This lawsuit against a Cosby rape documentary is why fair use exists

6 11 2017

The production company that made The Cosby Show has sued the BBC (.pdf) over a documentary the British network aired about the rape allegations against Bill Cosby. Carsey-Werner, the production company that is the plaintiff in the case, says that the documentary is infringing its copyright because it uses eight audiovisual clips and two musical cues from The Cosby Show.

The documentary, titled Bill Cosby—Fall of an American Icon, was broadcast on a BBC channel in the United Kingdom on June 5 of this year. That was the same day that Cosby’s prosecution for one assault began in Pennsylvania. (The trial ended in a hung jury.) The UK production company that made the documentary, Sugar Films, is also named as a defendant in the case.

The complaint lists eight video clips that are used in the documentary. All are between seven and 23 seconds long, except for one clip that lasts 51 seconds.

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The content in this post was found at https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2017/11/bbc-makes-a-doc-about-bill-cosby-rape-allegations-gets-sued-over-copyright/ and was not authored by the moderators of freeforafee.com. Clicking the title link will take you to the source of the post.


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