Copyright aspects of downloading and streaming
Encyclopedia
Streaming
Streaming media
Streaming media is multimedia that is constantly received by and presented to an end-user while being delivered by a streaming provider.The term "presented" is used in this article in a general sense that includes audio or video playback. The name refers to the delivery method of the medium rather...

and downloading (or saving) media files may often involve use of linking and framing
Framing
Framing or enframing may refer to:* Framing , the most common carpentry work* Framing or Framing effect , terminology used in communication theory, sociology, and other disciplines where it relates to the construction and presentation of a fact or issue "framed" from a particular perspective*...

Internet material, but they raise quite separate issues from linking and framing under copyright law. The reason for the difference is that, unlike (or in addition to) mere linking and framing, streaming and downloading often involve making infringing copies of the works in question, or else the organizations running such Web sites may become vicariously liable for infringement by actively inducing infringement by others. Accordingly, some sites (such as TV Links) that have employed their own interfaces to stream media content from illegal sources, and others that provide a facility for saving (downloading) copyrighted content from legal interfaces, have faced strong legal opposition.

The advent of open hosting servers meant that people could upload files to a central server, which would incur the bandwidth and hard disk space costs such files generate with each download. As search engines came from the public need to navigate the growing universe of web pages, highly dynamic link sites (ie. web catalogs) emerged to address the particular fact that while hosts may provide files, hosts typically do not provide organized interfaces to their content. Link sites simply provide an interface for organizing information (links) to the media located at specific addressable locations on open hosting servers. Hosts issue a contract to each of its users which states that they are prohibited from using its service for distribution of copyrighted content. But users are typically anonymous (though their identities are almost always traceable), and the hosts can or will not take any action beyond responding to takedown notices addressed to specific files.

The issue is part of a larger issue related to the usage of the Internet to facilitate copyright circumvention, often called "piracy
Copyright infringement
Copyright infringement is the unauthorized or prohibited use of works under copyright, infringing the copyright holder's exclusive rights, such as the right to reproduce or perform the copyrighted work, or to make derivative works.- "Piracy" :...

". As overt static hosting to unauthorized content (ie. centralized networks) is often quickly and uncontroversially rebuffed, legal issues have in recent years tended to deal with the usage of dynamic web technologies (decentralized networks, trackerless bittorrents) to circumvent the ability of copyright owners to directly engage particular distributors and consumers. The issue of linking is simply an aspect within the larger issue of web interfaces; such that explicitly provide links to illegal content, and are organized, inventive, and dynamic in providing this facility. The expression of such information (links) is typically regarded as protected under free speech, even if this information is organized in accord with trademarked and copyrighted titles.

Background

The advent of anonymous and open hosting servers has made it difficult to hold the hosts accountable, as these typically have claimed little responsibility for hosting such content, though in the past there have been financial reparations made (YouTube). For owners, taking legal action against such hosts is often successful, but tedious; hosts all regard each legal action as applying to particular media files, and not to others. Taking action against link sites like TV Links is conceived of as the way for owners to get redress; consumers are rarely targeted for legal action by owners because such actions typically raise negative publicity for the owner. Taking legal action against the technologies behind unauthorized "file sharing" has proven successful for centralized networks (Napster), and untenable for decentralized networks (GNUtella, Bittorrent).

Pirate Bay litigation

On April 17, 2009, a Swedish court convicted four men operating the Pirate Bay Internet site of criminal copyright infringement. Pirate Bay was established in 2003 by the Swedish anti-copyright organization Piratbyrån to provide information needed to download film or music files from third parties, many of whom copied the files without permission. Pirate Bay does not store copies of the files on its own servers, but did provide peer-to-peer links to other servers on which infringing copies were stored. Apparently the theory of the prosecution was that the defendants, by their conduct, actively induced infringement. Under US copyright law, this would be a so-called Grokster theory of infringement liability.

The Swedish district court imposed damages of 30 million crowns ($3,600,000) and one-year prison sentences on the four defendants. “The defendants have furthered the crimes that the file sharers have committed,” said district court judge Tomas Norstöm. He added, "They have been helpful to such an extent that they have entered into the field of criminal liability." "We are of course going to appeal," defense lawyer Per Samuelsson said. The Pirate Bay has 25 million users and is considered one of the biggest file-sharing websites in the world. It is conceded that Pirate Bay does not itself make copies or store files, but the court did not consider that fact dispositive. "By providing a website with ... well-developed search functions, easy uploading and storage possibilities, and with a tracker linked to the website, the accused have incited the crimes that the filesharers have committed," the court said in a statement.

See also

  • Copyright aspects of hyperlinking and framing
    Copyright aspects of hyperlinking and framing
    In copyright law, the legal status of hyperlinking and that of framing concern how courts address two different but related web technologies...

  • HADOPI law
    HADOPI law
    The French HADOPI law or Creation and Internet law was introduced during 2009 as a means to control and regulate internet access and encourage compliance with copyright laws...

  • Music downloading
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