Social-Media

Twitter, Facebook , and Instagram have lifted a copyright lawsuit against Trump

All of them have drawn Trump copyright from their sites on Twitter, FB and Instagram, says Reuters.
 
The near-four-minute video shows pictures of late George Floyd of Minneapolis who died on 25 May following a policewoman standing on his back for more than 8 minutes.
 
A video incident culminated in the demonstrations by the national police force.
 
Facebook and Instagram deleted video posts, and Twitter deactivated the video. Jack Dorsey, Twitter CEO, said, "Do not personally or not legitimately objected to the twitter ban by President Trump.
 
We have a DMCA complaint from a copyright holder.
 
 
An Instagram owned facebook speaker said that the copyright law of the Digital Millennium was given to Reuters. He was also a claimant of copyright. "Instagram's organizations should have the right to use the original art," said the speaker.
 
The video version of YouTube did not remove the content that was not in breach of the copyright. On Saturday morning, the YouTube video had nearly half a million views.
 
The person who brought the video copyright complaint titled "Healing Not Hatred" included pictures of Floyd and his speech, which he said "George Floyd 's death was a serious tragedy." It was not clear who filed the complaint.
 
Twitter launched two of President Trump's tweets last month, one which was used for "glorifying violence" and one for "potentially misleading" mail-in voting with the sentence: "When plunder begins, shooting starts."
 
Trump subsequently released a Management Directive to regulate websites.

 






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