More than that, they need to clone a website and enter a date in the past. Then they need to fill out a form using DMCA sworn statement language. The must know what they're doing is illegal. That's not much of a deterrent when there's no real enforcement and it's so easy for these outfits to make a quick buck.
One big flaw is that anyone, anything, anywhere can submit a DMCA request/"demand." If they had to be done in person at a US courthouse then there would be a record of exactly who made the false claim. As they are now, they are functionally anonymous.
This might sound wacky, but the more pervasive AI becomes the more important it will become to link any significant requests to real humans. That might be legal requests, but it will also include financial services, etc.
srj|2 years ago
AJ007|2 years ago
This might sound wacky, but the more pervasive AI becomes the more important it will become to link any significant requests to real humans. That might be legal requests, but it will also include financial services, etc.