Article 6KVG2 Fake AI law firms are sending fake DMCA threats to generate fake SEO gains

Fake AI law firms are sending fake DMCA threats to generate fake SEO gains

by
Kevin Purdy
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6KVG2)
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Enlarge / A person made of many parts, similar to the attorney who handles both severe criminal law and copyright takedowns for an Arizona law firm. (credit: Getty Images)

If you run a personal or hobby website, getting a copyright notice from a law firm about an image on your site can trigger some fast-acting panic. As someone who has paid to settle a news service-licensing issue before, I can empathize with anybody who wants to make this kind of thing go away.

Which is why a new kind of angle-on-an-angle scheme can seem both obvious to spot and likely effective. Ernie Smith, the prolific, ever-curious writer behind the newsletter Tedium, received a "DMCA Copyright Infringement Notice" in late March from "Commonwealth Legal," representing the "Intellectual Property division" of Tech4Gods.

The issue was with a photo of a keyfobfrom legitimate photo service Unsplashused in service of a post about a strange Uber ride Smith once took. As Smith detailed in a Mastodon thread, the purported firm needed him to "add a credit to our client immediately" through a link to Tech4Gods, and said it should be "addressed in the next five business days." Removing the image "does not conclude the matter," and should Smith not have taken action, the putative firm would have to "activate" its case, relying on DMCA 512(c) (which, in many readings, actually does grant relief should a website owner, unaware of infringing material, "act expeditiously to remove" said material). The email unhelpfully points to the main page of the Internet Archiveso that Smith might review "past usage records."

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