of speech first, profits second", then they would have to live by that standard. I don't know what the rules on changing the nature of the company are, but stockholder value does not have to be the overriding concern. In fact, in some cases it cannot be (see the Microsoft offer to Yahoo!).
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Insightful)
All companies are required to limit their liability. Shareholders can take managers to court if they willfully reduce the value of the company's shares.
Keeping copyrighted material on your site, knowing you will be sued and almost certainly lose would surely come under the term willful.
Saying something like:
That could also come under the term willful.
Also, companies can make any statement to their customers they like. They don't have to live by them. Their only nod they make to the customer is via the marketplace and a few trading standards costraints. If the customer stops buying, they change what they are doing.
a
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Informative)
They don't have that right. That's the point of parody [wikipedia.org].
Jerry Falwell certainly didn't want his image used by Hustler Magazine, but he didn't have the power to stop them [wikipedia.org].
- David Stein
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Informative)
Faldwell didn't win on the libel charge, but did win $150,000 for emotional distress.
Larry Flynt took the case to the Supreme Court and won [wikipedia.org]. The court ruled that the parody was protected speech under the first amendment.
In terms of your other assertion, that trademark allows absolute control of images like the Olympic rings, that is not true. US trademark law has a provision called the fair use defense [wikipedia.org], where trademarks can be used to criticize or analyze. This doctrine allows this video [youtube.com] to be posted on YouTube though it contains many of Disney's trademarks and copyrights.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Informative)
It wouldn't surprise me if the legal situation at YouTube was that they yank any clip against which there is a properly filed copyright complaint, and that they follow up later on the actual applicability of copyright law.
I work for a web hosting company and thus have some exposure to this type of thing.
In a nutshell, you're entirely correct. Under the DMCA, providers are required by law to remove the "offending" material upon receipt of an infringement notice. If they don't, they become liable for infringement as well. No real proof of ownership is required, the author of the notice simply has to say it belongs to them. When we receive one of these, all we do is suspend the concerned account, forward the DMCA to the customer, and then our job is done.
The only thing that makes the DMCA bearable for us is the fact that we're off the hook if our customer decides to unsuspend the account and make the content available again after receiving the notice. From then on, it's a legal battle between the alleged copyright holder and the alleged infringer.
In this case (depending on how draconian YouTube/Google decides to feel today), the user can simply re-upload the video to YouTube and if the alleged copyright holder wants to battle it further, they have to use the legal system to get subpoenas, court orders, etc for further action. (But of course IANAL, so feel free to poke holes in my understanding of the DMCA here.)
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:4, Informative)
Mostly. The "unsuspend their account" is really a counter-notification [cmu.edu], and it works on all websites. The thing that's intended to stop misuse of the DMCA is that takedown notifications and counter-notifications are done under penalty of perjury, and that if the accused believes they're in the right, that the default state before a court hearing is that the content stays up (because of the three steps 1) takedown notice, 2) counter-notice, 3) accuser files a lawsuit, #1 and #2 are very quick, so if it's ultimately headed to #3, the content is only taken offline for the brief time between #1 and #2).
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Interesting)
Whatever youtube does is hardly the issue.
Actions like this by the IOC need to hurt (or at least make fear hurt) the sponsors of the events.
Here is a sample letter I am sending (I will customize it for each business I actually work with, listing what I will now longer be purchasing.
It is a rough draft, so if you use it, edit it.
I just wanted to let you know, that as a freedom loving citizen of the world, your sponsorship of the 2008 olympic games, and more importantly, proud display of association with the International Olympic Committee is going to prevent me from using your product until any of the following happens:
1) Your company issues an official statement condemning the abuses to freedom by the IOC (this includes, but is not limited to claiming copyright infringement on a critical video that used a clearly satirical alteration of their logo, blocking/allowing to be blocked free internet access to international journalists, and allowing people to be kicked out of their homes in tremendously huge quantities).
2) The IOC behaves better at the next Olympic games.
3) The IOC officially apologizes for the same reasons mentioned in item one.
