Question re non-specifics to UE, legal-types & the commu
Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2007 7:52 pm
The gist of this call is a question to the lack of a list of specific UE works in their Cease-and-Desist (see paragraph three).
Though not an attorney myself, I consort with them on business issues regularly. From that perspective, the C&D letter from UE seems to reduce to two (seeming not-unreasonable abstract) requests: "1) take down material for which we clearly hold copyright by any country's standard; 2) institute IP filtering to prevent downloading to countries where copyright laws preclude."
HOWEVER, what puzzles me and I don't agree with: is why UE did not facilitate compliance to (1), moving from the abstract to specifics, by enumerating the specific scores of theirs whose copyrights are unambiguously violated by IMSLP given its construal of copyright law??
In other words (and this is my call to the more legally-minded), if you UE were to bring suit against IMSLP, wouldn't the court require you to list the specific works with which you take exception rather than a) claiming some abstract violation of copyright and/or, even more ridiculously (b) asking IMSLP to act as your legal-aide by sifting thru their archive themselves to tag the offending and suspect works on your behalf?
It doesn't seem productive to tackle IP-filtering (2) until the issue regarding (1) is clarified.
UE, the reason people suspect ill-will from you is the C&D was thus non-specific. Good faith would have been indicated should a list of specific works have been contained in the letter. Instead, you asked IMSLP to do your (legal) homework for you, and then go so far as to continue with lazy abstractions in your histrionically-titled "do we live in a world without copyright law?" thread on this board.
Get specific, do due diligence (as you would need to as if you meant to serve suit), and this whole matter can be resolved quickly, productively, and amicably.
Thanks for reading, -- Mike Z.
Though not an attorney myself, I consort with them on business issues regularly. From that perspective, the C&D letter from UE seems to reduce to two (seeming not-unreasonable abstract) requests: "1) take down material for which we clearly hold copyright by any country's standard; 2) institute IP filtering to prevent downloading to countries where copyright laws preclude."
HOWEVER, what puzzles me and I don't agree with: is why UE did not facilitate compliance to (1), moving from the abstract to specifics, by enumerating the specific scores of theirs whose copyrights are unambiguously violated by IMSLP given its construal of copyright law??
In other words (and this is my call to the more legally-minded), if you UE were to bring suit against IMSLP, wouldn't the court require you to list the specific works with which you take exception rather than a) claiming some abstract violation of copyright and/or, even more ridiculously (b) asking IMSLP to act as your legal-aide by sifting thru their archive themselves to tag the offending and suspect works on your behalf?
It doesn't seem productive to tackle IP-filtering (2) until the issue regarding (1) is clarified.
UE, the reason people suspect ill-will from you is the C&D was thus non-specific. Good faith would have been indicated should a list of specific works have been contained in the letter. Instead, you asked IMSLP to do your (legal) homework for you, and then go so far as to continue with lazy abstractions in your histrionically-titled "do we live in a world without copyright law?" thread on this board.
Get specific, do due diligence (as you would need to as if you meant to serve suit), and this whole matter can be resolved quickly, productively, and amicably.
Thanks for reading, -- Mike Z.