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Unjust and extraterritorial law: DMCA

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Revision as of 00:13, 7 June 2025 by HouseStationLive.com (talk | contribs) (add " " on quote)

The DMCA is a US legal framework that deprives the accused of the presumption of innocence by removing or blocking their creative work immediately, without any formal investigation or judicial hearing. Once a takedown notice is filed, the burden is on the user to prove they are not infringing, often by revealing personal information and accepting legal risk. The content remains offline until the conflict is resolved, regardless of the user's good faith or the legitimacy of the original claim.

At the same time, the major online platforms that control most global publication and communication are all legally based in the United States. This includes services such as YouTube, Twitch, Facebook, Instagram and others. Even when local consumer law requires these companies to maintain a presence in each country, their terms of service clearly state that every user, whether located in Beijing, Timbuktu or Helsinki, must follow US law and appear before US courts in case of a dispute. This effectively imposes a foreign legal system on millions of people worldwide who have never had any connection to the United States, making the DMCA one of the clearest examples of extraterritorial law applied through private corporate infrastructure.

How it works

Section 512 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act establishes that online service providers shall not be held liable for copyright infringement if they respond expeditiously to remove or disable access to material that is claimed to be infringing, upon notification from the copyright holder.

In simple terms, anyone can file a DMCA claim... whether manually or automatically... and the content will be removed first, without any investigation or hearing. The responsibility falls entirely on the user to prove that their use was legal. This includes proving fair use, public domain status, or authorship, which may be difficult or impossible without legal assistance.

As a result, virtually every major platform operating in the global digital space enforces DMCA takedowns. This includes not only corporate platforms like YouTube, Instagram and Twitch, but also so-called alternative or decentralized platforms such as Mastodon, Odysee, PeerTube, Ghost.org, and a video platform whose name blends "Bit" and "Chute" (commonly written as one word). Even services hosted outside the United States apply similar mechanisms. Kick, based in Australia, explicitly refers to the DMCA in its content policy. Pixelfed, based in Canada, is subject to Canada's "notice and notice" system, which forwards copyright complaints to users and exposes them to risk, even when no court order is involved.

In practice, this means that no matter what platform you use, your content can be taken down by an automated or human moderator as soon as a report is filed. It will then be up to you, the user, to provide legal proof that your content is lawful if you want to restore access or visibility. This reverses the usual burden of proof and turns every user into a potential suspect by default.

Why it is a problem: Systemic conflict with constitutional and international law

Violation of due process and presumption of innocence

The DMCA contradicts the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, which guarantee fair trial and due process. In In re Winship (1970)[1] and a video platform whose name blends "Bit" and "Chute" (commonly written as one word), the Supreme Court confirmed that the presumption of innocence is essential to any criminal proceeding. In Coffin v. United States (1895)[2], the Court famously stated that the presumption of innocence is axiomatic and elementary. According to the New York Family Court Act, this principle applies even in juvenile cases and should never be bypassed without oversight.

Yet the DMCA bypasses due process entirely. Content is removed immediately upon complaint, without trial, without judicial scrutiny, and without any neutral evaluation. The accused is not presumed innocent but treated as a violator by default. There is no adversarial procedure, no verification of facts, and often no way to respond without waiving privacy and assuming legal risk.

Extraterritorial application without protection

This system is not limited to US citizens. The DMCA is enforced globally by American platforms regardless of the user's nationality or jurisdiction. Millions of people outside the United States (who are neither protected by the US Constitution nor able to access US courts) are subjected to takedowns under this framework. These users may be forced to submit to US legal standards, waive their privacy rights, or abandon their content altogether.

By treating non-American users as if they were under US law, the DMCA extends far beyond its national scope. It imposes a foreign legal system on the entire internet, without legal standing or democratic legitimacy in most affected countries.

Example: Overriding national licensing and cultural sovereignty

The global reach of the DMCA does not only suppress individual rights. It also overrides national legal frameworks that are supposed to authorize the lawful use of copyrighted content.

In France, web broadcasters are required to pay licensing fees to SACEM, the official agency representing authors, composers and publishers. A french station like "House Station Live .com" can fully comply with French law by paying this fee, which grants the right to broadcast copyrighted music on the internet worldwide. The SACEM license is not restricted to national territory. It is designed for global web distribution, taking into account the cross-border nature of online access.

But this legal authorization becomes useless the moment the content is hosted on a platform based in the United States. Services such as YouTube, Twitch or SoundCloud operate under US law. They do not recognize foreign licenses like those issued by SACEM. Instead, they rely on the DMCA to manage copyright enforcement through automated systems. A perfectly legal French broadcast can be removed or muted as if it were a case of piracy.

The result is that the user, despite having paid for international rights, is flagged as an infringer. They lose visibility, access and sometimes monetization. Their reputation can be harmed by repeated copyright strikes, while no platform takes responsibility and no French court offers protection. The license becomes legally valid on paper, but irrelevant in practice.

This is not a misunderstanding between systems. It is a power grab. The DMCA functions online as if it were the only copyright law that matters. It cancels foreign authorizations automatically, without legal standing outside the US and without being challenged by any authority. The user ends up paying for a right that is ignored in most online contexts, and has no meaningful way to enforce it.

Example: Fair use and automated retaliation

An American freelance content creator uploads a reaction video after a Formula 1 race. In his analysis, he includes a five-second clip of a key moment from the broadcast. The excerpt is used under the rules of fair use. It is not monetized directly, and it appears in a clearly transformative and critical context, which is protected by US copyright law.

Despite this, the video is flagged and removed within minutes by an automated system operated by the rights holder. The creator receives a copyright strike. His content disappears, his channel visibility drops, and several clients cancel ongoing work because of the perceived legal risk. Within a few days, his freelance business collapses. All of this because of five seconds of footage used legally.

There is no review process. No human being examines the case. The decision is made by an automated system trained to match pixels and audio patterns, without considering the legal context. The company that issued the takedown is based overseas. If the creator wants to contest the strike, he must submit personal information, accept legal liability, and prepare to defend himself in a foreign jurisdiction.

Hiring a lawyer involves not just legal fees, but potentially booking a flight (he might be in Florida, which is 5,000 kilometers from Silicon Valley), hiring an interpreter, and navigating a legal system he has never interacted with. All of this just to argue that he used content he had a legal right to use in his own country.

This is how the DMCA handles fair use. It is not treated as a right but as an exception you have to defend manually, at your own risk and cost, with no guarantee that anyone will listen.

Section 512(c)(1)(C) of the DMCA: "Upon notification of claimed infringement [...] the service provider shall respond expeditiously to remove, or disable access to, the material that is claimed to be infringing or to be the subject of infringing activity."

This clause requires platforms to take down content quickly when they receive a complaint. However, it does not require them to restore the content after a dispute is filed. The law protects platforms only if they remove the content, which gives them a strong incentive to delete first and ask questions later. This one-sided structure undermines the presumption of innocence and forces users to prove their legitimacy after the damage is already done.

References