Let me find out something ...
If I take the centos iso and rename it to (some famous movie) .mp4 and send it to some hosting, can it and probably be removed by copyright?
A better example.
I get the centos iso and rename it to a random, unformatted name. I upload the file and leave the download link on a blog that promises to download the (famous movie). Can it be removed?
>>59814337
>>59814318
It will be taken down if it harms a kikes income.
>>59814318
It probably will.
You can get any file taken down by making a public pastebin post like ### KUBO AND THE TWO STRINGS ### Release: Yify ### Video: libvpx-vp9 in MKV (8200kbps) ### Language: English ### etc..... and then eventually the link you want removed. Split it across different lines obviously
Here in the Netherlands, where we have some of the most data centers in the world, they did a test with dozens of hosts.
And only one followed the proper notice and takedown procedure. Where the host allowed you to look at it first. Then they could escalate it and the host would check the rights.
Most did no research at all. Only some small local one.
Can I re-encode a movie to 5kbps 128*72px and distribute it freely?