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1999 Guidelines for Compliance with the Online Service Provider
Provisions of the DMCA
Introduction
- Background
- Applicability
to Non-Profit Educational Instructions
- Prerequisites
to Limitation of Liability Afforded Under the Act
- Notification
Procedures
- Monitoring
and Recordkeeping
- Subpoenas
- Fair
Use
Full
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1999 Guidelines for Compliance with the Online Service Provider
Provisions of the DMCA
I. Background
The 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)
includes a section entitled the "Online Copyright Infringement
Liability Limitation Act" (Act) which grants an online service
provider (OSP) a limitation of liability for vicarious and contributory
copyright infringement when its subscribers infringe a third-party’s
copyright online (17 U.S.C. § 512). The University of California
provides online service to its students and faculty (or students,
faculty, and employees); therefore, it meets the definition of an
OSP. The limitation is available only under certain conditions and
when procedures prescribed in the Act are followed. The DMCA's limitation
on OSP liability was adopted as a compromise between demands by
online service providers that they not be held liable for the infringing
activity of their subscribers and counter-demands by content providers
(e.g., publishers and recording companies) that online providers
not have absolute limitations on liability.
The DMCA does not require online providers
to adhere to its procedures, nor does it supersede or alter existing
statutory or case law related to copyright. Any defense which would
otherwise be available to a provider remains available; however,
adherence to the procedures allows a provider to quickly dispose
of certain infringement claims without concern for liability either
to the alleged infringer (for the removal of the material) or to
the person claiming infringement.
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