Google Prepares Piracy Crackdown

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Google Prepares Piracy Crackdown


Google [http://www.google.com] is embarking on a campaign to crack down on piracy with changes to its policies and search engine that will make it harder to find and profit from copyright-infringing sites.

Google's ubiquity as a search engine can be neatly summed up by the fact that its name has become a verb. But with great power comes great responsibility and so it is that over the next several months, Google will implement four changes to its service that it hopes will reduce copyright infringement on the net.

First on the list is a pledge to improve the DMCA takedown request process for rightsholders and reduce the average response time on "reliable copyright takedown requests" to 24 hours or less. At the same time, "counter-notice tools" will also be improved and takedown requests will be made publicly searchable, and DMCA procedures will be put to use in an effort to identify infringing sites that use Google's AdSense program and give them the boot where necessary.

The Google search engine will also be changed to prevent Autocompletion of terms "closely associated with piracy," and to make "authorized preview content" more accessible in search results.

Speaking in a conference call with Music Ally [http://musically.com/blog/2010/12/02/in-depth-googles-simon-morrison-on-its-new-anti-piracy-steps/], Simon Morrison, the copyright, policy and communications manager at Google EMEA, said the changes will simply assist with weeding out infringing content but won't actually have any impact on the search results unless and until Google receives a DMCA takedown notice. "Today's announcement is in part about making that [takedown] process more efficient for rightsowners. It is not about altering the search results," he said. "Those [infringing] sites won't be removed from the search results. The search results will stay the same."

He acknowledged that the new takedown tools could be more open to "abuse" but said Google is determined to stay neutral and maintain the balance between users and rightsholders. "If we would take down anything that someone sent, we'd enter a situation in which it would be easier for them [rightsholders] to be lazy about it, and to blanket-ask," he explained. "We need to be very precise: we are taking down infringing content, but we are not hurting users who are doing things perfectly legally. It is important to strike that balance."

To learn more about the upcoming changes to Google's copyright infringment policies, check out the Google Public Policy Blog [http://googlepublicpolicy.blogspot.com/2010/12/making-copyright-work-better-online.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+GooglePublicPolicyBlog+%28Google+Public+Policy+Blog%29].


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KEM10

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Oct 22, 2008
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I was wondering when Google would step in. However, it looks more like they are making it harder to start a piracy career than stop the act all together.
 

Antari

Music Slave
Nov 4, 2009
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Does anyone else remember the WMG disaster on Youtube when they went crazy claiming every video on there? I don't see how these measures actually do anything. But as long as they think they are doing something I guess.
 

Dogstile

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Jan 17, 2009
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Kittenmauler said:
Guess I'll go to bing for my pirating needs lawl.
Kudos on the exact same thoughts as me :D

But i'm a little worried. "closely associated with piracy?". That's not exactly specific.
 

Popido

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Oct 21, 2010
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Damn, they're pointing the gun at google now? I wonder if they have the balls to sue google at some point.
 

Beastialman

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Sep 9, 2009
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Kittenmauler said:
Guess I'll go to bing for my pirating needs lawl.
I hope they make a commercial for it.

"Pirates, Pirates of the Carribean, Captain Jack Sparrow, Johnny Depp, Tim Burton, Nightmare Before Christmas, Hot Topic, Invader Zim... what has the search engine done to us?"
 

uppitycracker

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Oct 9, 2008
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damn, now the lawyers are actually going to have to WORK to find those copyright infringements... i'm willing to bet 90% of them are clueless outside of googling torrents :p
 
Aug 25, 2009
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They already have more power than most nations, so I don't know exactly who would stop them whatever they wanted to do. If Google announced tomorrow that they were going to shame and belittle the entire world by revealing vast quantities of personal data, they would be entirely able to and no one could stop them.

Google are terrifying, and I'm quite glad that they seem to apply pretty rigidly to the law.
 

Gindil

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Nov 28, 2009
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So google is becoming copyright cops. As soon as this is implemented, I expect shares of Google to go down.
 

Gindil

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Nov 28, 2009
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ciortas1 said:
Gindil said:
Yes to the first, no to the second. You have to stop deluding yourself, almost nobody who uses the internet will ever even know this, there's hardly any way for them to get a negative effect out of this.

Not that I'm for it, I'm for the Internet being as neutral as it possibly can.
That's like saying people still don't villify the RIAA for trying to sue on copyright charges. If Google begins taking down websites, I'm willing to bet that we'll see them taken down a peg in a similar manner.
 

Onyx Oblivion

Borderlands Addict. Again.
Sep 9, 2008
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Considering that many people are too lazy to dig deeper than a Google search, even when it comes to getting stuff "for free", I actually think this will have an impact.

But for the more serious pirates, this will do nothing.
 

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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ciortas1 said:
Gindil said:
Yes to the first, no to the second. You have to stop deluding yourself, almost nobody who uses the internet will ever even know this, there's hardly any way for them to get a negative effect out of this.

Not that I'm for it, I'm for the Internet being as neutral as it possibly can.
Google isn't the internet. It's a search engine and a privately owned entity that can determine how its free service is used.

If Google wanted every search to bring up porn and nothing but porn, it could do that too.