I hope that my voice is one of many (though I fear I am but one of a few) and that your companies inconsiderate pursuite of a new market ends up costing both prophits and shareholders for years to come.
Woops, almost left my sig that includes my phone number from that email.
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Hope the maker of the video fights back (Score:5, Insightful)
If I understand current US copyright law (DCMA, cough) correctly, the IOC can demand that YouTube yanks the clip now. But at least in theory, they do so under penalty of perjury.
The person who put it up can file a counterclaim and say that he believes the video does not infringe any copyright. I think fair use might cover this use of the Olympic Rings, and I'd really like to see the EFF getting behind a lawsuit in such a case.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:4, Informative)
Considering that the average lifespan in Tibet has increased pretty dramatically since the Chinese took over from the lamas, then yes, it is better.
Says who, exactly? The very same Chinese government that took over?
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:4, Insightful)
Wait, so... massacring people is more advanced than having an out-of-date religion?
Wouldn't it be better that the caste system be discarded AND China stop trying to be stank hos? Can't they both have faults? Just because you argue that they are "bad" does not make China "good".
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Interesting)
Tibet was not by any stretch of the imagination a free, fair nor democratic society before the Chinese invaded. Many of Tibet's citizens are indeed wealthier, freer and healthier as a result of the invasion.
The Dalai Lamas have suppressed many things over the centuries and have protected their dictatorship bloodily. It's all about money and power. Even now, the current Dalai Lama preaches "simplicity," and the opportunity to buy his latest overpriced book on "simplicity."
A Free Tibet will be a great thing. But neither the Chinese nor the (self-appointed) Tibetan Government in Exile are in anyway truly interested in that.
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So both philosophies are flawed.... (Score:5, Insightful)
But only one side invaded a sovereign nation in enforce their will upon it. That invader is by default the 'bad guy'
Sorry, that's just how it goes.
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Re:In response to your sig... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:In response to your sig... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes it was pre-1950 but there was never a democratic government in Tibet. If China pulled out tomorrow what would happen in Tibet? One has to wonder. I remember when Germany was reunified. At first there was great joy and then everybody stopped and looked and thought... Good grief now what do we do! It was a huge mess. Imagine the same thing but without West Germany to help!
West Germany had a common heritage with East Germany to say the least and had decades of democratic government, freedom, economic reform, and economic growth. That was a best case scenario and it was still a long and complicated process.
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Re:In response to your sig... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:In response to your sig... (Score:4, Insightful)
Indeeed. I know little of Tibetian Bhuddism, but I spent a year in Thailand while in the USAF, and Thailand is a Bhuddhist country.
The Bhuddhists worship life itself. I dont see how even an athiest could have a problem with that.
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Re:In response to your sig... (Score:4, Insightful)
I know little of Tibetian Bhuddism
But apparently that is not something you'll let stop you from having opinions on it?
"The Buddhists" are not some coherent group. And just because a religion teaches righteous behavior, that is no guarantee that those ideals will actually be followed. Power corrupts, and just because you're supposed to be a Buddhist does not make you immune to that.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Interesting)
A couple popular ones:
http://www.michaelparenti.org/Tibet.html [michaelparenti.org]
http://www.case.edu/affil/tibet/tibetanSociety/social.htm [case.edu]
Etc., etc. Now, the fact that Tibet was formerly ruled by an oppressive, fanatical, and theocratic regime characterized by slavery doesn't make what China is doing now correct.
However, from the perspective of someone fighting for human rights, claiming that it was some sort of "peaceful paradise" can only undermine positive efforts.
Acknowledge that life in pre-China Tibet was absolutely terrible for the average person, acknowledge that life for the average Tibetan has improved dramatically in terms of education, quality of life, etc., and then, from this more realistic position, demand more.
Propping up what is understood by anyone knowledgeable about Tibet as a myth only hurts efforts to improve human rights and religious freedom in China.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Informative)
The problem with getting "The Story" on pre-1950 Tibet is that most of the information comes from two groups: The Chinese who wish to paint it as a caste system where the Lama caste mercilously ruled over the population with an iron fist; and the Tibet government in exile who want to paint the Chinese as an oppressive government mercilously ruling over the population with an iron fist.
