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RE: TTR - Duplicitous Duplicator Dithers Deceitfully

in #steemit7 years ago (edited)

I think it it's important to draw the distinction between

  • plagiarism - copying and pasting of work as your own (which can include just rewording to make it look different),
  • copyright infringement - unauthorised wholesale copy paste of entire or substantial portions of works even if properly attributed,
  • fair use - posting a link or citing a reasonable amount of work with proper attribution

Fair use is permitted within copyright law. I'm not a lawyer though so go look it up - here is a useful blog post that talks about the subject: https://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/fair-use/what-is-fair-use/. It is a useful and valuable thing and adds to the general wealth of content we have. I don't think anyone on Steemit is or should be arguing against it.

Note even embedding a YouTube video in a post, even though it will allow the entire video to be played, is still fair use since YouTube expressly allows that unless the uploader of that video selected the option to prohibit embedding. In that case the video just won't play - I see that all the time.

Yes there is the chance the YouTube video itself was ripped off by someone and Google has not yet forced them to remove it, in my experience eventually they will and quite likely the person posting a link doesn't even realized it was plagiarized (in which case we can politely tell them to attribute the original out even better find and use the original video). There is also content on YouTube where it is known to be plagiarized but YouTube allows it because they have some deals with the original content producer to compensate them for it by adding ads to the video. This is commonly the case with music uploaded or used as background music.

Plagiarized material - I think everyone on Steemit who follows our community ethos wants to see that gone and buried. It's a legitimate use of flagging / downvote in my opinion.

Which leads us to the copyright infringement area alluded to above. I doubt most Steemit users are lawyers, nor do they care too much about the nuances of fair use: you can read about them here: https://fairuse.stanford.edu/overview/fair-use/four-factors/ - I think we should leave arguing about copyright infringement vs. fair use to lawyers. However it is pretty clear that wholesale copying of an entire without permission is not fair use, it is copyright infringement. Even if the copier admits they are doing it and cites the source - it is still infringement unless the content creator allowed it such as by publishing it with a creative commons license, or by using a service such as YouTube that makes embedding on other sites a permitted and default licensing option even if many YouTube users don't actually realize that because they didn't read the fine print.

As the Nolo press article on fair use linked above mentions:

statements—known in legal parlance as “disclaimers”—are intended to prevent (or at least limit) copyright infringement claims. The most common of the half-million disclaimers used at YouTube is apparently “No Copyright Intended” which—despite its ambiguous meaning—is about as effective as going 90 MPH in your car with a sign that says “No Speeding Intended.”

And that pretty much covers the zerohedge instance being discussed here exactly. "No speeding intended" my ass. It is totally willful copyright violation and taking benefit from it and robbing the Steemit rewards pool at the same time.

In my opinion is our duty as a community to highlight the illegal copying of content, make a best effort to notify the content creator to give them a chance to do something about it - which includes giving their permission and maybe working out a rev share with the re-poster (or not if they don't care or think the referral traffic is sufficient compensation).

Furthermore if we find out that the original poster doesn't consent to the copyright infringement but doesn't have the means to stop it, and the infringer is unwilling to do so voluntarily, then we should help the content creator out and stop the "content rape" by swinging the downvote hammer as we see fit.

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There's the letter of the law, versus intent.

What you are discussing doesn't cover the pattern of duplicitous behavior. By pretending to be the official site, @zer0hedge has garnered an audience built largely on the belief that he was official.

And lets be frank, once someone subscribes or "follows" here, they don't often revisit their choices - leaving the content to populate their feed.

I think it is important to discuss identity theft and fraud in light of the evidence.

As I stated, @zer0hedge made a concerted effort to pass himself off as an official source before being forced incrementally to change his tactics. This still hasn't yielded the best result, but it does show his reluctance to present a truthful representation of who he is.

As one user has said - the mix between citation and original content varies, but seeing someone take other authors work, without permission - and make it 99.9% of their posts is clearly pushing the boundaries of what is expected and equitable.

