this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2026
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Read a little bit about this on the wiki page. It really sounds like some guy/company just lied to a regulatory body and then that org sent DMCA's out ~for~ them. And of course that agency was in the UK.
Just another reason the only response to a DMCA claim should be to do a
and send them a poop from a butt joke as a response. (Yes I am mature and normal.
)
So, that's just the thing—to a layperson, it seemed like they were registered with an actual regulatory body, but they were emphatically not. There are two parts to this: INTEROCO and Ukie. Here are the core bits of info:
INTEROCO
Ukie
The TL;DR is that the purported "copyright registrations" are no such thing, and the UK trade organization they are a member of (which clearly didn't do its due diligence to ensure they actually held the rights they claimed) is happy to blast out completely automated takedowns for anyone who pays £630+VAT per year to be a member.
I didn't get into the US trademarks here, but basically, they made provisionary applications for lapsed trademarks, but even if those trademarks are ever granted (which they have not been), it would have no bearing on matters of copyright.
Jeez, I know I'm preaching to the choir, but god damn copyright law is a bunch of bs. Like just in terms of understanding and tricks and "oops someone messed up because of X".