For the second time in three years, a federal judge has dismissed Viacom's $1 billion copyright lawsuit against YouTube, saying the online video site doesn't have to police itself as long as it removes infringing videos when copyright owners give notice.
US District Court Judge Louis Stanton in New York ruled yesterday that Viacom never proved YouTube was aware of thousands of videos Viacom said were stolen from its TV networks such as Comedy Central and BET.
Viacom Inc. Said it will appeal.
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The ruling upholds Stanton's original decision from June 2010 and leaves in place the current understanding of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998. Stanton also ruled that YouTube did not act with "willful blindness" to the issue, noting that in 2007 it removed 100,000 videos in one day after being notified by Viacom they were infringing.
Last April, the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals returned the case to the district court for re-evaluation, saying a jury might conclude YouTube was aware it was hosting pirated material.
Google Inc, which bought YouTube in 2006 when it was a year old, said the ruling marks an important day for the Internet.
"This is a win not just for YouTube, but for people everywhere who depend on the Internet to exchange ideas and information," Google's general counsel, Kent Walker, said in a statement.