Originally posted by: CrackRabbit
ONE BEEELION DOLLARS!!
Originally posted by: funboy42
LOL because of youtube and some of the videos replayed on there I wonder how many new viewers they have gotter, or gotten back from people who stoped watching the shows but say a re-cap on there and decided to watch again.
If it wasnt for youtube, I wouldnt be watching south park again myself. I stopped, but after seeing the return of Chef, Im hooked all over again, and there are other clips that have made me watch other shows I would never of found or liked had I not seen them on youtube.
Originally posted by: ThePresence
Hmmm, I wonder why they didn't sue until after Google bought it?
Originally posted by: mugs
For the same reason people don't sue homeless people.
On one hand, the law protects service providers from liability for the actions of their users. But on the other hand, Viacom has a point that YouTube exists almost entirely for the purpose of sharing copyright infringing video clips.
But it's mostly short clips, and Viacom should recognize that as free advertising. It's just the full/half episodes that they should care about.
Originally posted by: Roguestar
Originally posted by: CrackRabbit
ONE BEEELION DOLLARS!!
rofl
I'd love to see how they justify the price tag on this lawsuit. Not like lost primetime viewers cost them $1billion.
Originally posted by: ThePresence
Hmmm, I wonder why they didn't sue until after they brought out their own viral video hosting service after failing to reach a distribution agreement
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: ThePresence
Hmmm, I wonder why they didn't sue until after Google bought it?
For the same reason people don't sue homeless people.
On one hand, the law protects service providers from liability for the actions of their users. But on the other hand, Viacom has a point that YouTube exists almost entirely for the purpose of sharing copyright infringing video clips.
But it's mostly short clips, and Viacom should recognize that as free advertising. It's just the full/half episodes that they should care about.
Originally posted by: ElFenix
Originally posted by: ThePresence
Hmmm, I wonder why they didn't sue until after they brought out their own viral video hosting service after failing to reach a distribution agreement
