YouTube Begins Defense, Seeks Depositions 106
eldavojohn writes "YouTube has begun their defense against Viacom by first calling on 30 depositions from people like Jon Stewart & Stephen Colbert. While the article mentions that YouTube has not revealed what they hope to gain in these depositions, I think Jon Stewart's opinions will weigh in favor of YouTube. Comedy Central's parent company, Viacom, objects to YouTube's hosting of their content. Comedy Central hosts many Daily Show & Colbert Report clips on its own site, bringing in its own ad revenue."
It's a Tactic (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:It's a Tactic (Score:5, Insightful)
Both the Daily Show and the Report have used youtube in many ways to poke fun at it and use it for their show. Since Stewart and Colbert both have much to do with their shows content creation, it fits that they might be deposed.
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Re:It's a Tactic (Score:5, Interesting)
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That doesn't follow. ALL content is copyrighted these days. If Comedy Central didn't clear the rights with whomever owns them, they are in violation. IANAL, but I'm sure Google will be able to use that to some advantage.
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Re:It's a Tactic (Score:5, Informative)
Google needs to make the case that brief exposure to copyright violation (while Viacom staff hunts down the content and issues formal complaints to You Tube) has not had a negative impact on the programs that have been infringed. They also need to show that they've been prompt in responding to concerns about copyright violations on their site.
If they can make those two points, they'll have a start to a workable case. The real question is how much effort Google can realistically be asked to put in to make sure that their users don't upload copyrighted material. The answer to that question will have far-reaching impacts on every site (mine included) that allow users to contribute their own content whether text, audio, video or something else.
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Is real-world impact actually a consideration in copyright cases
Sort of.
Google is contending, I believe, that they do what they can do police their users by allowing them to police themselves, and by responding to copyright holders who have complaints. Showing that doing so has limited any financial loss to the copyright holder could make the point that they're doing a sufficient job, even if, at any given time, you can find something that violates copyrights on You Tube.
This would not work for someone who was actively violating copyright (say, distributing a song on y
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I suppose they could renegotiate their contract, or create their own content, and then allow it to be put up on yout
Is there any doubt? (Score:4, Funny)
Probably they're hoping that Colbert will raise his eyebrows and bug his eyes out during his deposition. Then they can put the footage on YouTube and rake in viewership from all the Colbert fans: "Look, while he said that he raised his eyebrows and bugged his eyes out! It's funny because he raised his eyebrows and bugged his eyes out!"
From the (Wrong) Horse's Mouth (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:From the (Wrong) Horse's Mouth (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:From the (Wrong) Horse's Mouth (Score:5, Interesting)
I know for me, watching Lazy Sunday on YouTube brought me back to checking out SNL again for the first time in several years...maybe that's just me though.
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What if... (Score:2, Interesting)
1) Every day, broadcast a live stream of the show as it's recorded. If subscriptions are broken up into tiers, this wou
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They may also be using them as "expert witnesses" who can comment upon the economic impact of the infringements. If these witness
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What Google is doing now is getting these "employees" on their side so that they can use them against Viacom later on. Will it help? I don't know but look at the Southpark situation right now. Tre
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That's not necessarily correct, nor is it entirely the point. First, the contract details aren't known about either show, but the Colbert Report was created by Stewart's production company and the degree of their ownership may well be significant.
The point of them testifying, though, is to undercut
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They agreed to accept a huge sum of money to produce that content for viacom. If they wanted to give that content away for free then they should not have entered into that agreem
Have anyone tried to use Comedy Central's video? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not worth it. Slow, laggy performance and you have to wade through pages of premercials before you get to the crappy player. I've tried it a few times and it's such a lousy experience I don't bother anymore.
They should simply strike a deal with YouTube, take a percentage of ad revenue from pages with Comedy Central clips on them - and let the pros handle the video.
But is Google in the wrong? I don't think so... (Score:1)
Re:Have anyone tried to use Comedy Central's video (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing is, people are lazy. People will watch advertisements. Youtube doesn't usually have entire episodes, the episodes vary in quality, and it can sometimes take a good amount of time to actually find. If they just put the content where people want it (remember that whole economics thing, with supply and demand?), then why not provide it? You can even make money on it. Really.
Not to mention of course, Youtube helps gain popularity for the show. Something called advertisements. Something most companies have to spend a lot of money on.
Re:Have anyone tried to use Comedy Central's video (Score:2)
Which Comedy Central player are you using? I use this one [comedycentral.com] + AdBlock, and I don't see any ads. It uses Windows Media Player (insert your own opinion on whether that's a "crappy player" here).
Re:Have anyone tried to use Comedy Central's video (Score:2)
My theory is that the system can more quickly handle an unwanted mouse
Doesn't even work (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Have anyone tried to use Comedy Central's video (Score:2, Informative)
Occasionally, there's an annoying ad, but I just mute it for the 15 or 30 seconds that it plays, then turn the volume back on.
For me, it's a lot easier than having to search through a bunch of Y
Why don't........ (Score:2, Interesting)
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Re:Why don't........ (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, some users will edit-out the commercials. Others will skip past them. It doesn't matter. A very large number of users won't bother skipping the commercials (if they are sufficiently short and not too frequent). And, if you make the shows very easy to find and download, users won't bother looking on P2P sites for the equivalent commercial-free version.
The key here is to make the experience for the consumer sufficiently convenient that they no longer feel the need to overcome "the system." When commercials are annoying, people learn to circumvent them (e.g. adblock on webpages, record and fast-forward for video). When commercials are "good" (sufficiently short, infrequent, and maybe even entertaining), people will watch them.
