Viacom V YouTube Summary Judgment
Viacom V YouTube Summary Judgment
Viacom V YouTube Summary Judgment
-against-
Defendants,
----------------------------------------X OPINION AND ORDER
THE FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION PREMIER
LEAGUE LIMITED, et al., on
behalf of themselves and all
others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs,
-against-
07 Civ. 3582 (LLS)
YOUTUBE, INC., YOUTUBE, LLC, and
GOOGLE, INC.,
Defendants.
----------------------------------------X
infringements in suit.
Plaintiffs cross-move for partial summary judgment
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(A)(i) does not have actual knowledge that the
material or an activity using the material on the
system or network is infringing;
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(3) Elements of notification.—
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(B)(i) Subject to clause (ii), a notification
from a copyright owner or from a person
authorized to act on behalf of the copyright
owner that fails to comply substantially with the
provisions of subparagraph (A) shall not be
considered under paragraph (1)(A) in determining
whether a service provider has actual knowledge
or is aware of facts or circumstances from which
infringing activity is apparent.
* * *
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service provider qualifies for the limitation on
liability in any one of those subsections shall
be based solely on the criteria in that
subsection, and shall not affect a determination
of whether that service provider qualifies for
the limitations on liability under any other such
subsection.
512(c).
could find that the defendants not only were generally aware of,
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authorization” (Viacom Br., Dkt. No. 186, p. 1), and that
original).
all the clips in suit are off the YouTube website, most having
1.
Legislative History
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Due to the ease with which digital works can be
copied and distributed worldwide virtually
instantaneously, copyright owners will hesitate to
make their works readily available on the Internet
without reasonable assurance that they will be
protected against massive piracy. Legislation
implementing the treaties provides this protection and
creates the legal platform for launching the global
digital on-line marketplace for copyrighted works. It
will facilitate making available quickly and
conveniently via the Internet the movies, music,
software, and literary works that are the fruit of
American creative genius. It will also encourage the
continued growth of the existing off-line global
marketplace for copyrighted works in digital format by
setting strong international copyright standards.
At the same time, without clarification of their
liability, service providers may hesitate to make the
necessary investment in the expansion of the speed and
capacity of the Internet. In the ordinary course of
their operations service providers must engage in all
kinds of acts that expose them to potential copyright
infringement liability. For example, service
providers must make innumerable electronic copies by
simply transmitting information over the Internet.
Certain electronic copies are made in order to host
World Wide Web sites. Many service providers engage
in directing users to sites in response to inquiries
by users or they volunteer sites that users may find
attractive. Some of these sites might contain
infringing material. In short, by limiting the
liability of service providers, the DMCA ensures that
the efficiency of the Internet will continue to
improve and that the variety and quality of services
on the Internet will continue to expand.
It elaborates:
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service providers. A service provider which qualifies
for a safe harbor, receives the benefit of limited
liability.
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They discuss the “applicable knowledge standard”
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Subsection (c)(1)(A)(iii) provides that once a
service provider obtains actual knowledge or awareness
of facts or circumstances from which infringing
material or activity on the service provider’s system
or network is apparent, the service provider does not
lose the limitation of liability set forth in
subsection (c) if it acts expeditiously to remove or
disable access to the infringing material. Because
the factual circumstances and technical parameters may
vary from case to case, it is not possible to identify
a uniform time limit for expeditious action.
Subsection (c)(1)(B) sets forth the circumstances
under which a service provider would lose the
protection of subsection (c) by virtue of its benefit
from the control over infringing activity. In
determining whether the financial benefit criterion is
satisfied, courts should take a common-sense, fact-
based approach, not a formalistic one. In general, a
service provider conducting a legitimate business
would not be considered to receive a “financial
benefit directly attributable to the infringing
activity” where the infringer makes the same kind of
payment as non-infringing users of the provider’s
service. Thus, receiving a one-time set-up fee and
flat periodic payments for service from a person
engaging in infringing activities would not constitute
receiving a “financial benefit directly attributable
to the infringing activity.” Nor is subparagraph (B)
intended to cover fees based on the length of the
message (per number of bytes, for example) or by
connect time. It would however, include any such fees
where the value of the service lies in providing
access to infringing material.
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the copyright owner; in such a situation, the service
provider’s liability, if any, will be decided without
reference to section 512(c). For their part,
copyright owners are not obligated to give
notification of claimed infringement in order to
enforce their rights. However, neither actual
knowledge nor awareness of a red flag may be imputed
to a service provider based on information from a
copyright owner or its agent that does not comply with
the notification provisions of subsection (c)(3), and
the limitation of liability set forth in subsection
(c) may apply.
Report at 55-56):
* * *
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copyrighted work, identification of the allegedly
infringing material, and information sufficient for
the service provider to contact the complaining party,
and (ii) the service provider does not promptly
attempt to contact the person making the notification
or take other reasonable steps to assist in the
receipt of notification that substantially complies
with paragraph (3)(A). If the service provider
subsequently receives a substantially compliant
notice, the provisions of paragraph (1)(C) would then
apply upon receipt of the notice.
