You think Meta can’t pick up some random new IP address just for this?
A better solution would be to either stop fretting about trivialities like this, or if you can’t do that stop putting your data up on an open protocol that is specifically designed to spread it around and show it to anyone who wants to see it.
There is nothing against copyright law to read data that a person has put online in a public, unrestricted manner for the purpose of having it be read.
You think Meta can’t pick up some random new IP address just for this?
A better solution would be to either stop fretting about trivialities like this, or if you can’t do that stop putting your data up on an open protocol that is specifically designed to spread it around and show it to anyone who wants to see it.
Companies need to stop ignoring copyright on data they don’t own and never have owned.
There is nothing against copyright law to read data that a person has put online in a public, unrestricted manner for the purpose of having it be read.
What specific data are you referring to?
Short messages usually aren’t creative enough to be protected by copyright. Exceptions might be poems and similar texts.
“Terms of service” checkmarks are their reality