Showing posts with label 17 usc 1201. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 17 usc 1201. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Copyright Law: Donglegate - Fifth Circuit Shreds DMCA, Tosses Damages Experts



Here's a scenario for a copyright plaintiff's lawyer:

Client comes to you.  Potential defendant has cracked (infringing) copies of your client's software on its system.  Client uses a "dongle" to protect the software:  you can't access or operate the software without the dongle.  The cracked copies of the software can run without using your client's dongle key: bypassing the encryption system.   You sue. Judge gives you an injunction, infringer proceeds to ignore it, keeps using copies and fails to account for missing laptops.  Defendant is big, profitable company, made lots of $$ using your infringements.

Enter the Digital Millenium Copyright Act:

17 USC § 1201. Circumvention of copyright protection system



(a) Violations Regarding Circumvention of Technological Measures. — (1)(A) No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title. The prohibition contained in the preceding sentence shall take effect at the end of the 2-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this chapter.

From Wikipedia:
 
A dongle is a small piece of hardware that connects to a laptop or desktop computer for the purpose of copy protection or authentication of software to be used on that system.[1]
Electrically, dongles mostly appear as two-interface security tokens with transient data flow that does not interfere with other dongle functions and a pull communication that reads security data from the dongle. These are used by some proprietary vendors as a form of copy protection or digital rights management, because it is generally harder to replicate a dongle than to copy the software it authenticates. Without the dongle, the software may run only in a restricted mode, or not at all. As of July 26, 2010 it became legal in the United States to use programs protected by this method without needing a dongle as according to the United States this technology is obsolete.

(no citations for that last proposition)

You have a SLAM DUNK, in collecting big damages right?   Not in the Fifth Circuit, and not if you have screwed up your damages claim.

Enter MGE UPS Systems v. GE Consumer and Indus. Inc., 2010 WL 2820006 (5th Cir. July 20, 2010). You can find the decision here.

Deciding an issue of first impression, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals found that the dongle wasn't used by the infringer to bypass copyright protections to make infringing copies, it was bypassed simply to use the infringing copy, so didn't violate 17 USC 1201.  That is now the law of the Fifth Circuit interpreting 17 U.S.C. 1201.   The Fifth Circuit reasoned that once you bypassed the dongle, there wasn't ANOTHER layer of protection, so using the cracked software was AOK under 17 U.S.C. 1201.   Also, the infringer's possession of a cracked copy was not sufficient to show that the DEFENDANT had bypassed the technology.

Ordinarily in copyright law, showing access plus an infringing copy is enough to prove direct copying - videos of people actually cracking software are pretty rare.   So the general rule is when a copyright owner busts someone with a lot of cracked software, it's pay up or shut up time.  Not in the Fifth Circuit!

But for the poor copyright owner, it gets worse.  Rule 26 of  the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires a litigant to calculate damages upfront.  This is usually impossible prior to discovery, so litigants usually put in something pro-forma and then try to amend/update as possible or necessary as early as reasonably possible.  In this case, the plaintiff put in that it would rely on its expert.  The expert calculated only the Plaintiff's losses based on theories that the trial court threw out.  The expert NEVER SOUGHT OR CALCULATED ACTUAL PROFITS RELATING TO THE INFRINGEMENT.

The result?  Since the expert's hokey theories were thrown out, plaintiff's lawyers were left with the gross sales of the infringer.  But it gets worse.  They never present to the jury the revenues that they claim are RELATED TO THE INFRINGEMENT.

Result?   The Fifth Circuit threw out all jury awards, granted plaintiff injuntive relief plus a "take nothing judgment" (those are the Fifth Circuit's actual words).

Time for a book plug, because obviously the message is not getting through.   When you start a copyright litigation, please buy my book Copyright Litigation Handbook.  I took three years to write the book combing the case law for examples of lawyers running afoul of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as applied to claims under the Copyright Act.  Nimmer it ain't.  Patry it ain't.  It is SHORT and USEFUL.  It doesn't try to replace or compete with a treatise on copyright law.  It's a little over $200.  Unlike any other publication on copyright law, each Chapter is chock full of screwups for the litigation practitioner to avoid. When you get to your Rule 26 disclosures on damages and experts, read three relatively short chapters:  Chapter 14 Discovery; Chapter 15: Evidence and Experts and Chapter 17:  Damages and Profits.  They are short chapters, it won't kill you.