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Do I dutifully watch the ad every time? No. However I see the ads enough for them to
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As far as I'm concerned no ad will ever be considered good and I will always do what I can to avoid them, not matter how infrequent, relevant or "entertaining" they are.
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If you can download them at will from their site at good speed who needs to edit anything?
Personally though, flashplayers like youtube or adultswim.com are the way to go. ABC.com managed to fuck this up by checking for the browser ID and OS. why I have no idea since flash runs on just about every browser and OS.
Colbert's Deposition (Score:2, Funny)
Jugde: Overruled! Let the witness answer the question.
Colbert: Nation, there's no problem about people adoring me on youtube. That's only natural.
I've always wondered how Stephen Colbert would behave in real life.
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He also hosted an episode of The Daily Show a few years back, and you can see the real Stephen interviewing David Cross.
I swear... (Score:5, Funny)
Because they're entertaining (Score:3, Funny)
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Objection: relevance? (Score:4, Insightful)
My lawyer has suggested - quiet brilliantly - that I subpoena Roger. Roger is the guy who works the register at the location where I've been hamburgling. He sometimes sweeps the floor. His IQ is around 75 and he has worked there for over ten years. He really knows the restaurant business because of all of that experience.
Roger agrees with me that the hamburgers cost too much and are of too low quality to pay for. He also thinks that having me come into the store in my hamburglar outfit [outlet4toys.com] excites the customers by giving them a little drama in their supersizeme lifestyles - so they are more likely to return and eat more. A testament to my success is that since I have been working that golden arches, on-site cardiac arrests and ambulence visits from all the McD customers have triped. Toilets overflowing incident reports have quadroupled.
We think we can get Roger to testify on my behalf that my hamburgling is actually helpful to McDonalds and that I'm not stealing anything of much value anyway.
Robble Robble.
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The "Objection: relevance" should apply to your post. Free advertising is in no way comparable to theft, not to mention that what you actually expounded on would really BE beneficial to McDonald's. If someone was "stealing" my hamburgers and I could sell 4x as many, I'd make sure that it kept happening. Keep trying, though. I'm sure your superior IQ (as compared to Roger's) of 76 and inability to spell "hamburgler" will garner yo
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My point was that having a low-level employee of a company that is suing you testify in an attempt to undercut the company's case is... retarded.
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And it doesn't matter if the employees liked the 'advertisent.' It's wholly irrelevant.
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Speaking of which manslaughter, 1st degree murder, 2nd degree murder, assault, assault and battery, breaking and entering, tresspassing, copyright infringement, libel, slander, criminal negligence, piracy on the high seas, treason, and sedition are all different crimes.
Personally... I'm still confused what the difference between libel and slander, but I believe in the court of law there is always a big difference.
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Jesus man thats the most confusing analogy ive EVER read...
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Great idea (Score:5, Funny)
"OK guys, I've got a great idea! There's this company out there on the interwebs called youtube, and they're owned by Google, and they get tens of millions of visitors every day. Now they're willing to host our videos - get this - for free!
So here's my idea: let's put our videos on our own website instead! That way, we can pay for all our own web design, site maintenance and bandwidth, we can make sure that the interests of the advertisers who finance us go unserved thanks to our site getting just a tiny fraction of the traffic youtube gets, AND we can piss the whole world off in the process! How can we lose!?
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if(size of settlement(infringment violations * max penalty) - cost of(web design + site maintenance + bandwidth + bad press)) > cash google has) {
sue google;
} else {
work with google;
}
Since their costs are low compared to the potential payoff, the risk is worth the reward. FYI this is the exact same logic was applied by the record labels when they sued MP3.com.
Maybe (Score:2, Insightful)
Hopefully though, they'll still try to use safe harbor laws in their defense. I think they have a much stronger case there.
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What happens if I upload a picture that someone else copyrighted to Flickr? Did Flickr commit copyright infringement? NO! I DID!
What
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simply (Score:1)
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You know, adapt or die.
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the they can't stop people.. is just incentive
what my argument was really about... is that they should realize that it could actually be PROFITABLE for them to let stuff be distributed like this...
infact THEY should get a you tube account and put up the episodes them self (with a watermark and a lower res quality perhaps)...
I can promise there are people who had never heard of a show until they happened to catch a clip on you tube and now watch new episodes of the show regularl
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Opinions change (Score:4, Insightful)
I wouldn't count on that. I bet Mr. Stewart will be thoroughly "briefed" by Viacom Corporate Counsel prior to the deposition about what's an appropriate response in behalf of Mr. Stewart's employer.
Re:Opinions change (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Opinions change (Score:4, Insightful)
Given how popular his show is, I would be surprised if there wasn't a bidding war for him once his contract is up.
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There is a contract that doesn't expire until next year.
Man, I wish I was an actual law-dude, instead of just an armchair one, but -
It seems to be that if Viacom dismissed him for obeying the law and telling the truth during a deposition they would have a hard time binding him to said contract. I'm certain it has all the usual 'employer can do whatever it wants' language, but my understanding of employment contracts is that they only apply to the actual transaction of the employment. You can't interfere with due process of law just because both parties signed
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I'm sure there will be some discussions like this, and they'll try and explain to him why YouTube is bad for his show. But that being said, once he's under oath, I think he'll give honest opinions.
Jon Stewart's Daily Show (as opposed to Craig Kilbourne's) is one of the pillar
Stephen Colbert? (Score:3, Funny)
A few ideas for approaching this mess.... (Score:1)
Here are some different approaches I have to this issue, a
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It is also my belief that it is unreasonable to place the burden upon copyright holders to monitor and notify GooTube for every single infringing video they may have.[/quote]
Thing is, that's the law as it stands right now. A content provider has
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Colbert (Score:1)
Crazy (Score:2)
Link to depositions? (Score:1)