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Igor2016-12-22 18:59:37
Copyright
Igor, 2016-12-22 18:59:37

How to remove information posted on a third-party site illegally?

Hello fellow experts!
Attention, question:
There is a site that provides legal support, consulting, etc., publishing articles by people competent in this industry.
It so happened that a dozen articles were published without the consent of the author.
Tried to get in touch, ask to delete, but it was unsuccessful.
It turned out that the domain is assigned to the owner from Kyiv, and the hosting is based in the USA, the site is Russian-language.
Tell me how to be? I can’t make ends meet where to turn, how to appeal.

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2 answer(s)
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xmoonlight, 2016-12-22
@xmoonlight

Initially, you need to prove that the articles were published illegally .
Those. you must have all documented reasons to call their publication illegal!
And only then, try to negotiate with the owner (s) of that site with the provision of evidence (with the provision of copies of these materials confirming your rights to them and indicating the points of violation of the law) or immediately to the court.

Z
Zr, 2016-12-23
@Zr

Uh... To begin with, I correctly understood that a "competent in this field" author of articles on legal topics came with the most popular copyright question on the IT forum? Well, welcome, but they don't give consultations here - in the sense that IANAL, TINLA.
So, firstly, it’s worth realizing that if your work is so useful and interesting to the people that it is being replicated with might and main (by the way, you can feel free to be happy for yourself, not everyone manages to write something so useful :-), then remove it from the Internet *impossible*. And do not care that the laws of all capitalist countries protect your monopoly. Here even multinational corporations are powerless.
However, if you have something there that few people need, then you can try. The link here that is most unstable to your blackmail is, of course, hosting in the USA - feel free to write a complaint to them using the “DCMA takedown” form - there are a lot of examples on the Web. It is not a fact that you will be able to justify your author's monopoly, if before that your work has not been published anywhere in the public domain and is not registered in the Library of Congress, but an attempt is not torture, especially since they do not take money for it.
If it doesn’t work out with hosting, you can at least snitch on Google - there, judging by the massive errors of the first kind, there is a complete presumption of good faith of the complainant - the page will be excluded from the issue.

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