Another thing about counters: you need to enter your name and address to make it legit. Who wants to send their details to those people. If you are registered as a company you can at least put the address of the company but if you are a sole proprietor then it is your home address.
Useful tool to see who is after you the most (replace with your domain name at the end): :
https://transparencyreport.google.co...YOURDOMAINNAME
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Originally Posted by fullhdporn
1I even got hit with a DMCA for hosted content which was provided as marketing and I auto tweeted it out... wtf !
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You have to be cautious with that and read your cam sponsor's terms to be sure : for example, in the case of Chaturbate, you are allowed to do Twitter promo but not allowed to use a model picture even if provided trough their API after the show has ended. Anything that shows up in "Twitter media timeline" is therefore off boundariies of what you can do. Other sponsors do allow for offline profile pics.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pryda
Do you know of any case where a counter-notice resulted in a lawsuit, in our adult world?
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I do not know any case. I have not researched that extensively though.
The fact that few (none?) go to that extend is probably why those dmca cowboys file the notices in the first place.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pryda
I'm under the impression that most complaints are based on what Google shows. I don't think blocking bots would make a difference.
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I see what you mean, you are suggesting the bots are using Google results as opposed to crawl our sites. You could be right.