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To report copyright infridgement on youwatch.org, you will want to contact customer service directly if they don't have a report button for the videos. There is not much more that can be done unless the copyright holder actually catches the material on the website. Then they can ask that it be taken down through legal action.
Please report it by clicking "Report Abuse" in the upper right corner of the answer page. Then select the "Plagiarism / Copyright Infringement" option and click "Send Report."
Without permission, yes it would be an infringement of the artists right to control distribution of his/her music.
You can contact the local FBI or the RIAA to snitch.
Nike has an email hotline for this: counterfeit@nike.com
This site might help: http://webdesign.about.com/od/copyright/a/aa081700a.htm
This phrase is often found on websites that allow posting of third-party content. The site is indemnifying itself against infringement by its users. YouTube, for example, would want to be exempted from prosecution for infringement for activities by uploaders over whom they have no control.
Luckily it was shut down due to copyright infringement. The site was not uplifting for the LGBT Community. Instead the basis of the site was cyber bullying and messiness.
If you are the owner of a copyright you can sue someone who infringes upon your copyright. If you are not the owner, you can report the infringement to the person (or business) who is. The police will not investigate the crime, it can only be dealt with by litigation.
Twitter makes it very easy to report copyright and trademark violations via the link below.
YouTube removes copyrighted materials from its website to avoid a contributory/vicarious infringement lawsuit. In MGM v. Grokster (the most recent Supreme Court case on contributory infringement), the Court said that some of the main factors for finding Grokser (a peer to peer site) liable were that it did not sufficiently police infringement even though it could have, and it received a continual financial benefit from the infringing material from ad revenue. YouTube (naturally) does not want to be the target of an infringement lawsuit, and so it does go through and remove copyrighted material when it can. If it remained willfully blind to the infringing material on its site, or if it knew about the copyright violations but did nothing about it, YouTube would likely be found liable for indirect infringement.
Should you be bullied on this site report it to a supervisor.