Maybe the real, bottom-line reason Reddit won’t help is because they don’t have to. Then again, this look-the-other-way strategy is par for the course for internet companies who have no incentive, legal or otherwise, to be accountable.
r/nosleep is only the tip of the iceberg of piracy that has been made possible by Reddit users, from rampant illegal live sports streamingto file-sharing via applications such as Plex. Maybe Reddit decided that to acknowledge one forum where piracy is rampant would be to acknowledge all of them. Maybe Reddit had a strategic reason to let the creatives of r/nosleep fend for themselves. Since they won’t provide compensation to their creatives, isn’t protecting one of their most popular, and lucrative, forums from piracy the least that Reddit could do? Which begs the question: If your platform is profiting, why aren’t you responsible? But guess who does? You’re right, Reddit does – by slipping ads into the mix just like YouTube and other free-to-use platforms.īut unlike YouTube, Reddit does not allow their users to monetize subreddits and share in the proceeds. r/nosleep pulls in nearly 14 million users to the site, and the writers who post on the forum do not make a dime. That task should have fallen solely on Reddit. The creatives of r/nosleep should not have to waste time chasing after infringement of content they are offering for free. In an era of rampant piracy enabled by internet platforms that fail to be accountable for it, these moderators had only one recourse: to band together and resist on their own terms.īut they shouldn’t have had to do any of it. The forum has since returned and is public again, but the actions by its moderators to protect their authors taught some important lessons. “This is being done… to make a very important point: if the authors are not treated fairly and their work is continuously used in ways that break copyright laws, they will stop posting here.” “In a move to support our authors, r/nosleep has been set to private to protest content theft and unfair crediting and compensation practices by those who share/narrate the stories found here,” the forum’s moderators wrote. They established another subreddit, r/SleeplessWatchdogs, which features a blacklist of all Reddit users known to have purloined writings from r/nosleep and other Reddit author forums and used them elsewhere without permission.Īnd then, in March, realizing that they were dealing with a “culture of free” that would lead to continued abuses by the pirates (a culture nurtured by the world’s biggest internet companies and their advocates, by the way) – r/nosleep took their most drastic step yet. Yes, even non-monetized uses require your permission… Yes, even on Reddit.”īut that was only the beginning of r/nosleep’s pro-copyright vengeance. That means no one has the legal right to use, adapt, reproduce, or host your content-for free, or commercial use-without your permission. “You are the legal owner of your content from the moment it’s published… and that includes publishing to an online site like Reddit. “There is a HUGE misunderstanding about free-to-read content,” states the introductory post on r/NoSleepWritersGuild, which reads like a very satisfying pro-copyright blog in its own right.
Scariest videos on the internet iceberg license#
They established another subreddit, r/NoSleepWritersGuild, devoted to helping their authors license and sell their stories, and educating them about their legal rights when stories were being stolen. Understandably concerned by the rampant pilfering of their work, r/nosleep moderators fought back. On many occasions, these thieves would profit from the stolen tales, narrating them in videos posted to YouTube, and collecting advertising revenue. Contributors to r/nosleep willingly offered their gut-wrenching works without expectation of payment, but that didn’t stop a faction of the forum’s subscriber base from taking many of the stories and using them without permission anyway. Online piracy is a monster looking to devour all creative content, even when posted for free. We speak, with dread in our hearts, of PIRACY! Yes, with nothing more than words on a screen, these authors could summon scares like magicians do rabbits, and yet they themselves were haunted… by a fiend that torments all creatives on the internet. Its authors had a gift for the spine-tingling detail you just can’t shake – they were so good, in fact, they would never dream of starting a story with a cliché like, “It was a dark and stormy night.” The horror story-themed Reddit forum (known as a “subreddit”) had built a massive following by curating some of the scariest tales on the internet. It was a dark and stormy night when the online forum r/nosleep closed its doors to the general public.