WebProNews

Tag: Richard O’Dwyer

  • Should Linking To Copyrighted Material Be Illegal?

    Despite how you feel on the matter, online piracy is illegal. Various courts throughout the country have said again and again that uploading pirated works on the Internet for others to download is illegal. The copyright lobby hasn’t really done much about it in recent years after finding out that suing everybody wasn’t good for their image. There is, however, a new war that the copyright lobby is waging that’s far more murky in its legality.

    The courts are now having to deal with the issue of linking to content that may be illegal. Copyright law has generally been applied to those who host the content themselves. Now the law is being applied to sites that host zero content, but rather link to content on other Web sites. That’s where the case of Anton Vickerman comes in.

    Should linking to copyrighted material be illegal? Where do we draw the line in copyright law? Let us know in the comments.

    It was reported Monday that Vickerman was convicted on two counts of conspiracy to defraud. He now stands to serve four years in prison for running surfthechannel.com. The Web site hosted links to content off site – both legal and illegal. He was said to have made £250,000 through advertisements on the site in 2008.

    The interesting part is that Vickerman could not be charged for copyright violation. The prosecution had to go with charges of conspiracy to facilitate copyright infringement. Facilitating copyright infringement is a hard sell in most courts because most people charged with the crime usually aren’t aware that the content they’re linking to illegal.

    Unfortunately for Vickerman, he sold advertisements on his Web site. The mere fact that he made money by linking to this illegal content is what doomed him in the first place. The prosecution stated that Vickerman’s Web site “was created specifically to make money from criminal activity.” The defense obviously argued that this was not the case, but it’s hard to argue with the £250,000 made over the course of a year. That’s obviously more than what running a link aggregator would cost.

    It causes one to think if the result would have been the same if Vicerkman had made no money off of the site. There are plenty of other sites out there that only link to illegal content, but make no money from it. They pay for the servers out of their own pocket or with donations from users. It seems to be a legal gray area that only becomes criminal activity once the site owner starts to make money off of it.

    Vickerman isn’t the only UK resident who is facing charges over linking to illegal content, nor is he the most well known. We’ve covered the extradition case of Richard O’Dwyer extensively over the past year and it’s far messier than Vickerman’s case ever was.

    For those who need a refresher, O’Dwyer is a 23-year-old from the U.K. who is going to be extradited to the U.S. for copyright infringement. What was his crime? He linked to online streaming videos of U.S. television shows and movies. The kind of shows that citizens in the U.K. can’t easily gain access to until months after their original airing in the U.S.

    Just like Vickerman, however, O’Dwyer is being charged because he made money off of his Web site – TVshack.net. The site was reported to have had about 300,000 users per month and he made about £147,000 in revenue over three years from the site. For his crimes, O’Dwyer would be extradited to the U.S. where he could face up to 10 years in prison.

    Of course, this brings us to the difference between O’Dwyer and Vickerman. Why can one be tried in the U.K. while the other has to be tried in the U.S.? Many groups and activists don’t see a difference and are fighting to have O’Dwyer tried in his native country. Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales started a petition in June that called for the halting of O’Dwyer’s extradition. He even went so far to say that O’Dwyer is the “human face of the battle between the content industry and the interests of the general public.”

    O’Dwyer’s mother even jumped into the fray with a passionate plea for her son to remain in the U.K. She said that her son’s extradition is not about copyright, but rather the U.S. wanting to flex its control over the Internet. She said that her son’s case is about “America trying to control and police the Internet.” She also said that it’s “wrong that America should lay laws down on the Internet for other countries.”

    Both Wales and O’Dwyer’s mother bring up good points that lead to a much larger question. Why does the copyright industry care so much about linking to content? Why would they go out of their way to prosecute some guys that ran a Web site that never hosted any of this content, but rather linked to it. Most of the content on these sites were submitted by users. The DMCA has a safe harbor provision that protects Web sites from the actions of its users. Of course, a Web site can only qualify for safe harbor if they have no knowledge about the infringing content. It’s hard to say if Vickerman or O’Dwyer knew the content they were hosting was illegal.

    Should O’Dwyer be extradited to the U.S. for merely linking to copyrighted material? Should either men receive DMCA protections? Let us know in the comments.

    All of this is meant to lead up to the biggest problem at hand – Google. There are other search engines, but Google has been targeted the most for their actions. The copyright lobby has been constantly on Google’s back for linking to copyrighted content. They even claim that Google prioritizes infringing links over legitimate links in search results for those searching for something as innocuous as “Justin Bieber MP3.”

