DGA Statement Regarding Viacom-YouTube Lawsuit

Taylor Hackford

June 30, 2010

Los Angeles – DGA President Taylor Hackford made the following statement today regarding the judge’s ruling in the Viacom lawsuit against YouTube:                

"We are extremely concerned about the implications of the judge's decision, which permits those who engage in or enable Internet theft to build sites using illegal content provided the site operators promise to take the illegal content down later if they are caught and notified. This decision means that content creators and copyright holders will carry 100% of the burden of policing the Internet and pursuing takedown measures for every instance of copyright infringement that they are able to find. Every content owner will need to search the Internet constantly and forever – a never-ending task of Sisyphean proportions. For our members who work on smaller independent or low-budget films, the burden will be even greater because they do not have the resources at their disposal to even begin tackling this impossible task. They will have no option but to watch helplessly while websites that are predicated on copyright infringement make money off the fruits of their labor.

"The content created by our members takes months or years of work and millions of dollars of investment to come to life. We fear that the precedent established in this ruling, if not overturned by the appeals court, could result in a drastic rising tide of Internet theft that could decimate our members' livelihoods, their pension and health plans, and their ability to continue creating the content that is beloved by people all over the world."

Contact
DGA Communications Department (310) 289-5333
press@dga.org