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Github has revealed that throughout 2019, the coding hosting platform took down more than 14,300 projects following DMCA complaints. Of the total notices received, only a tiny proportion was contested via counter-notice. Interestingly, the Microsoft-owned platform also reveals that one copyright complaint cannot be detailed as it's the subject of a gagging order.
The reasons for these claims are varied but most commonly on TF we cover copyright infringement issues. Recent examples can be found in a
notice filed by the MPA which of ‘pirate’ app TeaTV or when Instagram requested , ostensibly to protect its users’ copyrights.
In common with platforms like Google and Reddit, Github publishes an annual transparency report, which offers additional information on how
the company responds to requests for user information and removal of
content. Its latest, the sixth since 2014, reveals that in response to copyright complaints, Github permanently took down 14,320 projects.
“14,320 may sound like a lot of projects,” says Abby Vollmer, senior manager of policy at GitHub, “but it’s only about one one-hundredth of a percent of the repositories on GitHub at the end of 2019.”
“Based on DMCA data we’ve compiled over the last few years, we’ve seen an increase in DMCA notices received and processed, trending with growth in registered users over the same period of time, until this year,”Vollmer says.
“However, if we compare the number of repositories affected by DMCA notices to the approximate number of registered users over the same period of time, then we see an increase this year that correlates with that of GitHub’s community.”
“We received one this year and interestingly, it was about copyright but not under the DMCA. Since it was a gagged court order, we weren’t able to provide our usual transparency to the user of sharing and posting the notice, but we are able to report on the fact that we processed a takedown on this basis,”Vollmer concludes.Overall, the number of copyright complaints received by Github is relatively small considering its size. It’s unlikely that leading rightsholders see the platform as a major problem but over the years many have had projects taken down, including , , the body in charge of , and .A pirate site even got in on the act, but that was a .
Github’s 2019 Transparency Report can be viewed in full
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