    Back in January, when the debate over SOPA was in full swing, media mogul Rupert Murdoch said that Google was a “piracy leader.” He said that Google streams movies, which I assume he means YouTube, and sells adverts around them. That kind of response to Google is typical hence why Google and other search engines were given a code of conduct by the U.K.’s Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

    The code of conduct says that Google and other search engines should “assign lower rankings to sites that repeatedly make available unlicensed content in breach of copyright.” It also calls upon Google to “stop indexing Web sites that are subject to court orders.” In short, it’s all about the copyright industry wanting Google to stop linking to illegal content. They might have gotten their wish last week.

    The Internet collectively freaked out when Google announced that they were adding DMCA takedown notices to their search algorithm. Google’s SVP of Engineering, Amit Singhal, said that “sites with high numbers of removal notices may appear lower in our results.” Many people immediately began to assume that this was just Google bowing to copyright lobby pressure and why wouldn’t they? While it’s highly unlikely that Google would be convicted for copyright violations, the DMCA definitely protects them, it gives them a bargaining chip in Washington and Hollywood.

    The mere fact that Google did this in the first place, however, is a major cause for concern. There are plenty of legitimate sites that receive bogus takedown notices all the time. Most of these sites thrive off of user created goods and media. Would Google knock them down in search results because of some overzealous copyright warrior?

    Our own Chris Crum was quick to point out that Google’s new ranking signal was only one out of over 200. Sites that were already doing well are still going to keep doing well. Your favorite YouTube videos and Etsy stores are still going to stay near the top of search if Google has anything to say about. What is worrisome is that Google even had to address in the first place.

    With Google backing the idea that linking to illegal content is indeed illegal, it only legitimatizes the current trend of going after those that only host links. Will Google’s move make the copyright lobby more aggressive in going after those who run link aggregate sites? Will it only go after those who link to television shows and movies? What about news aggregate sites that link to content from the overly protective AP?

    It’s still too early to tell, but a war on links may be coming. The Internet was built on links, but that may not be the case for much longer if laws continue to punish the mere act of linking.

    Do you think links are in danger? Would the copyright lobby try to destabilize one of the key tenets of the Internet? Let us know in the comments.

  • Jimmy Wales Got a Little Testy with Reporters About the O’Dwyer Case

    In spite of what appeared to be a decision from the United Kingdom’s Home Office to continue with the extradition of accused copyright-infringer Richard O’Dwyer to the United States, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales maintains that reports of the Home Office’s decision are false.

    On Tuesday, V3 published a comment from U.K. Home Secretary Theresa May’s office saying that it would not halt the extradition of O’Dwyer, who is being sought to stand trial in the United States in spite of not committing any crime there and not having clearly broken any law in the United Kingdom. However, following the report, Wales took to Twitter to dismiss the statements from the UK Home Office and insisted that all accounts affirming the Home Office’s decision were incorrect.

    In fact, he just about goes all out Braveheart on some of the people repeating that the U.K. Home Office won’t halt the extradition.

     

     
     
     

     
     

    Aside from correcting multiple journalists for reporting a statement that was provided to V3 about the O’Dwyer extradition and confidently claiming that statement is untrue, Wales says that his efforts to stop the extradition are far from over.

     

    I hope that Wales’ insistence that the UK Home Office wouldn’t risk a public relations nightmare by not meeting with him has some merit. He’s obviously got some clout and given he has the ears of notables like Jimmy Carter and Richard Branson, hopefully he’ll be able to rally some high-profile names to add to the legion of internet supporters that have gathered around O’Dwyer’s cause.

    Then again, maybe the UK Home Office cares not for public opinion over sustaining cozy relations with the U.S. government.

    At any rate, godspeed, Mr. Wales.

  • Despite Protests, UK Will Feed Richard O’Dwyer to US Officials Anyways

    In a paradigm switch of imperialism, the United Kingdom is apparently to now be considered the Far Eastern United States given the fate of TVShack webmaster Richard O’Dwyer. Despite having not committed any crime on U.S. soil and hosting no servers in the U.S., and in defiance of widespread support to block O’Dwyer’s extradition, V3 has confirmed with the office of U.K. Home Secretary Theresa May that she will not block his extradition to the U.S. to face charges of copyright infringement.

    If convicted, O’Dwyer faces a maximum sentence of ten years in prison.

    Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales has rallied internet support around O’Dwyer’s plight by penning a petition to Secretary May that has so far gained over 212,000 co-signers in hopes of convincing her to halt O’Dwyer’s extradition. In the petition letter, Wales implores May to stop the extradition and try O’Dwyer in a U.K. court since that is where the alleged crime was committed, as opposed to spiriting him away to the U.S. to stand trial for charges that didn’t occur there.

