US courts say Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak can’t blame YouTube for Bitcoin scams
Steve
Wozniak now has 30 days to revise his lawsuits against YouTube over
being “unresponsive” in deleting fraudulent videos.To get more news
about WikiFX, you can visit wikifx.com official website.
A
California state judge has ruled that Steve Wozniak, a co-founder of
tech giant Apple, cant sue YouTube over Bitcoin scam videos that used
his image, Bloomberg reported today.
In his lawsuit, filed last
July, Wozniak stated that some unknown malicious actors had used
photographs and videos of him in an attempt to steal Bitcoin from
YouTube users. The scam itself was a “tried and true” fraud that asked
users to send some crypto to receive twice as much back.
“But when
users transfer their cryptocurrency, in an irreversible transaction,
they receive nothing back,” Wozniak said in his lawsuit at the time.
Section 230 wins again
He
also argued that Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which
shields Internet platforms from any responsibility for the content
posted by their users, should be applied in this case.
This is
because not only YouTube was “unresponsive” to Wozniaks requests to take
down the fraudulent videos, but also “materially contributed” to
scammers by placing target ads and verifying the bogus channels.
Notably,
the videos also used names and images of other well-known personalities
such as Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, per
the lawsuit.
However, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Sunil
R. Kulkarni said that Wozniak‘s arguments weren’t enough to bypass
Section 230. Thus, the judge ordered that YouTube retains its immunity
from the lawsuit. Still, Wozniak was given 30 additional days to revise
his complaint.
Impersonation scams galore
Images of famous
“big tech” people are often used by scammers to defraud their
unsuspecting victims. In mid-March, for example, an “Elon Musk” Bitcoin
giveaway scam on Twitter resulted in one user losing 10 Bitcoin, worth
more than $550,000 at the time.
Meanwhile, 2021 is already shaping up to become a record-breaking year for crypto giveaway scams.
“We
dont have any data to explain it, but it could be related to the wider
Bitcoin market. When the Bitcoin price goes up, people go crazy and a
lot of them are new to the market and they want this idea of quick
money,” Frank van Weert, the founder of Whale Alert, explained to the
BBC earlier this year.
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