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District Court Decision Indicates Liability for Erroneous DMCA Takedowns

Age of Disruption

District Court Decision Indicates Liability for Erroneous DMCA Takedowns

Virtual World

Failing to make this evaluation—similar to a submitting party’s duty to consider fair use prior to takedown—could lead to liability under Section 512(f) of the DMCA for parties who knowingly and materially misrepresent that third-party content is infringing in a takedown request. A knowing representation can be inferred from business practices that constitute “head in the sand” willful blindness—a meaningful risk for companies who handle their DMCA takedowns in-house and without input from legal counsel. Under the wrong circumstances, erroneous DMCA takedowns can lead to liability for tortious interference as well.

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We live in a disruptive age, with ever-accelerating advances in technology largely fueling the disruption permeating almost every aspect of our lives. We created the Age of Disruption blog with the goal of exploring the emerging technologies reshaping society and the business and legal considerations that they raise. 

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