The Copyright for the Satoshi White Paper is Already Causing Trouble

Published on by Coindesk | Published on

Craig Wright's copyright registration of the original bitcoin white paper is starting to create ripple effects.

On May 28 Scribd, a service for posting downloadable documents on the Internet, notified CoinDesk that it had pulled down our copy of the Satoshi Nakamoto white paper.

"This is a notification that Scribd's BookID copyright protection system has disabled access to Bitcoin White Paper. This does not necessarily mean that an infringement has occurred, or that you have done anything wrong," the company wrote in a terse email.

Scribd did not pull mine down although it should, theoretically, be covered by Wright's copyright.

As we noted before, while Wright did register copyright for the white paper this means absolutely nothing unless someone contests the copyright in court.

Because systems like BookID most likely ping the US copyright database, copies of the paper will be dinged on public services.

While in our specific case there is little concern the white paper will ever disappear - it will be here forever or until CoinDesk's servers melt down - the loss of access could have far-reaching and unintended consequences.

Copyright - and patent-trolling - are already rampant in other parts of tech and it's clear blockchain is next.

Our team has reviewed your response and has determined that Scribd's BookID copyright protection system likely misidentified your content as infringing.

The volume of content in our copyright database prohibits us from proactively reaching out to uploaders before content is disabled.

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