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posted by takyon on Friday November 23 2018, @09:00PM   Printer-friendly
from the bad-vs.-worse dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow1984

Cloudflare Sued for Failing to Terminate Repeat Infringers

In a new complaint filed at a California federal court, Cloudflare stands accused of contributing to, aiding, and abetting copyright infringements. The company fails to terminate customers who are repeatedly called out and is therefore liable, the argument goes. The case in question was not filed by Hollywood or the major record labels, but by two manufacturers of wedding dresses.

[...] In 2016 Cloudflare was sued for contributory copyright infringement by adult publisher ALS Scan. This case ended in a confidential settlement this summer, but now there's more trouble on the horizon for the company.

The new threat doesn't come from any of the major entertainment industry players, but from two manufacturers and wholesalers of wedding dresses. Not a typical "piracy" lawsuit, but it's a copyright case that could have broad effects. In a complaint filed at a federal court in California, Mon Cheri Bridals and Maggie Sottero Designs argue that Cloudflare fails to terminate sites of counterfeit vendors after multiple warnings. This makes Cloudflare liable for the associated copyright infringements, they add.


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  • (Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23 2018, @10:22PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23 2018, @10:22PM (#765707)

    So, now do you see why regulating ISPs is important? Give them common carrier status, they are just "dumb pipes" and must be treated as such. Legalize non-discrimination for financial processors and other such basic infrastructure.

    Someone wants to slander GoDaddy or whomever for having shitty people using their hosting services? GoDaddy should sue for slander with the defense that they are legally obligated to serve customers that are not violating the law. In this case the customers are breaking the law and once convicted they would lose their hosting service. Let the courts do what they're supposed to, not turn a bunch of computer techs into law enforcement.

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