Such measures might not be necessary if the site allows you to make corrections or deletions after the fact or does not permanently disable access to your work or comments. Unfortunately, many sites deny access after the fact completely and forever as a penalty for being BAD.
Here then is the means to address a situation in which you want to delete your material and comments but the site has disabled your access. A DMCA Take Down notice includes copies in "unpublished" sections where other users can continue to post comments and replies and receive links to your material by email, even though the material is in the "unpublished" section. Sites must comply in deed and not just words or suffer the consequences of their resulting copyright violation.
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Signing UpStep 1Gathering the necessary information
The name of the Instructables DMCA agent for instance is:
Eric Wilhelm
Instructables, Inc.
1467 Park Ave
Emeryville, CA 94608
dmca@instructables.com
510-653-1643
Normally the phone number which is provided for the DMCA agent is a fax number, but if it is not then you can send a certified letter to the snail mail address. Note that a picture is not necessary, although a likeness or avatar might help the site's staff connect the name with the person...
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The DMCA is deceptive in seeming "DIY" and consumer-friendly. Unfortunately, just as often as not, someone making a DMCA takedown demand does it incorrectly under the statute -- either they apply DMCA procedures to non-copyright-based claims, or they make a defective claim which does not meet the requirements for the procedure. But the real danger is the backlash: the DMCA itself provides not just a "rebuttal" by the target, but also creates a right for the "target" to sue the complainer. And many have done just that, and some have gotten very large damage awards.
I have an article discussing the dangers of incorrect DMCA takedowns:
http://arborlaw.biz/blog/2008/02/05/dmca-takedowns-and-cd/
It's for a legal audience so it's dry and technical -- but it gives the citations and steps through the process of making a valid takedown. It also discusses all the things you can NOT use a DMCA takedown for, such as: statements that are false that someone says against you (slander, libel, disparagement); trademark complaints; trying to eliminate a competitor; getting back at a former lover.... Sounds trivial, but if you go to chillingeffects.org you will see that people use the DMCA for ALL kinds of inappropriate reasons.
Carol Shepherd, Attorney
Arborlaw PLC
Your question is a bit incoherent (it is not possible for a legal process to be a trade secret), but I'll dress down your language and assume that you're asking if law should be practiced exclusively by lawyers. The answer is no, it should not. That is not the case, in fact, and I believe that as a normative statement, as well. It is a competent person's right to defend herself in court, and any citizen may file properly-formed motions.
However, for the third time, I will remind you that this is not the matter at hand. Law is ultimately tested in the context of particular facts, in the real world. A DMCA notice results in the removal of a piece of content, or it does not. A subsequent lawsuit has an outcome favoring the plaintiff, or one favoring the defendant. Until one of these things happens, anything one says is theory.
This is always the case, but for an convoluted argument like the one you've made (that unconscionable terms of service can nullify the copyright assignment porton of the TOS and thus leave a web site open to a DMCA claim) it is even more important to put the idea into practice before you can claim that it will work.
So, I once again challenge you to show that your Instructable works as advertised.
Note, again, that this does not need to involve a lawyer. So if you feel the need for me to reassure you for a third time that you can do it yourself, please just reread these threads again and get to work.
I am not naive enough to speak in the absolutes that you do, especially when it comes to legal matters, but I will say that most user-generated content sites on the web have copyright assignment as part of their terms of service. Go ahead and look around. Almost any place where you can upload images, comment, or post text of any sort will have a "User Content License" that assigns at least part of the contributor's copyrights to the site. Some of these are more relaxed than others, but they all operate under the same principle: The user agrrees the TOS upon signing up or contibuting content. Most well-known sites have had those clauses tested, legally, and all have prevailed.
Again, I am not naive enough to think that this will necessarily continue to be the case. It's possible that, in the future, given a certain situation, a user might be able to make a valid legal argument that would prevail in court. However, the burden is most definitely on that user to provide the rationale for the court to rule against well-estabilshed precedent.
You are that user. All anyone reading this Instructable would ask is: "Does it work?" It's a fairly low bar that most Instructables are subject to. If you're really going to answer that question, you're going to have to step up your game, significantly.
While the Instructable is generally useful, though, it may not work in the particular situation that you mention. Users may not have a DMCA claim over their content on most sites, depending on the Terms of Service that users agree to when they create an account.
On Instructables, for example, users retain almost all IP rights to their work (which is pretty cool, IMHO), but they also grant Instructables the right to display that content. Check out Section 7a of the Terms of Service:
"With respect to Content you submit or make available for inclusion on publicly accessible areas of Instructables, you grant Instructables the world-wide, royalty free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive and fully sublicensable license to use, distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, publicly perform and publicly display such Content solely for the purposes of providing and promoting Instructables."
Generally, an author can assign part or all of her copyright protection via contract, which is exactly what users do when they agree to Terms of Service on a web site. This is also how cool legal instruments such as Creative Commons licenses work.