Of course, his comments were directed mainly at Viacom Inc., which last month filed a $1 billion lawsuit against YouTube accusing the site of copyright infringement. The two have been involved in a war of words ever since about which entity the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) provides more protection to in this case.
"As that product rolls out, the issue becomes moot," Schmidt said in response to questions from an interviewer's question about how the tool might affect the suit. "We are automating that process to claim that content." Microsoft Corp. recently stopped taking new users for its Soapbox video sharing site until it improves anti-piracy measures.
Source:
Reuters
Written by: James Delahunty @ 17 Apr 2007 18:16