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Author: Adi Robertson
Lucasfilm Ltd.
Yesterday, the Disney Plus Twitter account encouraged fans to share their favorite Star Wars memory, promising it might show up “somewhere special” on May 4th. But a follow-up tweet suggested the hashtag came with some hefty legal baggage: “By sharing your message with us using #MayThe4th, you agree to our use of the message and your account name in all media and our terms of use here.”
It included a link to Disney’s terms of use, which total approximately 6,500 words.
Disney is notoriously heavy-handed about copyright, but even by those standards, the statement came off as both ambiguous and ridiculous. To many Twitter users, it sounded like Disney had claimed anybody posting #MayThe4th tweets was “sharing” them, and that by tweeting...
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Continue reading...
Yesterday, the Disney Plus Twitter account encouraged fans to share their favorite Star Wars memory, promising it might show up “somewhere special” on May 4th. But a follow-up tweet suggested the hashtag came with some hefty legal baggage: “By sharing your message with us using #MayThe4th, you agree to our use of the message and your account name in all media and our terms of use here.”
It included a link to Disney’s terms of use, which total approximately 6,500 words.
Disney is notoriously heavy-handed about copyright, but even by those standards, the statement came off as both ambiguous and ridiculous. To many Twitter users, it sounded like Disney had claimed anybody posting #MayThe4th tweets was “sharing” them, and that by tweeting...
Continue reading…
Continue reading...