They also suspended the account belonging to Auburn football.
Both were for supposed music copyright violations (lol).
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...ed/3748238002/
What a joke these social media companies have become.
They also suspended the account belonging to Auburn football.
Both were for supposed music copyright violations (lol).
https://www.usatoday.com/story/sport...ed/3748238002/
What a joke these social media companies have become.
Twitter could have deleted the offending tweets. There is no legal requirement for them to ban/suspend accounts hit with DMCA claims.
I'm sure if Twitter deleted the tweets with the alleged copyrighted music, and then sent a stern warning that they would suspend the Rockets if they did it again, the behavior would have changed.
Here's why, in a nutshell: https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20...-bad-law.shtml
Ever since this case and others like it, companies/providers/platforms have to take the 'repeat offender' threat very seriously. So they do.
So yes, you absolutely can blame the DMCA. Because of it, certainly no free-to-use service is gonna take any chances on people who get multiple DMCA notices anymore.
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