Be mindful of the fact that most of the sources he is copying come from newsletters and other publications that are subscription-only content. The official Zerohedge site has relationships with these authors, which is why they are able to share it.

Encouraging someone to do the lowest-effort possible in contributing to the platform does nothing but ensure original content creators eventually abandon it - turning Steemit into yet another failed social experiment.

I'd say that alone is enough to push back hard against people who think copy-pasting equals "curation".

Well the issue of impersonation would be moot if it is clear he has always attributed the content as I believe he claims he did. I guess you are claiming otherwise. I certainly find his recent posts not that misleading and use of similar or copy-cat names are not uncommon here. Sure not using such a name and putting the disclaiming at the start of the article would be better. But for me it is mostly about does he have permission, and then if yes I couldn't care less - I might even subscribe to his feed then.

I have not gone back to the beginning of time to examine his early posts - it sounds like you have. Perhaps you could post links to or screenshots of his early postings which you say are especially egregious in their deceit about the account's identity? Thanks to the permanent nature of Steemit he would not be able to alter or delete them after one week.

Thanks.

PS. No word back from ZeroHedge. I'll report back if I hear anything.

If you navigate to my original post about the subject, there's a google-cache of his early postings. No disclaimer, no differentiation. Its the foundation upon which he's built an entire copy-paste empire.

Also, I take issue with "use of similar or copy-cat names are not uncommon here." Are you suggesting just because others do it, that it must be okay?

That kind of ethical lapse doesn't make sense in light of your other arguments.

You'll have to forgive me for missing that one link... I agree that 6 month ago post did not indicate he wasn't Zerohedge but hey at least he linked to the source.

However no matter how dodgy his past his and potentially misleading the name his current posts do seem to be far less misleading. Unless I wasn't really reading his posts at all it would be hard to miss the big disclaimer at all. I think we have to give everyone the chance to learn and reform. He can't really go back and fix the past since those old posts are immutable right (or can it be done with some low level API?)

So for me this is now mostly about copyright violation and what the original copyright holder(s) think(s).

As for copycat names - nope, definitely not saying doing that to mislead people is cool, more that rules are only good ones if you enforce them regularly in a uniform way. If you get lax about it or discriminate people will start to assume no one cares or rules only apply to certain people. Ergo people break laws because they see rich people get away with it. If there were bots and many more of us being vigilant over copycat names on Steemit I think people would get the message.

But it does appear the fake Zer0hedge has learned his lesson in that regard - at least AFAIC.

Note on the flip side some real people on Steemit have been hounded by down voting and robots targeting their profile because there is no reliable recognized way to prove identity here. Clearly Steemit could do better, maybe integrate support for a token or service that verifies identity. There could be a bot for new accounts telling people how to do that. It would make a clear impression on identify theft and provide a solution for identity assertion (@cheetah I'm looking at you)

It sounds like you or Patrice may already have contacted the real Zero Hedge before, did they really have no interest in this reposting account?

I've already stated the actions I've taken. They were not aware that he was riding on their coat-tails.

Whether they take action or not themselves is beyond the scope of this discussion.

By pretending to be the official site, @zer0hedge has garnered an audience built largely on the belief that he was official.

That's where your whole argument fall short.

Since day 1.

  • Different username.
  • Profile say "Best of zerohedge.com"
  • Never implied that it was official.
  • Always cited source of content.
  • Answered almost all inquiry asking about it that I wasn't.
    Like the picture you posted yourself.

As I stated, @zer0hedge made a concerted effort to pass himself off as an official source before being forced incrementally to change his tactics.

Where is the "concerted effort" to you? and concerted with who?

The prior google-cache link in my first article shows it clearly.

Naturally you've gone into concern-troll mode again, playing the innocent newbie "What, who me?".

Its almost like you forgot what is posted from one day to the next.

How very odd.

Shows what clearly ?

What do you mean by shows?

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