Domain Registrar Can Only be Held Liable for Pirate Sites As a Last Resort

The highest court in Germany has clarified that domain name registrars should only be held liable for pirate sites if all other options fail. The order is part of a drawn-out battle between Universal Music and domain registrar Key-Systems. Universal Music now has to show that taking direct legal action against the defunct torrent site H33t.com or its hosting company was futile.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

In 2013, H33T.com, one of the Internet’s most-visited torrent sites at the time, disappeared from the web.

The downtime was initially shrouded in mystery but it later became clear that the site was at the center of a copyright infringement action.

‘Blurred Lines’ Takedown

In order to stop the distribution of a copy of Robin Thicke’s album Blurred Lines, Universal Music had obtained an injunction against Key-Systems, a German-based registrar where the H33t.com domain name was registered.

Key-Systems wasn’t happy with the ruling and the precedent it set but had no other option than to comply. However, the company did appeal the verdict and seven years later both sides are still fighting in court.

In 2018 the domain registrar suffered another setback. On appeal, the Higher Regional Court of Saarbrücken ruled the injunction was proper and that even a single link can require the company to take down a domain. Unsatisfied with this decision, Key-System went to Germany’s highest court whose verdict was just made public.

Domain Registrar Only Liable as Last Resort

The order of the Federal Court of Justice can be seen as a victory for the registrar. While the court stressed that domain registrars can be held secondarily liable for pirate sites, this should only be used as a last resort.

“Unlike the hosting provider who may save infringing data, the registrar only ensures the connection of an internet domain,” the court writes, stressing that domain registrars are neutral service providers.

The court further noted that the rights of Universal Music should be carefully weighed against those of the domain registrar. Generally speaking, registrars have no obligation to monitor or police the activities of their customers.

Weighing Rights

“When weighing up the fundamental rights involved, there is a risk that this results in a disproportionate burden on the registrar,” the court writes, adding that registrar liability “is the last resort if copyright protection cannot be effectively ensured in any other way.”

In addition, the rights of the public at large shouldn’t be ignored either. This means that overblocking should be prevented and copyright holders must show that a website is predominantly offering illegal content.

“Contrary to the opinion of the court of appeal, the fact that internet users are affected by the fundamental right to freedom of information cannot be ignored,” the court notes. This means that one pirated link is not sufficient to take an entire site offline.

Domain Registrar Isn’t Liable Yet

Universal Music already made it clear during the appeal that H33T.com was largely offering copyright-infringing material. However, the music company did not show that it tried to go after the operator or its hosting provider directly.

Without proof that Universal has taken legal action against the operator or the hosting company, Key-Systems can’t be held liable. The Federal Court of Justice, therefore, decided to refer the matter back to the lower court to properly review this angle.

This is positive news for the domain registrar, for now, but the legal battle will continue. The Federal Court of Justice also left the door open for a further review at the European Court of Justice, should that be needed.

A copy of the verdict, spotted by Tarnkappe, is available here (in German)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

The NIH’s top vaccine maker wants Warp Speed to be the new normal

John Mascola thinks COVID-19 proves we have to prep for the next virus, too.

The NIH’s top vaccine maker wants Warp Speed to be the new normal

Enlarge (credit: Krisana Antharith | Getty Images)

If the first vaccines against COVID-19 really do start coming online in a couple of weeks, that’ll be a blazingly fast scientific achievement—from new virus to new vaccine in just about 12 months, faster than ever before, and using a new vaccine technology, too. Amazing! And also only sort of true, because the path of the two vaccines likeliest to become available first, one from the pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and BioNTech and one from Moderna, began long before people started getting sick in Wuhan in December 2019.

Like all scientific discoveries, that path has many trailheads. One of them is the lab of John Mascola, director of the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. He didn’t come up with the idea of using genetic material to make vaccines, but he and collaborators around the US spent years trying to direct those efforts against coronaviruses, the family that includes SARS-CoV-2, the cause of COVID-19. Most vaccines against the disease clue the immune system into seeing a specific protein on the surface of the virus; it was Mascola’s VRC that brought the mRNA for that “spike protein” to Moderna.

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Shadow Moon tries to escape his demigod destiny in American Gods S3 trailer

We have hopes for a less rocky S3 with new showrunner and several new cast members

Shadow Moon (Ricky Whittle) is hiding from the New Gods in Lakeside, Michigan in American Gods season 3 trailer.

Shadow Moon flees to a small town in Wisconsin to escape the ongoing war between the Old Gods and the New Gods in the full trailer for the upcoming third season of American Gods. The visually striking (if narratively uneven) Starz series is adapted from the novel of the same name by Neil Gaiman.

(Some spoilers for first two seasons below.)

In season one, recently released convict Shadow Moon (Ricky Whittle) falls in with the mysterious Mr. Wednesday (Ian McShane) as his bodyguard after losing his wife, Laura (Emily Browning). But Mr. Wednesday is not who he seems. He's actually the ancient Norse god Odin, seeking to rally all the remaining Old Gods, who are slowly dying off from people's lack of belief. Their mission: beat back the encroaching influence of all the New Gods so they can survive. The New Gods are led by Mr. World (usually played by Crispin Glover, although he has many incarnations), i.e., globalization, and include Technical Boy (Bruce Langley)—reincarnated as Quantum Boy in S2—and Media (Gillian Anderson), reimagined as New Media (Kahyun Kim) in S2 when Anderson left the series.

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Lilbits: GMK’s 2.4 inch mini PC is now available, Android picks up new features, and Raspberry Pi OS gains performance enhancements

The GMK NucBox mini PC that I reviewed this summer is now available for purchase from GMK or Amazon, no crowdfunding campaign required. The unit I tested in August was a pre-release model and offered decent performance for a Windows PC in a 2.4″…

The GMK NucBox mini PC that I reviewed this summer is now available for purchase from GMK or Amazon, no crowdfunding campaign required. The unit I tested in August was a pre-release model and offered decent performance for a Windows PC in a 2.4″ x 2.4 ” x 1.7″ case. But I wasn’t able to […]

The post Lilbits: GMK’s 2.4 inch mini PC is now available, Android picks up new features, and Raspberry Pi OS gains performance enhancements appeared first on Liliputing.