The service provider must restore the material within two weeks of receiving your notice, unless
the alleged copyright owner has filed a lawsuit within 10 business days of the original notice.
Assuming Capcom's Copyright Agent does not receive notice within 10 business days that
the alleged copyright owner has filed a legal action against the affected user, Capcom will restore the affected material within 10 - 14 business days following receipt of the counter-notification.
If Capcom receives a counter-notification, it will promptly provide a copy to
the alleged copyright owner who submitted the copyright notification, and will inform that person that Capcom will restore the affected material in 10 business days.
Not exact matches
The DMCA provides a process for a
copyright owner to give notification to an online service provider concerning
alleged copyright infringement.
In the
copyright infringement context, many Canadian ISPs participate in a «notice and notice» system whereby they forward notices to subscribers that
copyright owners allege have engaged in infringement.
It's up to the
copyright owner to pursue (
alleged) violations of
copyright - it's no one else's problem.
Not true, assuming the host is in the USA and follows the DMCA safe harbors, including removing the
alleged infringement when requested by the
copyright owners.
He has represented both
copyright owners and
alleged infringers in all aspects of litigation, from pre-lawsuit strategy development to ultimate resolution of the case.
The DMCA provides a process for a
copyright owner to give notification to an online service provider concerning
alleged copyright infringement.
Since we respect artist and content
owner rights, it is Innocence Project's policy to respond to
alleged infringement notices that comply with the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act of 1998 («DMCA»).
e) A statement, in which you state that the
alleged and disputed use of your work is not authorized by the
copyright owner, its agents or the law;
Please be sure to include the following information: (a) a description of the
copyrighted work you
allege is being infringed upon (and registration information if such work is registered with the
copyright office); (b) the location of the allegedly infringing material on the Site, (c) your signature (digital or hard - copy), (d) your address, telephone number, and e-mail address, and (e) a statement (notarized if possible and made under penalty of perjury that): (i) you are the
copyright owner or are authorized to act on the
copyright owner's behalf; (ii) you believe in good faith that the rights of the
copyright owner are being infringed, and that the uses of the allegedly infringing material are not authorized (either by the
copyright owner, its agents, or applicable law).
The
Owner filed a lawsuit against the ISP
alleging copyright infringement.
The lawsuits
allege that NeighborCity.com's
owner and operator, American Home Realty Network Inc., reproduced, displayed and distributed
copyrighted listing content, including photographs, without the MLSs» authorization.