"Policing" requirements on links that are unsustainable for small businesses. Something that might have hit home on an NPR interview I heard earlier today: how many people do you have to police your own blog comment section? The usual response from shills is to say that the bill doesn't target those sites. But the point is that it's so poorly drafted that it's likely to sweep them in anyway, by abuse of process.
Speaking of which: Prior abuse of DMCA process against sites like veoh, which got painted as pirates, and subjected to legal or government action, when they weren't. Including at least one fraudulent takedown which was used to censor a news story about a prior fraudulent takedown: http://www.theverge.com/2011/12/14/2636680/universal-has-tec...
Speaking of which: Prior abuse of DMCA process against sites like veoh, which got painted as pirates, and subjected to legal or government action, when they weren't. Including at least one fraudulent takedown which was used to censor a news story about a prior fraudulent takedown: http://www.theverge.com/2011/12/14/2636680/universal-has-tec...