2213 readersThe commotion surrounding copyright troll Righthaven’s lawsuits just keeps getting better. One of the defendants, news aggregator Buzzfeed.com, has filed a class-action counterclaim against the company on behalf of all sites sued by Righthaven, alleging Righthaven is abusing legal process, does not actually own the copyrights it is claiming, and is suing in bad faith
1830 readersRighthaven, the copyright troll we’ve mentioned a few times in the last few months, has just seen one of its lawsuits backfire in a major way, that could affect every newspaper in the country if upheld on appeal. On Friday, a judge stated that he was going to dismiss a copyright lawsuit filed by Righthaven,
1975 readersPaid Content notes that Righthaven, the copyright troll suing organizations and individuals who re-blog excerpts from articles from a Las Vegas newspaper, has offered to drop its lawsuit against the Democratic Underground website provided it does not have to pay their legal fees. Under American law, copyright cases have a lower bar than most others
1824 readersBreak out the popcorn, everyone; the saga of copyright troll Righthaven just veered right into summer blockbuster territory. After signing MediaNews, the US’s second-largest newspaper publisher, for its copyright protection racket, Righthaven has just filed suit against Matt Drudge, the notably pugnacious blogger behind the Drudge Report, (Found via Techdirt.) Drudge had the temerity to
777 readersApropos of the HarperCollins v. Open Road lawsuit over the backlist e-book title Julie of the Wolves, legal blogger Passive Guy (aka contract lawyer David Vandagriff) has written a fairly lengthy post looking at the question of whether e-book rights are covered in pre-e-book contracts. Passive Guy writes:
A fundamental legal question involved in construing a
1233 readersArs Technica has another brief post on Righthaven. A Colorado court trying its case against a blogger for posting a photo without permission has found in favor of the defendant, because Righthaven did not actually own the rights to the image it would have needed for its suit to be valid. The judge required Righthaven
894 readersIt’s a little weird to begin every post I make about the company this way, but the saga of e-news copyright troll Rights Haven’t, I mean Righthaven, keeps getting better and better.
First came the news that a Colorado court has thrown out the first Righthaven case to be thrown out outside of Nevada. The
436 readersA brief follow-up to my latest post about copyright troll Righthaven’s travails: Wendy Davis at the Daily Online Examiner reports that the EFF has helped one of Righthaven’s defendants, the Democratic Underground, file suit against Stephens Media, the company that launched Righthaven and licensed or sold it its copyright, to obtain a declaratory judgment that
2497 readersApparently copyright troll Righthaven is really starting to get worried. After a series of judges have expressed opinions ranging from skepticism to outright hostility toward some of its cases, it has turned to a high-powered copyright litigator: Dale Cendali, who has been involved in a couple of the better-known copyright cases of the last few
3022 readersThe Righthaven case just keeps getting better and better. Ars Technica had a nice piece yesterday summing up recent developments (Techdirt also had a series of Righthaven-related pieces here, here, here, and here). In short, the EFF succeeded in having the court unseal a document describing the relationship between Righthaven and Stephens Media, the newspaper