Never mind how much Saturday Night Live has blown chunks in recent years and has little to compete with Mad TV. The first SNL video clip to take the Internet by storm in a long while, Chronicles of Narnia rap spoof "Lazy Sunday," belongs to NBC. Don't even think about generating buzz for them. The YouTube. College students everywhere started thinking, "hey, maybe SNL doesn't suck anymore." The may have even started watching again. But NBC Universal intellectual property lawyers put a stop to that free promotion stuff really quick. Even though the video was available for free at the NBC website, available for purchase through iTunes, and YouTube contacted NBC about some sort of rights agreement, NBC sent the video sharing site a cease and desist asking that all 500 NBC clips be taken off the site. YouTube, shaking its head at the stupidity of it, did as the network asked. Julie Summersgill, a spokesman for NBC Universal, told the New York Times that the company meant no ill will toward fan sites but wanted to protect its copyrights. Damn the free publicity and forget that whole thing about how those clips have already been paid for at least once over. Fred von Lohmann, a lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), said this is a harbinger of things to come for social video sites. "This is an example of the copyright troubles that are waiting for YouTube, Google Video and all the other video hosting services that rely on user-posted content," said von Lohmann. Former EFF attorney Wendy Seltzer questions the wisdom of being so bullish about "Lazy Sunday" on Harvard Law's here.") Drag this to your Bookmarks. Add to document.write("Del.icio.us") Yahoo My Web
NBC Shoots Self In Foot
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