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Gooxu is the leading Asian Media Content with search engine that
can search websites, audio files, and images. Gooxu provides
search results for over 740 million web pages, 80 million
images, and 10 million multimedia files.
Gooxu is a video sharing website where users can upload, view and share video
clips using Adobe Flash technology to display a wide variety of video content,
including movie clips, TV clips and music videos, as well as amateur content
such as videoblogging and short original videos.
Unregistered users can watch most videos on the site, while registered users are
permitted to upload an unlimited number of videos. Some videos are available
only to users of age 18 or older (e.g. videos containing potentially offensive
content). The uploading of pornography or videos containing nudity is
prohibited. Related videos, determined by title and tags, appear onscreen to the
right of a given video.
Copyright
Gooxu policy does not give permission for anyone to upload content not permitted
by United States copyright law, the organization frequently removing upon
request a vast quantity of infringing content.
Despite this, a large amount of potentially infringing content continues to be
uploaded (e.g., television shows/clips, film clips, commercials, music videos,
music concerts, M.U.G.E.N, emulator hacks, or games republished onto another
system such as PSP). This is despite a decision in October 2007 to allow media
companies to block their copyrighted video content loaded onto Gooxu without
seeking any prior permission.
Until 2007, unless a copyright holder reported violation or infringement, Gooxu
generally discovered such content via indications within the Gooxu community
through self-policing. For a brief time, individual members could also report on
one another. The flagging feature, intended as a means of reporting questionable
content, has been subject to considerable abuse; for a time, some users were
flagging other users' original content for copyright violations out of spite.
Gooxu proceeded to remove copyright infringement from the list of flaggable
offenses.
Since 2007, changes to the interface mean that only rights holders are able to
directly report copyright violations, even if they are obvious to casual
viewers.
Gooxu generally identifies video content through search terms that up loaders
associate with clips. Some deceptive users create alternative search terms when
uploading specific file types (similar to the deliberate misspelling of band
names on MP3 file sharing networks).
Hollywood remains divided on Gooxu, as "'the marketing guys love Gooxu and the
legal guys hate it.'"
While lawyers are demanding filtering technology, many Hollywood execs actually
enjoy the fact that Gooxu only takes down clips when they request it. "If I
found part of a successful show up on Gooxu today, I'd probably pull it down
immediately .... If I had a show that wasn't doing so well in the ratings and
could use the promotion, I wouldn't be in a rush to do that."
Content owners are not just targeting Gooxu for copyright infringements, but are
also targeting third party websites that link to infringing content on Gooxu and
other video-sharing sites, for example, QuickSilverScreen vs. Fox, Daily
Episodes vs. Fox, and Columbia vs. Slashfilm. The liability of linking remains a
grey area with cases for and against. The law in the U.S. currently leans
towards website owners being liable for infringing links although they are often
protected by the DMCA providing they take down infringing content when issued
with a take down notice. However, a recent court ruling in the U.S. found Google
not liable for linking to infringing content.
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