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photograph was still protected by copyright, whether
the use was licensed; and if the use was not licensed,
whether it was permitted under the fair use doctrine.
The important intended objective of this standard is
to exclude sophisticated “pirate” directories—which
refer Internet users to other selected Internet sites
where pirate software, books, movies, and music can be
downloaded or transmitted—from the safe harbor. Such
pirate directories refer Internet users to sites that
are obviously infringing because they typically use
words such as “pirate,” “bootleg,” or slang terms in
their uniform resource locator (URL) and header
information to make their illegal purpose obvious to
the pirate directories and other Internet users.
Because the infringing nature of such sites would be
apparent from even a brief and casual viewing, safe
harbor status for a provider that views such a site
and then establishes a link to it would not be
appropriate. Pirate directories do not follow the
routine business practices of legitimate service
providers preparing directories, and thus evidence
that they have viewed the infringing site may be all
that is available for copyright owners to rebut their
claim to a safe harbor.
In this way, the “red flag” test in section 512(d)
strikes the right balance. The common-sense result of
this “red flag” test is that online editors and
catalogers would not be required to make
discriminating judgments about potential copyright
infringement. If, however, an Internet site is
obviously pirate, then seeing it may be all that is
needed for the service provider to encounter a “red
flag.” A provider proceeding in the face of such a
red flag must do so without the benefit of a safe
harbor.
Information location tools are essential to the
operation of the Internet; without them, users would
not be able to find the information they need.
Directories are particularly helpful in conducting
effective searches by filtering out irrelevant and
offensive material. The Yahoo! Directory, for
example, currently categorizes over 800,000 online
locations and serves as a “card catalogue” to the
World Wide Web, which over 35,000,000 different users
visit each month. Directories such as Yahoo!’s
usually are created by people visiting sites to
categorize them. It is precisely the human judgment
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and editorial discretion exercised by these
cataloguers which makes directories valuable.
This provision is intended to promote the
development of information location tools generally,
and Internet directories such as Yahoo!’s in
particular, by establishing a safe-harbor from
copyright infringement liability for information
location tool providers if they comply with the notice
and takedown procedures and other requirements of
subsection (d). The knowledge or awareness standard
should not be applied in a manner which would create a
disincentive to the development of directories which
involve human intervention. Absent actual knowledge,
awareness of infringement as provided in subsection
(d) should typically be imputed to a directory
provider only with respect to pirate sites or in
similarly obvious and conspicuous circumstances, and
not simply because the provider viewed an infringing
site during the course of assembling the directory.
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stated in Perfect 10, Inc. v. CCBill LLC, 488 F.3d 1102, 1113
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2.
Case Law
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does not impose liability on the service provider. It furnishes
particular work.
1090, 1108 (W.D. Wash. 2004) the court stated that “The issue is
activity that would have sent up a red flag for Amazon.” Id. at
Inc. v. eBay Inc., 600 F.3d 93 (2d Cir. April 1, 2010) the Court
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jewelry of which a significant portion (perhaps up to 75%) were
eBay, and the District Court had found that eBay indeed “had
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We agree with the district court. For
contributory trademark infringement liability to lie,
a service provider must have more than a general
knowledge or reason to know that its service is being
used to sell counterfeit goods. Some contemporary
knowledge of which particular listings are infringing
or will infringe in the future is necessary.
And at p. 110:
1
See Inwood Labs., Inc. v. Ives Labs., Inc., 456 U.S. 844, 102
S. Ct. 2182 (1982).
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3.
545 U.S. 913 (2005) and its progeny Arista Records LLC v.
No. 06 Civ. 5578, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 122661 (C.D. Cal. Dec.
21, 2009), and Arista Records LLC v. Lime Group LLC, No. 06 Civ.
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protected by the DMCA is strained. In a setting of distribution
motion (Dkt. No. 188, p.60) and Viacom’s response does not
post and access all sorts of materials as they wish, while the
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material when he learns it infringes. To such a provider, the
4.
Other Points
(a)
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for digital online communications.” Surely the provision of
the safe harbor when they flow from the material’s placement on
the service provider its safe harbor. See also UMG Recordings,
Cal. 2008):
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deterred from performing their basic, vital and
salutary function—namely, providing access to
information and material for the public.
Such activities simply fall beyond the bounds of the safe harbor
(b)
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from advertising, applied equally to space regardless of whether
(c)
as only one strike against a user both (1) a single DMCA take-
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evaluating whether Amazon complied with § 512(i), the Court
1116, 1118 (C.D. Cal. 2009), the Court upheld Veoh’s policy of
infringements. It stated:
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that position does not violate § 512(i)(1)(A). See UMG
CCBill LLC, 488 F.3d 1102, 1112 (9th Cir. 2007) (“We therefore
accurately.
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reference would eviscerate the required specificity of notice
without also giving the works’ locations at the site, and would
original).
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