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Comment Re:Invalid claims are the bane of my life (Score 1) 97

Both Facebook and YouTube have facilities for doing this.

My issue is mainly the administrative headache of having to fill in the forms when the claimants can apparently just do things automatically and at minimal/zero cost.

Personally I think I should be able to bill the music publishers an hourly rate for the time I waste dealing with their spurious claims.

Comment Invalid claims are the bane of my life (Score 5, Informative) 97

I run Facebook and YouTube accounts for a church. We've got a fairly good choir and from time to time share services and/or performances of music.

Our repertoire is almost exclusively more than a century old.

Any time we post a new video we get a copyright claim, without fail, accusing us of plagiarising someone else's recording of whatever the piece happens to be. Then it somehow becomes my job to explain that the video of people singing in a church is not, in fact, lip syncing to a professional recording.

My all time favourite was getting a copyright claim for some chant that, as far as I'm aware, dates from around the ninth century and was therefore (probably) a few years out of copyright.

Comment Re:This is why you call your bank before tourism (Score 1) 345

If you're going to make out of the ordinary purchases for overseas, or travel overseas, you always want to call your bank ahead of time. This is a standard operating procedure, and nothing to complain about on Slashdot.

It actually makes no difference in my experience.

I've had my bank shut down my VISA card twice now for the first international transactions made in exactly the location I've told them I'm going to be.

I think what happens is that a computer stops the card immediately and flags it for a human to review at a later point, but in the mean while I have a dead piece of plastic and an embarrassing situation at a checkout.

Cellphones

Passport Required To Buy Mobile Phones In the UK 388

David Gerard points out a Times Online story that says: "Everyone [in the UK] who buys a mobile telephone will be forced to register their identity on a national database under government plans to extend massively the powers of state surveillance. Phone buyers would have to present a passport or other official form of identification at the point of purchase. Privacy campaigners fear it marks the latest government move to create a surveillance society. A compulsory national register for the owners of all 72m mobile phones in Britain would be part of a much bigger database to combat terrorism and crime. Whitehall officials have raised the idea of a register containing the names and addresses of everyone who buys a phone in recent talks with Vodafone and other telephone companies, insiders say." We've recently discussed other methods the UK government is using to keep track of people within its borders, such as ID cards for foreigners and comprehensive email surveillance.

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