I am reading more and more case law where experts are coming in with goofy theories and getting tossed out by judges.   You may need to pursue a few different theories in discovery and be prepared for at least one to be tossed as outright nonsense (economists, industry comparisons, etc.).  And if you can't get those billions you think your case is worth, it's better to take home at least the value of your legal fees and costs.



Purchase Copyright Litigation Handbook from West here  
Enhanced by Zemanta

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Beware of Default Judgments: Captcha Gotcha Spammers Under Digital Millenium Copyright Act


Craigslist is a wildly popular service for posting free classified advertisements.  Over the years I have hired a number of employees through Craigslist - responding quickly to an ad shows tech savvy, computer literacy and some level of good judgment.


Over the years we have all entered fuzzy, annoying-looking numbers and words into Captcha fields probably without thinking too much about it.   Captcha is a free spam-proofing device used by many websites to ensure that a human being is entering a website and using it for legitimate purposes.  There are numerous providers of Captchas, check out here and here.



From Wikipedia:

A CAPTCHA or Captcha (pronounced /ˈkæptʃə/) is a type of challenge-response test used in computing to ensure that the response is not generated by a computer. The process usually involves one computer (a server) asking a user to complete a simple test which the computer is able to generate and grade. Because other computers are unable to solve the CAPTCHA, any user entering a correct solution is presumed to be human. Thus, it is sometimes described as a reverse Turing test, because it is administered by a machine and targeted to a human, in contrast to the standard Turing test that is typically administered by a human and targeted to a machine. A common type of CAPTCHA requires that the user type letters or digits from a distorted image that appears on the screen.

I found one 2007 case finding CAPTCHA to be a technological measure to protect copyrighted materials, the circumvention of which would be a violation of the Digital Millenium Copyright Act. Ticketmaster L.L.C. v. RMG Technologies, Inc., 507 F. Supp. 2d 1096 (C.D. Cal. 2007)

In Craigslist, Inc. v. Naturemarket, Inc., C 08-5065 PJH, 2010 WL 807446 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 5, 2010) Craigslist sued a spammer who offered software that did auto posting on Craigslist and sold telephone-verified Craigslist accounts to other spammers or marketers.  To develop the software, the spammer had to access Craigslist, obtain data, code and images, steal telephone-verified accounts, and distribute that information.

When we go on a website, we usually click "I accept" the terms of use ("TOU").  This creates a contract or license agreement (a k a "end user license agreement" or EULA) governing use of the information obtained through the website or database accessed.

In Craigslist, Inc. v. Naturemarket, Inc., Craigslist sought to pursue the spammer through the Digital Millenium Copyright Act and through the terms of the TOU (essentially contract claims).

Craiglist was told by the spammer that he'd sold about $40,000 worth of the autoposter software.  Craigslist pursued both  Digital Millennium Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C. §§ 1201 ("DMCA") and the TOU (Contract) claims.

The spammer did not hire a lawyer to defend the lawsuit and failed to respond to pleadings and court notices.

Craiglist obtained default judgments pursuant to Rule 55 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure under both the DMCA for statutory damages of $470,000 and under the TOU (Contract) for $840,000. The court found the liquidated damages clause of $200 per unauthorized post to be enforceable.   The court accepted Craigslist's lowest estimate of unauthorized posts.  The spammer, Igor Gasov was held personally liable.

 Craigslist alleged that Defendants violated § 1201(a)(2) and (b)(1) of the DMCA. “A plaintiff alleging a violation of § 1201(a)(2) must prove: (1) ownership of a valid copyright on a work, (2) effectively controlled by a technological measure, which has been circumvented, (3) that third parties can now access (4) without authorization, in a manner that (5) infringes or facilitates infringing a right protected by the Copyright Act, because of a product that (6) the defendant either (I) designed or produced primarily for circumvention; (ii) made available despite only limited commercial significance other than circumvention; or (iii) marketed for use in circumvention of the controlling technological measure.” Ticketmaster L.L. C., 507 F.Supp.2d at 1111 (quoting Chamberlain Group, Inc. v. Skylink Tech., Inc., 381 F.3d 1178, 1203 (Fed.Cir.2004)).

The court found defendant's "auto poster" software to be a product violating the DMCA because it permitted posters to circumvent Craigslist's Captcha and telephone verification controls.



Looking at Google, we can see that the spammers did not get the message that auto poster software and selling verified Craigslist accounts can lead to significant personal liability.  It appears that the market for spamming Craiglist is quite large.  It is very dangerous not to defend these cases.   Craigslist's lawyers were awarded $65,038.20 in legal fees and $1,712.07 in costs.