DMCA Takedown Policy
Welcome to toddle's Guide to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, commonly known as the "DMCA." This page is not meant as a comprehensive primer to the statute
What Is the DMCA?
DMCA Notices In a Nutshell
A. How Does This Actually Work?
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Copyright Owner Investigates. A copyright owner should always conduct an initial investigation to confirm both (a) that they own the copyright to an original work and (b) that the content on toddle is unauthorized and infringing. This includes confirming that the use is not protected as fair use . A particular use may be fair if it only uses a small amount of copyrighted content, uses that content in a transformative way, uses it for educational purposes, or some combination of the above. Because code naturally lends itself to such uses, each use case is different and must be considered separately.
Example: An employee of Acme Web Company finds some of the company's code in a toddle repository. Acme Web Company licenses its source code out to several trusted partners. Before sending in a take-down notice, Acme should review those licenses and its agreements to confirm that the code on toddle is not authorized under any of them. -
Copyright Owner Sends A Notice. After conducting an investigation, a copyright owner prepares and sends a takedown notice to toddle. Assuming the takedown notice is sufficiently detailed according to the statutory requirements (as explained in the how-to guide ) and send it to the affected user. -
toddle Asks User to Make Changes. If the notice alleges that the entire contents of a repository infringe, or a package infringes, we will skip to Step 6 and disable the entire repository or package expeditiously. Otherwise, because toddle cannot disable access to specific files within a repository, we will contact the user who created the repository and give them approximately 1 business day to delete or modify the content specified in the notice. We'll notify the copyright owner if and when we give the user a chance to make changes. Because packages are immutable, if only part of a package is infringing, toddle would need to disable the entire package, but we permit reinstatement once the infringing portion is removed. -
User Notifies toddle of Changes. If the user chooses to make the specified changes, they must tell us so within the window of approximately 1 business day. If they don't, we will disable the repository (as described in Step 6). If the user notifies us that they made changes, we will verify that the changes have been made and then notify the copyright owner. -
Copyright Owner Revises or Retracts the Notice. If the user makes changes, the copyright owner must review them and renew or revise their takedown notice if the changes are insufficient. toddle will not take any further action unless the copyright owner contacts us to either renew the original takedown notice or submit a revised one. If the copyright owner is satisfied with the changes, they may either submit a formal retraction or else do nothing. toddle will interpret silence longer than two weeks as an implied retraction of the takedown notice. -
toddle May Disable Access to the Content. toddle will disable a user's content if: (i) the copyright owner has alleged copyright over the user's entire repository or package (as noted in Step 3); (ii) the user has not made any changes after being given an opportunity to do so (as noted in Step 4); or (iii) the copyright owner has renewed their takedown notice after the user had a chance to make changes. If the copyright owner chooses instead to revise the notice, we will go back to Step 2 and repeat the process as if the revised notice were a new notice. -
User May Send A Counter Notice. We encourage users who have had content disabled to consult with a lawyer about their options. If a user believes that their content was disabled as a result of a mistake or misidentification, they may send us a counter notice . As with the original notice, we will make sure that the counter notice is sufficiently detailed (as explained in the how-to guide ). If it is, we will pass the notice back to the copyright owner. -
Copyright Owner May File a Legal Action. If a copyright owner wishes to keep the content disabled after receiving a counter notice, they will need to initiate a legal action seeking a court order to restrain the user from engaging in infringing activity relating to the content on toddle. In other words, you might get sued. If the copyright owner does not give toddle notice within 10-14 days, by sending a copy of a valid legal complaint filed in a court of competent jurisdiction, toddle will re-enable the disabled content.
B. What About Clones? (or What's a Clone?)
C. What about Circumvention Claims?
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What the technical measures are; -
How they effectively control access to the copyrighted material; and -
How the accused project is designed to circumvent their previously described technological protection measures.
D. What If I Inadvertently Missed the Window to Make Changes?
E. Repeated Infringement
F. Submitting Notices
Learn More and Speak Up