A user who had a clip from
VH-1 removed from
his YouTube
account, despite the music television channel having used his video without
consent, has had it reinstated.
VH-1 owner
Viacom had
originally
complained
to YouTube about Christopher Knight's use of the clip from its
Web
Junk 2.0 show.
However, the
VH-1
segment showed one of the presenters making fun of a
campaign
advert featuring Knight, which it had taken from YouTube without his
permission.
Knight had argued that Viacom could not claim that he was violating its
copyright when the video contained material which he had originated.
YouTube removed the video from the site pending an investigation, but has now
reinstated the file.
"In accordance with the
Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, we have completed processing your
counter-notification regarding your video," the YouTube statement said. "This
content has been restored and your account will not be penalised."
Knight gave thanks to Fred von Lohmann, a senior staff attorney at the
Electronic
Frontier Foundation, for his help.
"There is no telling how much grief and headache Fred [von Lohmann] and his
crew have prevented, not just for me but for a lot of other people too," Knight
wrote on his
Knight
Shift blog.
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