Actress Cindy Lee Garcia has won a significant victory in her copyright case against Google over her request to have Google-owned YouTube take down the trailer for the controversial anti-Islam film Innocence Of Muslims. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in a 2-1 decision today (read it here) rejected Google’s assertion that the removal of the film amounted to a prior restraint of speech that violated the U.S. Constitution. The court is ordering YouTube to remove the video, and the video-sharing site could be hit with major penalties. “We are delighted that the Ninth Circuit has recognized the significant threat to Cindy Lee Garcia’s life and safety caused by Google and YouTube’s refusal to remove the propaganda film Innocence Of Muslims from the YouTube platform after Ms. Garcia made eight separate requests that they do so,” Garcia’s lawyer M. Cris Armenta said today after the verdict. Garcia had lost a lower-court ruling requesting the video be removed, but the 9th Circuit today called that decision an “abuse of discretion” and said Garcia “was likely to prevail” on the copyright claim, according to the opinion from Chief Judge Alex Kozinski.
Posted online in September 2012, the 14-minute trailer for Innocence Of Muslims caused violent protests around the Muslim world and calls for the filmmaker’s death. Garcia, who also received death threats, has long claimed she never signed a release form for her participation in the ... Read More »
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Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Google Ordered To Take Down ‘Innocence Of Muslims’ Video After Actress’ Copyright Case Overturned
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