Twitter Doesn’t Want You Sharing This Link About TV Piracy

Twitter Doesn’t Want You Sharing This Link About TV Piracy

Twitter is home to some of the vilest neo-Nazis, racists, and homophobes on the planet. But don’t even think about discussing the one topic that’s apparently taboo on the platform: Piracy of TV shows.

Twitter deleted numerous tweets over the weekend that linked to news stories about some TV episodes that had leaked online. And then Twitter even deleted follow-up tweets about the deletions.

TorrentFreak, a news site that regularly reports on piracy and copyright issues, first published a story on April 8 about the fact that episodes of several TV shows like American Gods, The 100, Bless This Mess, and Knightfall had leaked online before they were supposed to air. The episodes are watermarked screeners that are typically given to TV reviewers. TorrentFreak has called the leak “one of the largest breaches ever.”

It appears that the tweets have been deleted in response to a Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) takedown notice filed by the TV network Starz, according to email notifications sent to journalist Mathew Ingram and reviewed by Gizmodo. Starz airs American Gods in the U.S. but doesn’t own all of the shows that have leaked online.

Notably, the original TorrentFreak news story didn’t link out to pirate sites that are hosting the shows. But that hasn’t stopped Twitter from deleting multiple tweets from people who linked to the TorrentFreak story.

Even a tweet from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) was deleted.

The original news story did use screenshots like the one above to illustrate that the movies were screeners, complete with the watermark of someone named “Jessica Silvester.” The message, “For Screening Purposes Only,” is also visible in the shot, along with a watermark for the gambling site 1XBET. It’s not uncommon for gambling sites to team up with content pirates to get more visibility for their name.

To make matters even more complicated, Twitter has deleted tweets that link to a TorrentFreak follow-up story from April 11 in a process that Ingram has called “Kafka-esque.” Ingram’s tweet about the follow-up story was deleted over the weekend.

“I think it’s an egregious over-reaching interpretation of the DMCA and I’m disappointed that Twitter agreed to take my tweet down — and a similar tweet by the EFF — when they are clearly not infringing,” journalist Mathew Ingram told Gizmodo via Twitter DM. “And I think it’s extremely disturbing that Twitter is taking down tweets that have links to news articles in them.”

Twitter confirmed receipt of an email from Gizmodo yesterday but did not answer any questions about the deleted tweets. If you try to find the offending tweets online, they’re listed as “withheld.”

Yes, copyright holders have a right to issue DMCA notices when their content is being used inappropriately. But, again, TorrentFreak was merely reporting on the existence of the piracy, not linking out to it. If this stands, it’s a dangerous precedent for copyright law on the internet.

Gizmodo will update this article if we hear back from Twitter.

[TorrentFreak]


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