Live
Black Hat USADark ReadingBlack Hat AsiaAI BusinessMeta Smart Glasses Can Now Track All the Food You Put Into Your MouthGizmodoI moved my entire ChatGPT context to Claude and it finally felt like home - MakeUseOfGoogle News: ChatGPTHere’s Who the Mysterious Main Characters Are in Disclosure DayGizmodoClaude Code is still vulnerable to an attack Anthropic has already fixed - InfoWorldGoogle News: ClaudeBehind the Blog: Systems As Designed404 MediaWe found $50k in forgotten subscriptionsDev.to AISMD/飞达 吸嘴、贴片机、物料车、刮刀等耗材对应的场景,以及这些耗材的市场行情,还有对应场景下的经济模式,处在哪个生态位上能够获得比较可观的收益Dev.to AIЯ автоматизировал 80% задач и уволил себя самDev.to AIAI tax scams surge ahead of filing deadline, Better Business Bureau says - KSATGoogle News: AIIs 32GB RAM Enough for Developers in 2026? Or Will It Slow You Down?Medium AIYou can use Google Meet with CarPlay now: How to join meetings safely in your carZDNet Big DataWe Cut Our LLM Inference Bill by 73% Without Degrading Clinical AccuracyMedium AIBlack Hat USADark ReadingBlack Hat AsiaAI BusinessMeta Smart Glasses Can Now Track All the Food You Put Into Your MouthGizmodoI moved my entire ChatGPT context to Claude and it finally felt like home - MakeUseOfGoogle News: ChatGPTHere’s Who the Mysterious Main Characters Are in Disclosure DayGizmodoClaude Code is still vulnerable to an attack Anthropic has already fixed - InfoWorldGoogle News: ClaudeBehind the Blog: Systems As Designed404 MediaWe found $50k in forgotten subscriptionsDev.to AISMD/飞达 吸嘴、贴片机、物料车、刮刀等耗材对应的场景,以及这些耗材的市场行情,还有对应场景下的经济模式,处在哪个生态位上能够获得比较可观的收益Dev.to AIЯ автоматизировал 80% задач и уволил себя самDev.to AIAI tax scams surge ahead of filing deadline, Better Business Bureau says - KSATGoogle News: AIIs 32GB RAM Enough for Developers in 2026? Or Will It Slow You Down?Medium AIYou can use Google Meet with CarPlay now: How to join meetings safely in your carZDNet Big DataWe Cut Our LLM Inference Bill by 73% Without Degrading Clinical AccuracyMedium AI
AI NEWS HUBbyEIGENVECTOREigenvector

A Baseless Copyright Claim Against a Web Host—and Why It Failed

Electronic Frontier Foundationby Betty GedluApril 2, 20264 min read0 views
Source Quiz

Copyright law is supposed to encourage creativity. Too often, it’s used to extract payouts from others. Higbee Associates, a law firm known for sending copyright demand letters to website owners, targeted May First Movement Technology, accusing it of infringing a photograph owned by Agence France-Presse (AFP). The claim was baseless. May First didn’t post the photo. It didn’t even own the website where the photo appeared. May First is a nonprofit membership organization that provides web hosting and technical infrastructure to social justice groups around the world. The allegedly infringing image was posted years ago by one of May First’s members, a human rights group based in Mexico. When May First learned about the copyright complaint, it ensured that the group removed the image. That sh

Copyright law is supposed to encourage creativity. Too often, it’s used to extract payouts from others.

Higbee & Associates, a law firm known for sending copyright demand letters to website owners, targeted May First Movement Technology, accusing it of infringing a photograph owned by Agence France-Presse (AFP). The claim was baseless. May First didn’t post the photo. It didn’t even own the website where the photo appeared.

May First is a nonprofit membership organization that provides web hosting and technical infrastructure to social justice groups around the world. The allegedly infringing image was posted years ago by one of May First’s members, a human rights group based in Mexico. When May First learned about the copyright complaint, it ensured that the group removed the image.

That should have been the end of it. Instead, the firm demanded payment.

So EFF stepped in as May First’s counsel and explained why AFP and Higbee had no valid claim. After receiving our response, Higbee backed down.

This outcome is a reminder that targets of copyright demands often have strong defenses—especially when someone else posted the material.

Hosting Content Isn’t the Same as Publishing It

Copyright law treats those who create or control content differently from those who simply provide the tools or infrastructure for others to communicate.

In this case, May First provided hosting services but didn’t post the photo. Courts have long recognized that service providers aren’t direct infringers when they merely store material at the direction of users. In those cases, service providers lack “volitional conduct”—the intentional act of copying or distributing the work.

Copyright law also recognizes that intermediaries can’t realistically police everything users upload. That’s why legal protections like the Digital Millennium Copyright Act safe harbors exist. Even outside those safe harbors, courts still shield service providers from liability when they promptly respond to notices.

May First did exactly what the law expects: it notified its member, and the image came down.

A Claim That Should Have Been Withdrawn Much Sooner

The troubling part of this story isn’t just that a demand was sent. It’s that Higbee and AFP continued to demand money and threaten litigation after May First explained that it was merely a hosting provider and had the image removed.

In other words, the claim was built on shaky legal ground from the start. Once May First explained its role, Higbee should have withdrawn its demand. Individuals and small nonprofits shouldn’t need lawyers just to stop aggressive copyright shakedowns.

Statutory Damages Fuel Copyright Abuse

This isn’t an isolated case—it’s a predictable result of copyright law’s statutory damages regime.

Statutory damages can reach $150,000 per work, regardless of actual harm. That enormous leverage incentivizes firms like Higbee to send mass demand letters seeking quick settlements. Even meritless claims can generate revenue when recipients are too afraid, confused, or resource-constrained to fight back.

This hits community organizations, independent publishers, and small service providers that don’t have in-house legal teams especially hard. Faced with the threat of ruinous statutory damages, many just pay what is demanded.

That’s not how copyright law should work.

Know Your Rights

If you receive a copyright demand based on material someone else posted, don’t assume you’re liable.

You may have defenses based on:

  • Your role as a hosting or service provider

  • Lack of volitional conduct

  • Prompt removal of the material after notice

  • The statute of limitations

  • The copyright owner’s failure to timely register the work

  • The absence of actual damages

Every situation is different, but the key point is this: a demand letter is not the same as a valid legal claim.

Standing Up to Copyright Trolls

May First stood its ground, and Higbee abandoned its demand after we explained the law.

But the bigger problem remains. Copyright’s statutory damages framework enables aggressive enforcement tactics that targets the wrong parties, and chills lawful online activity.

Until lawmakers fix these structural incentives, organizations and individuals will keep facing pressure to pay up—even when they’ve done nothing wrong.

If you get one of these demand letters, remember: you may have more rights than it suggests.

  • EFF Letter to Higbee and Associates, March 4, 2026
Was this article helpful?

Sign in to highlight and annotate this article

AI
Ask AI about this article
Powered by Eigenvector · full article context loaded
Ready

Conversation starters

Ask anything about this article…

Daily AI Digest

Get the top 5 AI stories delivered to your inbox every morning.

Knowledge Map

Knowledge Map
TopicsEntitiesSource
A Baseless …servicerevenuelegalrightsfranceElectronic …

Connected Articles — Knowledge Graph

This article is connected to other articles through shared AI topics and tags.

Knowledge Graph100 articles · 158 connections
Scroll to zoom · drag to pan · click to open

Discussion

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet — be the first to share your thoughts!