Reddit Copyright Complaints Jump 138% But Almost Half Get Rejected

As part of its now annual Transparency Report, Reddit has revealed that copyright complaints sent to the platform under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act jumped 138% in 2017. While the leap is significant, the numbers involved a still surprisingly low for a platform of its size. Nevertheless, the company still rejected more than 44% of all notices for not being valid.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

So-called ‘transparency reports’ are becoming increasingly popular with Internet-based platforms and their users. Among other things, they provide much-needed insight into how outsiders attempt to censor content published online and what actions are taken in response.

Google first started publishing its report in 2010, Twitter followed in 2012, and they’ve now been joined by a multitude of major companies including Microsoft, Facebook and Cloudflare.

As one of the world’s most recognized sites, Reddit joined the transparency party fairly late, publishing its first report in early 2015. While light on detail, it revealed that in the previous year the site received just 218 requests to remove content, 81% of which were DMCA-style copyright notices. A significant 62% of those copyright-related requests were rejected.

Over time, Reddit’s reporting has become a little more detailed. Last April it revealed that in 2016, the platform received ‘just’ 3,294 copyright removal requests for the entire year. However, what really caught the eye is how many notices were rejected. In just 610 instances, Reddit was required to remove content from the site, a rejection rate of 81%.

Having been a year since Reddit’s last report, the company has just published its latest edition, covering the period January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2017.

“Reddit publishes this transparency report every year as part of our ongoing commitment to keep you aware of the trends on the various requests regarding private Reddit user account information or removal of content posted to Reddit,” the company said in a statement.

“Reddit believes that maintaining this transparency is extremely important. We want you to be aware of this information, consider it carefully, and ask questions to keep us accountable.”

The detailed report covers a wide range of topics, including government requests for the preservation or production of user information (there were 310) and even an instruction to monitor one Reddit user’s activities in real time via a so-called ‘Trap and Trace’ order.

In copyright terms, there has been significant movement. In 2017, Reddit received 7,825 notifications of alleged copyright infringement under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, that’s up roughly 138% over the 3,294 notifications received in 2016.

For a platform of Reddit’s unquestionable size, these volumes are not big. While the massive percentage increase is notable, the site still receives less than 10 complaints each day. For comparison, Google receives millions every week.

But perhaps most telling is that despite receiving more than 7,800 DMCA-style takedown notices, these resulted in Reddit carrying out just 4,352 removals. This means that for whatever reasons (Reddit doesn’t specify), 3,473 requests were denied, a rejection rate of 44.38%. Google, on the other hand, removes around 90% of content reported.

DMCA notices can be declared invalid for a number of reasons, from incorrect formatting through to flat-out abuse. In many cases, copyright law is incorrectly applied and it’s not unknown for complainants to attempt a DMCA takedown to stifle speech or perceived competition.

Reddit says it tries to take all things into consideration before removing content.

“Reddit reviews each DMCA takedown notice carefully, and removes content where a valid report is received, as required by the law,” the company says.

“Reddit considers whether the reported content may fall under an exception listed in the DMCA, such as ‘fair use,’ and may ask for clarification that will assist in the review of the removal request.”

Considering the numbers of community-focused “subreddits” dedicated to piracy (not just general discussion, but actual links to content), the low numbers of copyright notices received by Reddit continues to baffle.

There are sections in existence right now offering many links to movies and TV shows hosted on various file-hosting sites. They’re the type of links that are targeted all the time whenever they appear in Google search but copyright owners don’t appear to notice or care about them on Reddit.

Finally, it would be nice if Reddit could provide more information in next year’s report, including detail on why so many requests are rejected. Perhaps regular submission of notices to the Lumen Database would be something Reddit would consider for the future.

Reddit’s Transparency Report for 2017 can be found here.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Pixel Player: Alle Details zu Googles erstem Android-TV-4K-Stick

Bald wird es wohl wieder ein Android-TV-Gerät von Google geben. Bei der US-Zulassungsbehörde FCC sind alle Details zu einem Android-TV-Stick mit 4K-Unterstützung aufgetaucht. Damit tritt Google in direkte Konkurrenz zu Amazons aktuellem Fire TV. (Andro…

Bald wird es wohl wieder ein Android-TV-Gerät von Google geben. Bei der US-Zulassungsbehörde FCC sind alle Details zu einem Android-TV-Stick mit 4K-Unterstützung aufgetaucht. Damit tritt Google in direkte Konkurrenz zu Amazons aktuellem Fire TV. (Android TV, Google)

Xperia XZ2 Compact im Test: Sonys kompaktes Top-Smartphone bleibt konkurrenzlos

Sony konzentriert sich beim Xperia XZ2 Compact erneut auf die alte Stärke der Serie und steckt ein technisch hervorragendes Smartphone in ein kompaktes Gehäuse. Heraus kommt ein kleines Gerät, das kaum Wünsche offenlässt und in dieser Größenordnung im …

Sony konzentriert sich beim Xperia XZ2 Compact erneut auf die alte Stärke der Serie und steckt ein technisch hervorragendes Smartphone in ein kompaktes Gehäuse. Heraus kommt ein kleines Gerät, das kaum Wünsche offenlässt und in dieser Größenordnung im Grunde ohne Konkurrenz ist. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (Sony, Smartphone)

T-Rex Trike: Elektroauto mit drei Rädern erhält Antrieb aus Elektromotorrad

Eine vollelektrische Version des Campagna T-Rex Trike soll einen Antriebsstrang von Zero Motorcycles erhalten. Das dreirädrige Gefährt ist eine Mischung aus Motorrad und Auto und bisher nur mit Verbrennungsmotor zu haben gewesen. (Elektroauto, Technolo…