The closest thing I have found to an independent review is this skeptoid article [skeptoid.com].
And for laughs, and an opinion not tilted by propaganda from either side, but maybe a little biased, is this Penn & Teller B*llsh*t bit [youtube.com].
The responses to the above from the Free Tibet crowd tend to go something like "But *THIS* Dalai Lama was a good one! He would have ruled with justice and compassion." Well, okay, maybe he really would. But history has shown us pretty conclusively that absolute monarchies tend to have more wicked than wonderful rulers.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Funny)
Pardon the nitpick . . . I don't think that word is right. It appeared in a comedy film as a word-geek riff on secret societies and conspiracy theories. The word itself is wrong (which is the joke) because it is a build-up on triumvirate, latin for "three men". Penta, however, is a Greek prefix for 5. I think you are looking for something more like "quintumvirate".
I'll shut up now.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Funny)
What do you call your car? An "autokinetikon" or a "suimobil"?
A decepticon.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:4, Insightful)
There are two different logos shown in the video, one being the 5 rings as handcuffs in black and white, which should be protected under fair use. But at the beginning of the projection, there is a full color illustration of the IOC's trademark 5-rings.
Now, if someone where to clip out that 1/2 a second of frames and re-post the video, I would be hard pressed to defend the IOC's actions.
-Rick
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:4, Informative)
A trademark's purpose is to allow someone selling Coca-Cola to prevent someone else from selling "I can't believe it's not Coca-Cola" and benefiting from the former's good name and marketing efforts unjustly via consumer confusion.
It is not trademark infringement to use a company's trademark to specifically identify that company's product in the context of criticism of that company's actions. Parody or not. I can opine that Microsoft is evil or Windows XP is crap without any fear that I am infringing their trademark doing it.
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Re:I'll judge them in 3 days. (Score:5, Insightful)
Because suing Amnesty International would be PR suicide?
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Help! Help! I'm being repressed! (Score:4, Funny)
The video depicts demonstrators conducting a candlelight vigil and projecting a protest video onto the consulate building; the projection features recent footage of Tibetan monks being arrested and riffs on the Olympic logo of the five interlocking rings, turning them into handcuffs.
People, please! This is the Olympics. The Olympics--let's not bicker and argue about who's been brutally repressing who for hundreds and hundreds of years!
On a side note, I used to enjoy this band from Minnesota called The Olympic Hopefuls who are now known [mtv.com] as The Hopefuls due to some legal business and the fact that the IOC is full of lawyers. And you're surprised a video criticizing the Olympics is taken down on the internet?
Re:Help! Help! I'm being repressed! (Score:5, Insightful)
Dude the Olympic ideal died a long time ago. It is all about who will make millions selling sneakers.
Sorry but that is what it has turned into.
And in this case it is also to show off to the world that China is a new wealthy world power. So yes I feel that it is totally legit to bring up China's political issues.
Trust me if it was in the US and people wanted to protest by blocking the marathon their would be people on Slashdot screaming about Freedom of Speech.
As much as I like the Olympics coming to the US maybe they should just make it always in Athens.
Or maybe they should pick the poorest country with a good history of Human rights and then all the rich nations chip in to build the infrastructure and give that nation a shot in the arm.
Maybe that would bring back the spirit.
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Re:Help! Help! I'm being repressed! (Score:4, Funny)
You think that's bad, you haven't talked to Zeus. He's had mount Olympus for years, and the IOC is constantly sending him cease and desist letters.
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Ah the IOC (Score:3, Interesting)
This is pretty clear cut (Score:5, Insightful)
How about accurately titling your video next time? I don't think trying to scam people looking for the opening ceremonies into viewing propaganda for your cause is the best way to get sympathy.
No, it's not really clear cut (Score:5, Insightful)
According to the screenshot, the video was titled "Beijing Olympics Opening Ceremony." It's not about censorship, it's about copyright, and was probably automatically removed based just on the title.
