On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 10:22:38PM -0500, Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
On 03/16/2017 10:07 PM, grarpamp wrote:
https://lbry.io/news/20000-illegal-college-lectures-rescued Today, the University of California at Berkeley has deleted 20,000 college lectures from its YouTube channel. Berkeley removed the videos because of a lawsuit brought by two students from another university under the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Overall, I think the thought behind the ADA was well-intentioned.
What happened is that Berkeley was sued under the ADA because some of the videos weren't captioned. Worse, this was legacy content left online after Berkeley decided not to add new content.
This, to me, is a clear case of unintended consequences, and probably not what those who drafted the ADA had in mind.
Absolute, fscking hogwash! Underpaid or compromised (((lawyers))) failed to state the bloody obvious - you cannot compel performance. That's an age old common law legal principal enshrined in all 'common law' and ex-English colonial jurisdictions such as the USA! For a few disabled folk to bring a University's entire historical video library to censure, for legal grounds, means that the fundamental legal grounds of sanity were not put forth, and or were otherwise ignored by the courts and or the UCB lawyers. This is the kind of consequence that (((disabled attention seekers))) are only too happy to receive. Some ridiculous corner case in some ridiculous cotton wool snowflake statutory act was "enforced" by force of courts or UCB "we give up". "Less fortunate" "underprivileged" "disabled" or "otherwise stupid" folks are granted statutory right to be bullies with force of law, against most of our community, all in the name of political correctness and "muh disabled ass i gonna be underprivileged if ya don stop da world for me now!" Cite the original complaint, response and final rulings documents if you want to insinuate this as "unintended consequences", otherwise, bullshit!
We copied all 20,000 and are making them permanently available for free via LBRY. Is this legal? Almost certainly. The vast majority of the lectures are licensed under a Creative Commons license that allows attributed, non-commercial redistribution. The price for this content has been set to free and all LBRY metadata attributes it to UC Berkeley. Additionally, we believe that this content is legal under the First Amendment.
I support the preservation effort. BTW, someone needs to tell LBRY they aren't on Wheel of Fortune and vowels don't cost $250 apiece...
-- Certified deplorable shitlord anti-snowflake. Ethnic nationalism FTW! "You can't invoke an ancient frog god Kek to meme a presidential win. ... That's where you're wrong, kiddo!"