Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

> people even created content purely for fun and the entertainment of others. Wow! Hardly believable now, especially reading this post I am replying to.

Believe it or not, I shitpost on the internet for fun. Sometimes, I get flagged for bullshit reasons (moreso Reddit than hackernews), and there's nothing I can do about it. Since it's for fun though, it doesn't really cost me anything outside some minor frustration.

> That said, again, how is a small creator, which at least several nines of all creators are, supposed to scratch up the legal and financial resources to fight massive corporate interests and industrial scale fraud?

This article is talking about a small-time copyright troll who is obviously pretending to be Nintendo. There is virtually no risk of calling their bluff because they obviously aren't going to commit identity fraud in court. Chances are, the troll has better things to do than to leak your personal information, but if you're worried about that, you can hire a lawyer to file the counter notification for you for a couple hundred bucks. I'm sure there are ways to do this yourself as well if you need to fight a lot of claims. Just spitballing here, but if you have a business owner friend, you can use their business address and have them be your representative and file on your behalf.

If we're talking about large corporations with armies of lawyers like real Nintendo, then there's not much you can do besides hiring a good lawyer and listening to their advice. For very straightforward cases, you can probably play lawyer yourself so long as if you do enough research and preparation (again, just spitballing). Also, it's not like Nintendo is unaffected by legal costs. In fact, any legal action will probably be several times more expensive for them than it would be for you. If they're pursuing legal action, they likely genuinely believe they're in the right.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: