Hello guys and gals, it’s me Mutahar again! This time we take a look at an individual known as Techlead once again. This creator has had an incredibly controversial history but it’s in the last few days he’s decided to take advantage of the YouTube copyright system to gain information on his critics and unlawfully remove their content. YouTube needs to step in. Thanks for watching!

Added some clarification to the original title as it’s a bit clickbaity.

tl;dw: A YouTuber by the name of “TechLead” has openly admitted to using the DMCA process to file illegitimate takedown requests against people who use any footage of him while making exposé videos.

The way it works is by filing a DMCA request against the video, which then forces the creator to respond to the complaint or have the video permanently deleted. Because DMCA complaints are a legal process, responding to the complaint entails supplying a lot of your personal information, which TechLead has been accused of leaking in the past. This forces creators to either expose their personal information to a person who has already had credible doxxing allegations made against them, or have their video removed and their channel permanently stricken.

This process is not only a violation of YouTube’s ToS, but also several US laws; depending on what he does with the information he gets from the complaint response, it may fall under doxxing laws, but also knowingly submitting a frivolous DMCA request is considered perjury.

  • Chozo@fedia.ioOP
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    5 months ago

    I don’t know how this changes without a class action lawsuit against Google.

    I don’t think Google would be the right target for this. YouTube’s DMCA process sucks because the DMCA, itself, sucks. The DMCA was conceived and written during a very early period of massive advancements in digital media production and was already outdated by the time it was put into place, and is absolutely archaic by today’s standards. YouTube’s process is basically just following the legal process as it’s written, so they don’t have much wiggle room to make improvements.

    The DMCA needs to be rewritten to reflect modern technology and culture. I’d say it should be scrapped completely, but I know better than to dream too big.