    According to V3, May’s office acknowledged the existence of Wales’ petition but said that the extradition would not be deterred.

    “Richard O’Dwyer is wanted in the US for offences related to copyright infringement,” a Home Office spokesman told V3.

    “The UK courts found there were no statutory bars to his surrender under the Extradition Act 2003 and on 9 March the Home Secretary, having carefully considered all relevant matters, signed an order for his extradition to the US.”

    O’Dwyer has filed an appeal for which a hearing will be held later this year.

    The charges against O’Dwyer were already spurious given his website didn’t actually host any content, but rather just offered links that forwarded visitors to other websites hosting pirated content. YouTube hardly does worse and it actually does host the content, yet it has remained protected under the “safe harbor” provision defined by the DMCA. Beside that point, there is no reason why O’Dwyer should be plucked out of his home country to face copyright charges in a country that he’s never lived in and has committed no crime in. It’s ludicrous. More, it’s not even clear if link-sharing the way that O’Dwyer was doing with TVShack is even a crime in the UK.

    And yet, because what he did in his home country is considered a crime in another country, he is being extradited to the United States of the MPAA/RIAA.

    [Via V3.]

  • Pressure Mounts on UK to Halt Richard O’Dwyer’s Extradition to US

    Although the United Kingdom has yet to withdraw plans to extradite Richard O’Dwyer to the United States in order to face charges related to copyright infringement, a separate case that isn’t entirely dissimilar to O’Dwyer’s situation may have increased pressure on the British government to take action to prevent his extradition.

    Anton Vickerman, who ran the site surfthechannel.com, has been convicted of conspiracy to defraud by a U.K. court and will face sentencing next month. Vickerman’s site was similar to O’Dwyer’s, TVShack.net, in that it served as a space to share links to other sites hosting pirated movies and television shows; neither site actually hosted any content. Although Vickerman is another example of the entertainment industry’s vigorous witch hunt of so-called copyright violators, the fact that he was tried in the U.K. has amplified the call from O’Dwyer’s supporters for the government to not extradite him to the United States and, instead, try him in a U.K. court.

    Earlier this week, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales created a change.org petition to be sent to United Kingdom Home Secretary Theresa May in hopes of persuading her to stop the extradition. As of today, less than five days since the petition was created, Wales has been joined by nearly 140,000 supporters on his letter to May (it just passed the 100,00 mark earlier today). The original goal for the petition was 35,000 signatures, which it achieved quickly. Now the goal has been raised to 150,000 signatures, which doesn’t really look like it’s going to be too hard for Wales to acquire.

    In the meantime, no intervention has been made by the British government to keep O’Dwyer on British soil so as to face the charges in his country.

    [Via The Guardian.]

  • Jimmy Wales Pens Petition to Halt Richard O’Dwyer’s Absurd Extradition to U.S.

    Earlier this year, Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales added instrumental support in the internet’s successful fight against the U.S. government-backed Twin Bills of Terrible known as SOPA and PIPA. For his second act, Wales is hoping he can once again use the internet to galvanize supporters in both the public and the government to take up the cause of U.K. student Richard O’Dwyer’s impending extradition to the United States.

    Richard O’Dwyer, 24, if you recall, was arrested in November 2010 in London on charges that his website, TVShack.net, was violating copyright law because it hosted links to pirated TV shows and movies – just links, mind you, and not the actual content. Although O’Dwyer has never lived in the United States and none of his servers were hosted in the United States, a U.K. judge nonetheless ruled that O’Dwyer should be extradited to the United States to stand trial. The charges against O’Dwyer carry a (jaw-dropping) maximum of ten-year sentence.

    Anonymous has already targeted the website of the U.K Home Office as a response to (among other reasons) O’Dwyer’s impending extradition to the U.S. More personally, O’Dwyer’s own mother has spoken out against the United State’s imminent domain-like seizure or her son and the site he ran, calling on activists to save the internet from the U.S.

    Wales met with O’Dwyer earlier this month and subsequently created a petition on change.org yesterday to further increase awareness of O’Dwyer’s extradition. Wales’ petition was released concurrently with an opinion piece in the Guardian. In both pieces, Wales makes an impassioned plea for support from the internet as well as reason from the government bodies that are currently threatening O’Dwyer’s quality of life.

    The internet as a whole must not tolerate censorship in response to mere allegations of copyright infringement. As citizens we must stand up for our rights online.

