Bubblegum Wiki:Copyrights

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Revision as of 04:28, 26 February 2013 by 72.148.3.214 (Talk)

Title 1, Bubblegum Wiki Copyright Code, Section 1(a)(1), which prohibits the possession, copying, modifying, editing, distribution, and/or use of any type of the artist or company's ownership, including fan art or fan fiction, that violates the owner's trademark, creative or patent works as part of the Bubblegum Wiki's Code of Conduct which by any means a copyright infringement

Under Title I, Administrators, Rollbacks, spamfighters, checkusers and Bureaucrats are excluded from being investigated of the intellectual property provisions of Title II regs that apply to traditional copyright content. Title I includes powers "which gives all authority to the effective performance of the Central Bureacracy's various responsibilities" to restrict fair use and prohibit copyright infringement.

In addition to the legislation that restrict the usage of "nonexistent copyright holders," the amendment has clauses to restrict the Bubblegum Wiki use of copyrighted material through bureaucratic and administrative processes.

Contents

Section 2: Restriction of uploads of Copyrighted Images

A prohibition and restriction on sales, lending or distribution to, or uploading by, violators of the copyrighted guidelines would cover:

A. Images which promote commercial revenue, or otherwise impede the infringement of a person's intellectual work.

B. Images which might be recognized as plagiarism, or appearing to be a fan art of someone's proprietary artwork, or which impede the development of copyright infringement of someone's intellectual work, or which might be feared to obstruct a person's proprietary artwork rights through commercial and non-commercial use.

C. If an image of a fan art of someone's artwork, an image from other sources (ex. News, Weather, Sports, Entertainment, etc.), or any other images of their own that doesn't have the {{Creative Commons}} template, the image will be immediately deleted, and the infringer will be warned (if by a first or second repeated offense) or banned (if by a third repeated offense) and be reported to their ISP, also known as a "Three-Strike Copyright Offense".


Section 3: Legal Definition of Copyright Infringement

Applies to:

1. Protective copyright and patent ownership of drawings, cartoons, sculptures, or paintings against infringers and illegal uploaders.

2. the illegalization to produce, distribute, receive or possess images containing proprietary licence owner and trademark holder if it is also "copyright infringement."

Section 4

1. Articles must be original to meet the guidelines, with the stated intention of removing copyrighted infringing articles from Bubblegum Wiki.

2. Non-administrative users on the bottom level are required to place Smart Copyright Template on their original article. Administrators are not required to do so under this paragraph.

3. The Central Bureaucracy must impose fines for copyright infringement.

4. Any non-original and non-Smart Copyright articles are deleted for Copyright infringement.

5. elimination of the "Fair Use" rule and implementation of the Smart Copyright rule will be part of the renewed Creative Commons rule.

6. New articles and uploaded images must be tagged with Smart Copyright that have a remote “off” switch. Smart Meters can be stopped by local governments before installation. A class action lawsuit against utility suppliers’ Smart Meters could go a long way toward stopping this program.

7. Smart Copyright is designed to be remotely monitored by the Central Bureaucracy AND your utility supplier who can cut your appliances “off”.

8. Global Warming Potential (GWP): copyright fines for potential global warming gas emissions may be levied. Absurdly, the report cites a ffine for potentially infringers, which would apply in whether your region leaks or not. infringement fines for ridiculous “potential” made-up threats are limited only by bureaucrats’ imagination.


Section 5

1. Fair Use and DMCA systems: fair use of copyrighted material are expensive and inefficient. This section designed to reduce fair use, while dramatically increasing centralized control.

2. Mass transit public transportation: buses are part of the planning scheme.

3. Smart Copyright clause are designed to keep people from infringing and to prevent fair use.

4. Copyright monitoring: the Bureaucracy will track illegal usage of copyrighted when users are registered and those with infringing contributions get to receive harsher penalties.

5. Interregional travel: the state will be broken into regions and “accounting approaches” will be applied for emission responsibility (this means more tolls and taxes).

6. Tolls and HOT Lanes: toll roads will increase and tolls for traveling in a congested area (the excuse given for this tax is that as a car idles in a congested area, there is more carbon emission). HOT (high occupancy toll) lanes and taxing single drivers for driving alone are part of the program.

   • Air conditioning: California emissions regulations intend to phase-out air conditioning.
   • Parking: planning regulations will limit parking; parking prices will increase and parking time shares are proposed.
   • Obesity: the State cites obesity as an excuse to ‘encourage’ (through regulations and taxes) bicycling and walking.

California is so thoroughly corrupt that despite State’s Air Resources Board fraud exaggerating diesel emissions by 340%. Meanwhile, the vehicle mandates are still going full speed ahead, without further study.

Section 6

1. Federal Stimulus Funding: no figures are mentioned, but the federal government is very supportive of centralized power at almost any cost.

2. Carbon cap-and-trade tax: no specific figures were given as to how much the appointed bureaucrats expected to profit from charging for a non-existent problem.

3. The Central Bureaucracy says that it can penalize users between $100 to $500 fines per infringing article and/or image, but does not specify whether this is a total or yearly figure.

4. Reforestation: public funds were cited as a way to finance the possible “need” for additional carbon sinks; no dollar amount was given.

5. Permits and licenses: there are 24 state agencies listed in the AB 32 Scoping Plan; all of them are likely to dream up new licensing and permit fees.

6. Mitigation fees: this has yet to be fully defined so it could apply to anything equally as silly as taxing a potential leaky refrigerator.

7. Private acts of infringment: individuals who will benefit from infringing copyright with the government.

Section 7

1. Any user who, prior to the effective date of this legislation amended to the copyright policy, was illegally uploading an copyrighted or posting a article that copyrighted material from shall be blocked ninety hours from such effective date to do any of the following with being subject to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA):

(a). Delete the copyrighted image or an article that has copyrighted material from other media sources;

(b). Render the user's editing and viewing privileges permanently inoperable; and

(c). Surrender user data of the illegally uploaded copyrighted image or posted article of copyrighted material from other media sources to the user's internet service provider for termination of service, subject to specific terms of service regulations.

2. person is labeled a class A felon if such person willfully upload, post or link an image of the exterior of any intellectual property in this state where such image is uploaded by or with the links to a copyrighted photo, media article, or any other work that is not authorized by the copyright holder. This prohibition shall also apply where the derivative work does not reveal forms identifiable as celebrities or cartoon characters.


Penalties

Multiple BGWIKI infringers are penalized with a six-week probabation. repeated infringers are indefinitely banned.

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