In response to last week's incident in which Destiny videos by prominent content creators on YouTube were hit with a spate of false copyright takedowns, developer Bungie has filed a lawsuit against ten unnamed individuals it believes responsible.
At the time of the incident, Bungie — whose own YouTube content was impacted by the bogus copyright claims — insisted the takedowns were not the result of a request by either itself or its partners. The studio later revealed the takedowns had come from «fraudulent accounts created to impersonate our IP protection service», which it believed may have been retaliation for a «recent set of authentic takedowns of OST uploads».
Following the results of its initial investigation, Bungie has now (thanks TorrentFreak) launched legal action against ten unnamed individuals, who it admits it does not yet know the identity of, but says it will «discover...soon, via subpoena or otherwise». It also has more than a few choice words for Google, extensively highlighting the flaws in what it calls the «gaping security loophole» of YouTube's «easily-gamed» DMCA-process security.
Destiny 2: The Witch Queen — Savathûn's Throne World.
«As far as YouTube is concerned,» the lawsuit explains, «any person, anywhere in the world, can issue takedown notices on behalf of any rights holder, anywhere. A disgruntled infringer or a competitive content producer, for example, can issue takedown notices purportedly on behalf of Disney, or Fox, or Universal — or even Google itself.»
«While YouTube has a form that allows anyone to claim to represent a copyright holder and issue copyright strikes,» the document continues, «it has no dedicated mechanism for copyright holders who are being impersonated to let YouTube
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