    When operating his site, Richard O’Dwyer always did his best to play by the rules: on the few occasions he received requests to remove content from copyright holders, he complied. His site hosted links, not copyrighted content, and these were submitted by users.

    Copyright is an important institution, serving a beneficial moral and economic purpose. But that does not mean that copyright can or should be unlimited. It does not mean that we should abandon time-honoured moral and legal principles to allow endless encroachments on our civil liberties in the interests of the moguls of Hollywood.

    Richard O’Dwyer is the human face of the battle between the content industry and the interests of the general public. Earlier this year, in the fight against the anti-copyright bills SOPA and PIPA, the public won its first big victory. This could be our second.

    Wales is right to stand up for O’Dwyer but it’s a shame that additional persuasive ambassadors of the internet have not come forward to support O’Dwyer’s case. Wales accurately compares O’Dwyer’s site to Google in that it merely provides a space for people to post links to videos that are hosted somewhere else on the internet. Google has argued a similar defense of its online video service, YouTube, in that it cannot be responsible for what the users of the service upload (although YouTube is actually hosting real content as opposed to mere links that forward users to other sites). Google has even proffered its two cents in similar piracy cases, such as it did earlier this year by submitting an amicus brief in the Motion Picture Association of America’s lawsuit against Hotfile, a file-sharing site.

    If Google believes that it is lawfully protected by the “safe-harbor” provision provided by the Digital Millenium Copyright Act and that Hotfile is likewise protected, there’s no reason why O’Dwyer shouldn’t be protected by the same provision (nor is there any reason why Google couldn’t make another interjection in O’Dwyer’s case the way it did with the Hotfile case).

    In the meantime, hats of to Jimmy Wales for helping broaden the attention on Richard O’Dwyer’s nigh-Kafkaesque legal nightmare.

    As of writing this, Wales’ petition to the UK Home Secretary has collected 28,353 signatures (it actually increased nearly 2,000 in the time it took me to write this article) of the 35,000-signature goal.

  • Richard O’Dwyer’s Mom Speaks Out Against US Control of the Internet

    In case you forgot, the story of Richard O’Dwyer fits right into the anti-SOPA/PIPA mood that permeates across the Internet, save for the United States government, of course. O’Dwyer ran a site called TVShack.net which posted links to downloadable copyrighted material, including, as the name suggests, television shows.

    For his actions, O’Dwyer was arrested by British police and was ordered to be extradited to the United States where he’ll face punishment for his site’s existence, even though, as his lawyer pointed out, O’Dwyer did not store the copyrighted content on any of his hard drives. Essentially, the Pirate Bay/we’re just like Google defense was used, which clearly fell on deaf ears. When O’Dwyer’s mother, Julia, learned of the sentence, she called the extradition treaty between the US and the UK “rotten.”

    But the matriarch didn’t stop there. In an interview with the World Socialist Web Site, Julia unloaded on the decision against her son with both barrels, and one of her primary targets was the U.S. government. Any emphasis added is ours:

    WSWS: There is a wider political issue in Richard’s case—and that is the attempts of the US government to clamp down on the freedom of the Internet and bring in new laws like SOPA, PIPA.

    Julia: I don’t know the detail of these laws, but I can see that it’s about America trying to control and police the Internet. Well, it doesn’t belong to them, does it? It’s wrong that America should lay laws down on the Internet for other countries. I don’t think America should rule the world.

    It’s like the case of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. They’re trying to get him, aren’t they? Because he exposed all their corruption and the evil things they were doing. Not just America, different governments. You know, you vote these people into power, and then you don’t really know what they’re getting up to until someone like Assange comes along and tells us their dirty little secrets. I don’t like these oppressive government regimes trying to take over the world, trying to take over the Internet.

    Would a “here, here” be overplaying my hand?

    Julia also points out that the extradition treaty between the two countries may have been improperly applied to her son:

    WSWS: Richard has never broken any law in this country? [the UK]

    Julia: We have been led to understand that it’s not a crime in this country. To be extradited to America, the offence has to be a crime in both countries. When they ask for your extradition, they say, “What’s the equivalent charge in the UK?” So they’ll just write copyright infringement.

    We have to prove what he did is not a crime in this country. The problem is the judges in the extradition court—they are not interested. Consequently, we lost that first fight at court. Richard’s barrister made the legal arguments in November, and the judge said, “You’ve got a good strong argument.” So did the prosecutor for the Americans. Then two hearings later, the judge tossed all that out of the window.

    Is this how the United States loses its postion as a world power? When the rest of the world revolts against US-led regulations that gut the Internet while making citizens of other countries criminals in the United States?

    If so, expect Julia O’Dwyer to be up in front.