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EFFecting Change: How to Disenshittify the Internet on May 14

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Content ID and the Rise of the Machines

Copyright Bots Aren’t Always Bad, But They Shouldn’t Be in Charge
In 2007, Google built Content ID, a technology that lets rightsholders submit large databases of video and audio fingerprints and have YouTube continually scan new uploads for potential matches to those fingerprints. Since then, a handful of other...

The Murky Waters of International Copyright Law

Protecting Fair Use from the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Copyright is too often used to stifle speech and restrict common sense uses of creative works, from books, to films, textbooks, images, and music. That's why we need exceptions and limitations to copyright, to serve as a safety valve against these kinds...

A person holding a megaphone that another person speaks through

The Web's First Blackout Protest: The CDA, 20 Years Later

Twenty years ago, large chunks of the Web went dark. These sites were changing their layout, or in some cases even going offline, to protest the Communications Decency Act, signed on February 8 by President Bill Clinton as Title V of the landmark Telecommunication Act. By some estimates, more...

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