Eine vollelektrische Version des Campagna T-Rex Trike soll einen Antriebsstrang von Zero Motorcycles erhalten. Das dreirädrige Gefährt ist eine Mischung aus Motorrad und Auto und bisher nur mit Verbrennungsmotor zu haben gewesen. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Elektroauto-Rennserie: Porsche und Audi offiziell für die Formel E zugelassen

Mehrere große Automobilhersteller starten in der kommenden Saison in der Formel-E-Elektro-Rennserie. Porsche und Audi sind nun ebenfalls von der Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) aufgenommen worden. (Formel E, Technologie)

Mehrere große Automobilhersteller starten in der kommenden Saison in der Formel-E-Elektro-Rennserie. Porsche und Audi sind nun ebenfalls von der Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) aufgenommen worden. (Formel E, Technologie)

Deutscher Computerspielpreis: Witch It ist das beste deutsche Spiel

Der Multiplayertitel Witch It ist der große Gewinner bei der Verleihung des Deutschen Computerspielpreises in München gewesen. Das Spiel hat sich sogar gegen internationale Großproduktionen durchgesetzt. (Deutscher Computerspielpreis, Steam)

Der Multiplayertitel Witch It ist der große Gewinner bei der Verleihung des Deutschen Computerspielpreises in München gewesen. Das Spiel hat sich sogar gegen internationale Großproduktionen durchgesetzt. (Deutscher Computerspielpreis, Steam)

Steam Spy announces it’s shutting down, blames Valve’s new privacy settings

Sales-estimate service, borne from an Ars data project, says goodbye to its best source.

(credit: Aurich Lawson)

In light of Internet and social-media privacy landing at the top of major news outlets this week, another major online service announced its own privacy-policy updates on Tuesday. The latest change comes from Steam, the Western world's largest online PC game seller. According to Steam's creators at Valve, an updated settings panel will soon let gamers more clearly decide how their use of the service is communicated to approved friends and the public at large.

Within hours of this announcement, one company confirmed the policy change's collateral damage. Steam Spy, the world's most comprehensive game ownership and play estimator available to the public, announced that it "won't be able to operate anymore" thanks to Valve's official policy change.

"Valve just made a change to their privacy settings, making games owned by Steam users hidden by default," the site's operators announced on its official Twitter account. "Steam Spy relied on this information being visible by default." In answering questions from fans, Steam Spy creator Sergey Galyonkin suggested that the site will only remain as an "archive" from here on out.

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Facebook CEO puts on suit and a smile to try to seduce, assuage senators

Sen. Blumenthal (D-CT): “Your business model is to maximize profit over privacy.”

Enlarge / Facebook co-founder, Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies before a combined Senate Judiciary and Commerce committee hearing in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill April 10, 2018 in Washington, DC. (credit: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was grilled before the Senate Commerce and Judiciary Committees in a Tuesday hearing that lasted hours.

Zuckerberg reiterated numerous times in both written and spoken testimony that, yes, the company made mistakes when dealing with Cambridge Analytica, the now-maligned British data analytics firm that worked with the Donald Trump presidential campaign. He also underscored the numerous new policies that Facebook has been rolling out in recent days, ranging from ad monitoring to more Burmese language support, among other changes.

Many senators used the opportunity to impress upon the executive that it may no longer be a completely fair trade for the company to happily absorb vast quantities of free information voluntarily shared on Facebook and for Facebook to make vast sums of money as a result.

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Surprise! Red Dead Redemption is getting a 4K patch on Xbox One X today

List of OG Xbox games that will work on Xbox One will more than double by end of April.

Enlarge / The 19 OG Xbox games coming to Xbox One by the end of April. (credit: Xbox)

While Microsoft has arguably fallen behind in some current-gen gaming console metrics, the company has taken a clear lead among the big-three systems' backwards-compatibility efforts. That's been evidenced in a regular drip-feed series of older 360 and OG Xbox games being brought forward to work on Xbox One systems, of which the PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch have no peer. Honestly, these Xbox One announcements come frequently enough to not merit the spotlight treatment.

But Tuesday's announcement, which was teased a full week earlier, brought the goods with a substantial list of games newly converted to work on Xbox One—and a few Xbox One X "upgrade" surprises, to boot.

The arguable biggest news of the day is that Red Dead Redemption's Xbox 360 version has now been patched to take advantage of Xbox One X hardware. That means, like other Xbox 360 games given the X treatment, RDR will now render at nine times its original 720p resolution. Should you have a 4K TV, an Xbox One X, and a copy of RDR, you'll be able to play the game at 3840x2160 pixel resolution once its patch launches sometime today.

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Yep, Russian trolls hit Reddit, too—on /r/funny and elsewhere

CEO: “We still have a lot of room to improve, and we intend to remain vigilant.”

Enlarge / Steve Huffman, cofounder and chief executive officer of Reddit Inc., listens during a Bloomberg Technology television interview in San Francisco in 2017. (credit: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

On Tuesday, Reddit released new data alongside its 2017 Transparency Report showing that it had identified 944 "suspicious accounts," a few of which "had a visible impact on the site."

Reddit is the latest among a slew of tech companies that have identified troll and/or bot-laden social media accounts likely connected to Russia's Internet Research Agency, which seemingly attempted to manipulate the American voting public and affect the outcome of the 2016 presidential election.

The site provided a full list of all of those accounts to Congress (and now the public), saying that the list would stay "visible for now," but it would be removed eventually.

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