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posted by janrinok on Tuesday August 11 2015, @04:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the that's-my-word-you-can't-use-it dept.

Columbia Pictures, the studio behind the recent Adam Sandler film "Pixels," has gone on the warpath, targeting independent films on Vimeo that use the word "pixels" in the title, TorrentFreak reports.

According to a DMCA complaint lodged with Vimeo by anti-piracy organisation Entura International on behalf of Columbia Pictures, with which Vimeo has complied, 10 videos were targeted by the production company.

These include: "Pixels -- Life Buoy," filmmaker Dragos Bardac's project for his degree at the National University of Arts in Bucharest, Romania, uploaded in 2010; a dance music video called "Detuned Pixels -- Choco" uploaded in 2014; a short film called Pantone Pixels, uploaded in 2011; a video by graphic designer Franz Jeitz, announcing that he'll be speaking at the 2015 Pixels Festival; and, ironically, the award-winning short film "Pixels" by Patrick Jean which served as the inspiration for the Sandler film.

While Jean's film has been removed from his own account, it remains untouched on the account of One More Productions, which produced it.

The sweep also caught two unofficially uploaded copies of the Columbia Pictures film's trailer. A search for the word "pixels" on Vimeo reveals that some targeting may have been applied, returning some 9,050 results still live on the site at time of writing.

According to a complaint by NGO NeMe, which uploaded a video called "Pixels" in 2006, video creators are also being issued "strikes" along with the takedown. When a content creator receives three of these strikes, their channel will be suspended from the site.


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:46PM

    by VLM (445) on Tuesday August 11 2015, @06:46PM (#221375)

    Of all the movies mentioned so far, yours sounds:

    1) Most likely to make a profit

    2) Most appealing for me to watch as a guy with mostly stereotypical preferences

    I mean, if the business model is to shovel out brainless exploitative formulaic dreck videos, at least make it a media with appeal, like pr0n. I had a weird argument about pr0n movies with this woman a long while back where she ranted at me for like ten minutes about exploitation of young women and unfair relationship expectations and unrealistic female body shapes and she just rambled on and on, and I finally shut her up with something like "OK so we've agreed we both don't like Disney Princess movies, now you claimed you'd lecture me about pr0n so lets switch to that". If you're not going to output stuff with cinematic integrity, why not at least shovel out stuff guys like to look at? Like what is the point of the failing movie industry?

    Can anyone talk me out of thinking MDCs movie suggestion would be the best movie mentioned so far in the article? I mean we're not talking "Star Wars: A New Pixel" or "LOTR: The fellowship of the pixel" here.

    Now if I'm missing something culturally and MDCs movie title means its an educational video where Barbie hosts the kids visit to a undersea fiber optic cable factory, well then clearly I'm missing out on some classy cinema, and in that case, whoops. I'm sure "Ken loves eating sausage" is all about his visit to the bratwurst factory, admittedly a site best unseen, much like software development.

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  • (Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Tuesday August 11 2015, @07:24PM

    by MichaelDavidCrawford (2339) Subscriber Badge <mdcrawford@gmail.com> on Tuesday August 11 2015, @07:24PM (#221387) Homepage Journal

    Mainstream media has demonstrated its reluctance to protect its trademarks when infringed by our friends in Chatsworth.

    --
    Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]