No Downtime for Free Speech Campaign
Whether you are quoting someone on your blog, inserting clips of CNN into your own video news report, or using a song sample in a musical parody, your free speech often depends on incorporating and referencing other people's creations as part of your own. The courts call this "fair use", and strong legal precedents exist to protect the limited use of copyrighted material in your work when you do so for expressive purposes.
Unfortunately, copyright owners often object to these uses, and may look for ways to take them offline via the legal system. A copyright cease-and-desist letter to your webhost or ISP may be all it takes to make your online speech disappear from the Internet — even when the legal claims are transparently bogus.
In particular, copyright claimants are increasingly misusing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) to demand that material be immediately taken down without providing any proof of infringement. Service providers, fearful of monetary damages and legal hassles, often comply with these requests without double-checking them, despite the cost to free speech and individual rights.
The DMCA also puts anonymous speech in jeopardy; misusing its subpoena power, copyright holders can attempt to unmask an Internet user's identity based on a mere allegation of infringement without filing an actual lawsuit or providing the user any constitutional due process.
And it's not just copyright law that gets misused. Trademark owners can also use their rights to censor critics online by claiming that any domain name or website referencing their product is an infringement. Yet, the First Amendment protects commentary and criticism using trademarks as well.
Unless IP claimants are held accountable when they go too far, the situation for online speech will only get worse. EFF has been fighting to make sure copyright and trademark rights don't trump free speech by litigating against inappropriate uses of the law.
No Downtime for Free Speech Campaign Cases
- Electric Slide Litigation
- Sapient v. GellerEFF is fighting back against Uri Geller -- the "paranormalist" famous for seemingly bending spoons with his mind -- on behalf of a YouTube critic who was silenced by Geller's baseless copyright claims.
- MoveOn, Brave New Films v. Viacom

- Lenz v. UniversalEFF filed suit against Universal Music Publishing Group, asking a federal court to protect the fair use and free speech rights of a mother who posted a short video of her toddler son dancing to a Prince song on the Internet.
- SHARK v. PRCAEFF has asked a federal court to protect the free speech rights of an animal welfare group after its video critiques of animal treatment at rodeos were removed from YouTube due to sham copyright claims.
- Online Policy Group v. Diebold
- Discover Communications and the Spankmaker
- Diehl v. Crook
In The News
- INFORMATION WEEK | August 25, 2008 Google And YouTube Need More Transparent Takedown Procedures
- ZDNET | August 24, 2008 Suit Over Baby Vid with Prince Song Goes Forward
Other Resources
- ABA IP Section Quietly Considering Anti-Consumer Proposals to Regulate Keyword Advertising
- A "Test Suite" of Fair Use Examples for Service Providers and Content Owners
- Fair Use Principles for User Generated Video Content
- Chilling Effects[chillingeffects.org]
Whitepapers
Deeplinks Posts
- September 05, 2008 Massive Takedown of Anti-Scientology Videos on YouTube
- August 25, 2008 EFF and ACLU of Northern California to ISPs and Content Owners: Do Your Part to Protect Political Speech
- August 20, 2008 Judge Rules That Content Owners Must Consider Fair Use Before Sending Takedowns
- August 13, 2008 Olympic Committee Takedown Shows Risks of Ill-Timed Take-Downs
- February 07, 2008 Arista v. Does 1-21: What's at Stake for the Rest of Us
- January 03, 2008 New Study on Copyright and Creativity from the Center for Social Media
- December 07, 2007 Music Industry Pressures EU Politicians for Filtered Internet
Press Releases
- July 15, 2008 Friday Court Hearing in YouTube Video Battle
- June 09, 2008 Animal Welfare Group Battles Online Censorship of Rodeo Videos
- October 31, 2007 Fair Use Advocates Issue Principles for Protecting Online Videos

