Google received 235 million DMCA takedown requests and approved 91 percent

Google received 235 million DMCA takedown requests and approved 91 percent
Copyright holders stepped up their efforts to get infringing links taken down, sending 235 million DMCA takedown requests to Google so far in 2013.

Google allowed 91 percent of the search engine takedown requests, meaning only 21 million URLs were left untouched. Most of these were illegitimate or just duplicates of previous requests, says TorrentFreak.



The number of requests has grown exponentially in recent years. In 2011, Google received just 10 million notices, followed by 50 million in 2012. At the current rate, Google might be hit with 1 billion notices next year.

Looking further into the numbers, the music industry (led by the BPI and RIAA) sent an astonishing 72.5 million notices, followed by Twentieth Century Fox, Froytal Services (porn industry) and Microsoft at 19.3, 19.2 and 10.4 million takedown notices, respectively.

Google rejected 520,000 of the BPI's notices, but the clear winner (or loser) in regards to discarded notices was Lynda.com. The online software training web site submitted 1.18 million URLs and Google took no action on 57 percent of those.



Written by: Andre Yoskowitz @ 28 Dec 2013 18:52
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Google DMCA takedown
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  • 1 comment
  • dEwMe

    Wonder what type of stuff Lynda was trying to get taking down that got denied so often?

    Just my $0.02,

    dEwMe

    3.1.2014 12:10 #1

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