Several major football leagues and broadcasters, including UEFA, the Premier League, and LaLiga, have criticized X (formerly Twitter) for its lack of effective measures against live-streaming piracy. They sent a letter to X's CEO, Linda Yaccarino, urging the platform to take piracy more seriously, accusing it of becoming a hub for illegal streaming. The letter highlights a decline in technical support for anti-piracy efforts since Elon Musk took over and contrasts X's approach with other platforms like META and YouTube, which have been more proactive in combating piracy. The organizations are calling for improved anti-piracy measures and greater transparency in takedowns.
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Discussion (2)
That's how you know they don't give a flying **** about copyright.
If they don't respect large media organizations, you can bet your bottom dollar that they won't care about anything pertaining theft to creators publishing to these platforms.
Can't wait till musk sells twitter data to be trained on by AI. All of the copyrighted content will be naturally included in the training sets.