- On June 11, 2015, the Court of Appeal for British Columbia ruled that Google had to block a rogue website offering counterfeit goods from its search results on a worldwide basis.[ref]Equustek Solutions Inc. v. Google Inc.[/ref]
- On June 3, 2015, the District Court for the Southern District of New York held that CloudFlare, a reverse-proxy service, had violated a preliminary injunction by directing people to pirate websites using the word "grooveshark."[ref]Arista Records, LLC, et al., v. Vita Tkach, et al.[/ref]
- On June 1, 2015, a German appellate Court affirmed a ruling that Google, once on notice of infringing material appearing on YouTube, had an affirmative duty to prevent the material from being reposted.[ref]YouTube not liable on copyright, but needs to do more: German court[/ref]
- In late June, an Australian law requiring ISP to block pirate websites went into effect.[ref]Site blocking bill goes into force in Australia[/ref]
Courts in Canada, Germany and U.S. Order Website Blocking, Internet Fails to Spontaneously Self-Destruct
07/09/2015
Stephen Carlisle
No Subjects
A series of curious events happened in June. Courts across the globe started to take action against those web business that actively service pirate websites. Amongst these actions were:
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