Anthony wrote:
On 7/21/06, Stan Shebs shebs@apple.com wrote:
If you have a suggestion that doesn't involve large numbers of nonexistent volunteers working all hours to keep WP out of legal peril, feel free to enlighten us.
Here's one: when people send in a DMCA takedown notice, remove the material, notify the uploader that her materials have been removed (via their talk page and email if the address is known), and provide them with an opportunity to send a written notice to the service provider stating that the material has been wrongly removed. If the uploader provides a proper "counter-notice" claiming that the material does not infringe copyrights, then promptly notify the claiming party of the individual's objection. However, only restore the image if there is also a consensus that the image is "free enough" within the project's guidelines.
I've been saying something like this all along. The law requires that the uploader be notified anyway. Furthermore, all others who have added to the article have had their work deleted too, so they too should be notified. A counter-notice can be issued by anyone; there is no need to have standing as there is to issue a takedown notice. Better to make the text of all takedown notices public.
Ec