03.07.2008, 22:48
Jupp, ihr habt richtig gehört. Nachdem bereits seit unzähligen Jahren Google und YouTube vor Gericht stehen, weil Viacom der Meinung ist, dass ihnen die Daten der User zustehen, hat Google es (bislang!) geschafft, seine Geheimhaltung über den Datentraffic zu gewährlisten. Nicht jedoch YouTube. Viacom hat nun vor Gericht durchgesetzt, dass zu jedem Video das auf den YT-Servern liegt, sie das Recht auf Einblick in die Nicknames und die IPs der Personen, die sich diese zu Gemüte führen, haben. Aus die Zeit der Illusion von YouTube-Privatsphäre...
Zitat:http://gizmodo.com/5021838/youtube-force...eo-watched
YouTube Forced to Reveal Username and IP Address of Every Video Watched
Remember Viacom suing YouTube and Google for one BILLION dollars eons ago? That's still going on! And while a judge ruled yesterday that while Google doesn't have to reveal its secret search sauce to the multimedia giantface, he did grant Viacom's request for YouTube to turn over records of "every video watch by YouTube users," and that includes their username and IP address. Yeah that's right, Viacom will know every time you watch "Pork n Beans" or need to refuel your day with Powerthirst. (Or watch Viacom's The Daily Show, you bastard.) And like that, the illusion of YouTube privacy was gone.
Zitat:http://news.cnet.com/8301-10784_3-998351...j=NewsBlog
YouTube privacy at risk in Google-Viacom ruling
Posted by Steven Musil
Google scored a legal victory in keeping its search source code secret from Viacom, but YouTube users were not so fortunate with their privacy.
A federal judge ruled on Wednesday (PDF) that the search giant doesn't have to turn over the code to Viacom, which filed a $1 billion copyright infringement lawsuit against Google in 2007.
In granting Google's motion for a protective order, U.S. District Judge Louis L. Stanton in Manhattan agreed with Google's characterization of the source code as a trade secret that can't be disclosed without risking the loss of business.
"YouTube and Google should not be made to place this vital asset in hazard merely to allay speculation," the judge said. "A plausible showing that YouTube and Google's denials are false, and that the search function can and has been used to discriminate in favor of infringing content, should be required before disclosure of so valuable and vulnerable an asset is compelled."
The judge also denied Viacom's motion for Google to produce source code for its Video Identification Tool, which helps copyright notify Google of copyright infringement.
However, the judge granted a Viacom motion that records of every video watched by YouTube users, including their login names and IP addresses, be turned over to the entertainment giant.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation called the ruling a threat to YouTube users' privacy.
"The court's order grants Viacom's request and erroneously ignores the protections of the federal Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA), and threatens to expose deeply private information about what videos are watched by YouTube users," the EFF said in a statement.
At stake in the legal battle is a key part of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), the 1998 law that shields Web site owners from copyright infringement involving material published by users. The "safe harbor" provision in the law can protect against infringement claims as long as copyrighted material is removed upon notification.
After the suit, YouTube launched an antipiracy tool that checks uploaded videos against the original content in an effort to flag piracy.