What, does the IOC have copyright on the word "Olympics"?
I imagine they're objecting to the image of the five colored rings that's shown in the video for a second or two. And if that's the case, this is a total abuse of a copyright infringement claim.
First, you'd think that showing the rings for a time that's probably less than 2% of the entire clip would qualify as fair use. Secondly, there's an issue of free speech. Are we no longer allowed to identify organizations by their logos?
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Ambiguous title (Score:5, Funny)
Abominations and Copyright (Score:5, Insightful)
The attacks upon monks in Tibet as well as the general lack of human rights in China are a moral abomination that over ride notions of copyright. There is a thing called natural law and every human being has a deep moral obligation to stand up for the oppressed regardless of circumstances.
If anything America and all other nations should be deeply ashamed of allowing any commerce at all with China including Olympics or other sporting events. Cut the phone lines and to hell with any nation that persecutes people over religion.
Protected Satire (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh, are the Olympics on again? (Score:5, Interesting)
Thirty years later I'll admit maybe I've changed more than the Olympics but I can't get into it anymore. It's a forum for political wankery and sports personality market development. Other countries are allowed in for no other reason than to give the US and the other big countries someone to beat. That may seem unkind, but it's the inevitable consequence of the focus on nationalism at the games. Some people say there should be no national identification at the games, and while it'll never happen, it would be better.
The games seem to me now on par with the Academy Awards, an exercise in marketing and self-promotion for political units and soon-to-be millionaire sports personalities. The big countries that host the games brought the concept of self promotion to the games, which inevitably leads to politics which inevitably leads to protests. They brought this on themselves.
Free Tibet!
In Soviet Russia - Moscow-80 (Score:4, Insightful)
I was young, but I remember West boycotting the 1980 Olympics in the USSR — Russia's suppression of democracy in Czechoslovakia (military [wikipedia.org]), Hungary (military [wikipedia.org]), and Poland (political [wikipedia.org]) were still fresh, as was the USSR's decision to, once again, prohibit its citizens a move to another country [wikipedia.org].. I could not really understand things then, but I'm disgusted, that the rest of "the Western Civilization" has deteriorated over the years down to the levels of the IOC...
Oh, and the 2014 Winter Olympics will be in Sochi — only a few miles away from Georgia. Is not Putin the coolest [time.com]? He sure is, and now he is hot too...
Commence the "troll" moderations, and "insightful" responses on how the US is just as bad...
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The IOC cannot allow unofficial use of the ring (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:The IOC cannot allow unofficial use of the ring (Score:5, Insightful)
These people aren't trying to identify anything else as the Olympics. They're trying to say the IOC is complicit with suppression and torture. The Olympic rings are being used to identify who they're supposed to identify, so there's no trademark issue.
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Re:The IOC cannot allow unofficial use of the VISA (Score:4, Insightful)
But it's fine to put them on Visa cards and checks. I think the latter diminishes the value of the symbol much more than the former!
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Re:But those Jihad Videos can stay up just fine... (Score:4, Funny)
Yup, videos of Jihadists killing American Soldiers can stay up. Videos recruiting terrorists can stay up.
Of course videos that are against Jihad MUST be taken down as well.
+1 Insightful
Gotta wonder about the people at You-Tube, they really seem to hate freedom.
+1 Funny? -1 WTF?
I just don't know.
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Re:But those Jihad Videos can stay up just fine... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yup, videos of Jihadists killing American Soldiers can stay up. Videos recruiting terrorists can stay up.
Of course videos that are against Jihad MUST be taken down as well.
Gotta wonder about the people at You-Tube, they really seem to hate freedom.
Blah Blah Blah. This is not about the people at Youtube, it's about copyright laws and the DMCA. They didn't take these videos down of their own accord (and neither would they take those others down unless they were against the terms of use or there was a legal requirement to).
The DMCA has long been abused to suppress free speech. Everybody knows it. Nobody cares.
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