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Joshua Moon the owner of Kiwifarms
Nice Amos is a sick fuck, Singapore jail is going to break him.
Wonder if he ever did any "research" on Commie Farms.... one handed ofc.
joshy posts a pic of a cake, one he claims to have made himself, or at least own. Very feminine photo (most likely AI), with tea towels, there.
 
Wonder if he ever did any "research" on Commie Farms.... one handed ofc.
joshy posts a pic of a cake, one he claims to have made himself, or at least own. Very feminine photo (most likely AI), with tea towels, there.
Josh is such a massive (literally and figuratively) faggot.
 
So I asked ChatGPT if there are any DMCA cases where a DJ was sought under 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (Declaratory Judgment Act, the law under which Null is suing LFJ), and ChatGPT gave me... Michael Malice's case against that Fox News pundit whose book he claimed to have ghost-written:

Krechmer is Michael Malice's real surname. He was suing a Fox News pundit for having ghostwritten her book, claiming copyright over it. He lost that case and did not obtain a DJ.

Short answer: yes. There are cases where 28 U.S.C. § 2201 (Declaratory Judgment Act) is invoked in litigation that also involves DMCA claims.
Here are concrete, citable examples:


1. Krechmer v. Tantaros LLC (2d Cir. 2018)
Why it matters
This case explicitly combines:
Declaratory Judgment Act (28 U.S.C. § 2201)
DMCA claim (17 U.S.C. § 1202)
Key excerpt
Plaintiff alleged “(1) a claim for relief under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201 … and (2) a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act”
Takeaway
- Clear example of § 2201 being invoked in a DMCA-related lawsuit
The declaratory claim was dismissed (jurisdictional issues), but it was still pleaded

2. Declaratory actions are recognized in copyright (including DMCA contexts)
Not a single case, but important doctrinal confirmation:
Parties facing copyright liability (including DMCA exposure) can file:
declaratory judgment of non-infringement
A party “facing a substantial threat of copyright infringement liability may initiate litigation seeking a declaration” under § 2201
Why this matters
DMCA disputes (e.g., takedowns, §512, §1202) are just a subset of copyright disputes
Declaratory judgment is a standard procedural tool in that space

Important nuance (this is where most people get it wrong)
Many major DMCA cases (e.g., IO v. Veoh, Vimeo) involve:
requests for summary judgment or safe harbor rulings
But:
- they don’t always explicitly plead § 2201
- functionally, they often seek declaratory-type relief
Bottom line (no fluff)
- Yes — § 2201 has been invoked in DMCA-related litigation
- Krechmer v. Tantaros is a clean, explicit example
- More broadly, declaratory judgment is routinely available in copyright disputes, including DMCA contexts
If you want to go one level deeper, I can:
pull pure DMCA takedown/counter-notice declaratory suits (those are especially interesting), or
build a tighter list of plaintiff-initiated DJ actions specifically about §512 safe harbor
Those are rarer—but they do exist.
 
Josh reiterates the IQ claims.
muhiq.jpg
 
this is what i love about Null, he's such a lolcow but he's crafted such a hugbox that no one can tell him that
even back in 2020, users were already giving Green Reddit the death certificate.

Odd Opossum lays it out plain 'n simple.

naysayers gettin' a taste of that freeze peace.
 
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