The
FA
Premier League has filed legal charges against
YouTube
owner Google
over the "unauthorised and uncompensated" use of its creative and copyrighted
works.
"Defendants are pursuing a deliberate strategy of engaging in, permitting,
encouraging and facilitating massive copyright infringement on the YouTube
website," the football organisation charged.
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The Premier League is seeking class action status for its suit allowing it to
join forces with other organisations and individual copyright owners whose works
have appeared on YouTube without permission.
Independent music publisher
Bourne
is the first to join the class action suit.
Video from football games are hugely popular items on YouTube. Highlights
from games typically show up within hours of the final whistle and videos from
high profile matches consistently rank high on You tube's lists of most viewed
items.
The lawsuit alleges that YouTube has "long been aware of this pattern of
massive infringement yet purposefully refrains from employing readily available
measures to curb it".
It further alleges that YouTube refuses to combat this unauthorised use
because its entire business model is based on exploiting copyrighted materials
without having to pay the owners.
The Premier League is demanding a permanent injunction preventing YouTube
from displaying any more copyrighted materials, as well as unspecified damages.
Viacom
launched the first
major legal
assault against YouTube in March for violating its copyrights. The company
had ordered Google to
remove
100,000 videos from YouTube for alleged copyright violations.
In an unrelated case, the government of Thailand plans to file legal charges
against YouTube because it allows the distribution of video clips that insult
King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
Thailand started blocking access to YouTube in April when a video on the site
depicted the king next to a photograph which is considered gravely offensive.
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