Viacom wins request to view viewing logs
YouTube has been ordered to disclose 12TB of logs recording which videos its users have been watching.
The decision came in the midst of a copyright case the company is fighting against Viacom and its subsidiaries. That $1bn case revolves primarily around user uploaded videos of Comedy Central and MTV shows.
After filing a request that the site remove some 100,000 videos, Viacom filed the suit and accused YouTube of profiting directly from stolen content.
US District Court Judge Louis Stanton granted Viacom's request for the logs, saying that the database is essential in deliberating whether YouTube profited from the infringing videos.
"They need the data to compare the attractiveness of allegedly infringing videos with that of non-infringing videos," wrote Stanton.
"A markedly higher proportion of infringing-video watching may bear on plaintiffs’ vicarious liability claim, and defendants’ substantial non-infringing use defense."
The judge also granted a motion by Viacom to release YouTube's archive of removed videos. Two other motions asking for the disclosure of the site's search and advertising code were denied.
Civil rights groups were quick to opine on the case. The Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a release that the Judge's decision will violate user privacy and violate the federal Video Privacy Protection Act.
"The Court's erroneous ruling is a set-back to privacy rights, and will allow Viacom to see what you are watching on YouTube," said the EFF.
"We urge Viacom to back off this overbroad request and Google to take all steps necessary to challenge this order and protect the rights of its users."
Source
YouTube has been ordered to disclose 12TB of logs recording which videos its users have been watching.
The decision came in the midst of a copyright case the company is fighting against Viacom and its subsidiaries. That $1bn case revolves primarily around user uploaded videos of Comedy Central and MTV shows.
After filing a request that the site remove some 100,000 videos, Viacom filed the suit and accused YouTube of profiting directly from stolen content.
US District Court Judge Louis Stanton granted Viacom's request for the logs, saying that the database is essential in deliberating whether YouTube profited from the infringing videos.
"They need the data to compare the attractiveness of allegedly infringing videos with that of non-infringing videos," wrote Stanton.
"A markedly higher proportion of infringing-video watching may bear on plaintiffs’ vicarious liability claim, and defendants’ substantial non-infringing use defense."
The judge also granted a motion by Viacom to release YouTube's archive of removed videos. Two other motions asking for the disclosure of the site's search and advertising code were denied.
Civil rights groups were quick to opine on the case. The Electronic Frontier Foundation said in a release that the Judge's decision will violate user privacy and violate the federal Video Privacy Protection Act.
"The Court's erroneous ruling is a set-back to privacy rights, and will allow Viacom to see what you are watching on YouTube," said the EFF.
"We urge Viacom to back off this overbroad request and Google to take all steps necessary to challenge this order and protect the rights of its users."
Source
Comment