Prince to Sue YouTube, eBay
U.S. pop star Prince plans to sue YouTube and other major Web sites
for unauthorized use of his music in a bid to "reclaim his art on
the Internet."
Prince said on Thursday that YouTube could not argue it had no
control over which videos users posted on its site.
"YouTube ... are clearly able (to) filter porn and pedophile material but appear to choose not to filter out the unauthorized music and film content which is core to their business success," a statement released on his behalf said.
YouTube responded by saying it was working with artists to help them manage their music on the site.
"Most content owners understand that we respect copyrights, we work every day to help them manage their content, and we are developing state-of-the-art tools to let them do that even better," said YouTube chief counsel Zahavah Levine.
"We have great partnerships with major music labels all over the world that understand the benefit of using YouTube as another way to communicate with their fans."
In addition to YouTube, Prince plans legal action against online auctioneer eBay and Pirate Bay, a site accused by Hollywood and the music industry as being a major source of music and film piracy.
"YouTube ... are clearly able (to) filter porn and pedophile material but appear to choose not to filter out the unauthorized music and film content which is core to their business success," a statement released on his behalf said.
YouTube responded by saying it was working with artists to help them manage their music on the site.
"Most content owners understand that we respect copyrights, we work every day to help them manage their content, and we are developing state-of-the-art tools to let them do that even better," said YouTube chief counsel Zahavah Levine.
"We have great partnerships with major music labels all over the world that understand the benefit of using YouTube as another way to communicate with their fans."
In addition to YouTube, Prince plans legal action against online auctioneer eBay and Pirate Bay, a site accused by Hollywood and the music industry as being a major source of music and film piracy.