According to the DMCA, PolygonPunks would have had to have claimed its material "was removed or disabled through mistake or misidentification."
Nonfungible token (NFT) marketplace OpenSea is once again listing the Polygon-based copy of CryptoPunks after a successful Digital Millennium Copyright Act counter-notice.
In a Tuesday announcement on Twitter, the PolygonPunks project said its NFT collectibles were back on OpenSea after responding to a DMCA takedown notice from Larva Labs, the creator of CryptoPunks. The punks were booted from OpenSea in August after becoming one of the most popular collections on the marketplace.
PolygonPunks ARE BACK ON @Opensea!!! The DMCA counter notice to Larva Labs was successful
— PolygonPunks (@PunksOnPolygon) September 28, 2021
We have resumed trading on the largest NFT marketplace in the world
We look forward to building a relationship with @0xPolygon and it's ecosystem as we grow on the Polygon network. pic.twitter.com/3qk6rK8BX8
Copyright and intellectual property laws are somewhat of a gray area in the crypto space. Larva Labs reportedly obtained a DMCA takedown notice for the Polygon-based CryptoPunks, which it was able to file by claiming that its rights over material on the internet had been infringed according to United States copyright law.
According to the DMCA, PolygonPunks would have had to have claimed its material “was removed or disabled through mistake or misidentification.” This now seemingly leaves Larva Labs with no other outlet to remove the punks without a court order.
Related: Minting, distributing and selling NFTs must involve copyright law
Data from DappRadar shows CryptoPunks is the third-most popular NFT project by trade volume, with roughly $10 million worth of tokens trading hands in the past 24 hours. OpenSea now lists 10,000 of the PolygonPunks and has sold $26,491 worth since the project returned to the marketplace 22 hours ago. In addition, Solana-based SolPunks are still trading on the Solanart marketplace.
via cointelgraph.com