IsoHunt, which gets 30 million unique monthly visitors, asked the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to block the takedown order. It accuses the District Court's injunction of being too broad. One issue of concern is a mandated removal of "searches" from the site. The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) sent a list of keywords for the block, which include the number 10, and the word Dracula, for example.
"One person's copyrighted Wizard of Oz is another person's public domain work," Rothken said to Wired. "The motion picture studios do not have a monopoly on names on things. That is where the injunction is violating the First Amendment." Rothken said the MPAA should instead provide URLS or hashes which can positively identify an infringing link.
Rothken said that even if the court does not immediately intervene and block the injunction, it is unlikely that IsoHunt will go down any time soon. "Depending on what happens, there may or may not be proceedings to interpret the injunction in the trial court," he said.
Written by: James Delahunty @ 17 Jun 2010 0:30