The Digital Millennium Copyright Act serves many purposes, some of which are good, but certain parts of it are ripe for abuse. The infamous DMCA takedown notice is at the top of anyone's list of most-abused parts of the act. These notices are meant to make it easy for content owners to have violations removed, and they do. But the notices also make it easy for anyone to try and silence criticism or stifle angles they simply don't like, even if the party in question is working perfectly within the confines of fair use.
Over the course of our coverage here at Ars, we've seen a number of DMCA takedown cases that were just plain lame. And, although there are plenty more lame cases that have happened in the world, we thought we would highlight some of our "favorite" ones to show how the DMCA takedown system can be used in an attempt to control content instead of merely enforcing copyrights. Plus, these examples just make us chuckle at the absurdity.
Psychic versus paranormal unbelievers
"Paranormalist" Uri Geller has always been somewhat of an eccentric dude—and how could he not be, having made claims that aliens gave him psychic powers and the ability to bend spoons with his mind? But when someone uploaded a clip to YouTube of a 1993 PBS piece showing how Geller's tricks could be easily produced, Geller was unable to use his mind to make the criticism disappear. So, he resorted to the next best thing: DMCA takedowns.
YouTube not only removed the video, it also suspended the account of the person who uploaded it for two weeks before the counter-notice was processed. The Electronic Frontier Foundation eventually got involved by filing a lawsuit against Geller—the magician was not the copyright owner to the video and was not otherwise authorized to act on behalf of the owner (PBS). Additionally, Geller could only lay claim to three seconds of the video, which the EFF argued qualified as fair use for criticism purposes.