USA TODAY US Edition

Court reverses YouTube ruling

Says site should not have been forced to pull anti-Muslim film

- Elizabeth Weise

An appeals court has overturned a controvers­ial ruling that required YouTube to take down a video that disparaged Muslims.

When it was released in 2012, the short film titled Innocence of

Muslims sparked violence in the Middle East and death threats to the actors.

“The appeal teaches a simple lesson — a weak copyright claim cannot justify censorship in the guise of authorship,” the court wrote in its ruling.

Ninth Circuit chief judge Alex Kozinski had ruled in February that Cindy Lee Garcia, who appeared in the movie, could ask for an injunction against the movie because she said she and the oth- er actors in the movie were duped and anti-Muslim dialogue had been dubbed in over their lines without their knowledge.

The actors said that they were hired to appear in a movie called Desert Warrior and that the film and script they worked on did not include references to Mohammed or Islam.

Google, which owns YouTube, said Garcia had no copyright claim to the film. It also argued that allowing someone with a bit part in a movie to suppress the final product could set a dangerous precedent that could give anyone involved in a production the right to stop its release.

A federal appeals court agreed, ruling Monday that YouTube should not have been forced to take the movie down from its site, despite Garcia being “bamboozled when a movie producer transforme­d her five-second acting performanc­e into part of a blasphemou­s video proclamati­on against the prophet Mohammed,” the ruling said.

“This it not a blasphemy case, this is not a fraud case, this is a copyright case — an extremely unusual copyright case,” says Eugene Volokh, a law professor at UCLA who specialize­s in intellectu­al property issues.

In a typical movie, the filmmaker has an explicit or implicit agreement with the actors to use their work. In the film in question, Garcia claims that there is no contract because the filmmaker lied to her about the work in which she was performing, Volokh says.

The original opinion was a preliminar­y injunction that said Garcia owned the copyright to her work and could ask for the movie to be taken down from YouTube.

Monday’s 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling overturns that, saying the order to take the movie down was “unwarrante­d and incorrect.”

The 14-minute film was first uploaded to YouTube in 2012. It has also been titled The Real Life of Muhammad and Muhammad Movie Trailer.

The movie contains scenes that depict Mohammed as a womanizer, homosexual and child molester.

The court also said the original ruling “gave short shrift to the First Amendment values at stake,” though that question was not the focus of the case.

 ?? 2012 PHOTO BY JASON REDMOND, AP ?? Actress Cindy Lee Garcia sought an injunction on the film and said anti-Muslim dialogue had been dubbed in.
2012 PHOTO BY JASON REDMOND, AP Actress Cindy Lee Garcia sought an injunction on the film and said anti-Muslim dialogue had been dubbed in.

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