Categories
Patent Law

CPIP Scholars Join Amicus Brief Arguing that the Government Cannot Petition for CBM Review

U.S. Supreme Court buildingOn December 17, 2018, CPIP Senior Scholars Adam Mossoff and Kristen Osenga joined an amicus brief written on behalf of seven law professors by Professor Adam MacLeod, a CPIP Thomas Edison Innovation Fellow for 2017 and 2018 and a member of CPIP’s growing community of scholars. The brief, which was filed in Return Mail Inc. v. United States Postal Service, asks the Supreme Court to reverse the Federal Circuit’s determination that the federal government has standing to challenge the validity of an issued patent in a covered business method (CBM) review before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB).

The petitioner, Return Mail, owns a patent for a method of processing mail that is returned as undeliverable. After the Postal Service refused to take a license, Return Mail sued it for “reasonable and entire compensation” in the Court of Federal Claims under Section 1498(a). Thereafter, the Postal Service filed a petition at the PTAB seeking CBM review, arguing that several claims were unpatentable. Return Mail contested the ability of the Postal Service to petition for CBM review, arguing that it is not a “person” who has been “sued for infringement” within the meaning of Section 18(a)(1)(B) of the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act of 2011 (AIA). Over a forceful dissent by Judge Newman, the Federal Circuit upheld the PTAB’s determination that the Postal Service has standing to challenge Return Mail’s patent before the PTAB.

The amicus brief written by Prof. MacLeod argues that the Federal Circuit was wrong to hold that the federal government could be treated as a “person” who has been charged with infringement. The brief points out that the federal government cannot be liable for patent infringement since it has sovereign immunity. Instead, the government has the authority to take a license whenever it pleases under its eminent domain power—so long as it pays just compensation to the patentee. The Federal Circuit classified the Postal Service’s appropriation as infringement, thus bringing it within Section 18(a)(1)(B) of the AIA. But, as the amicus brief notes, an infringement is an unlawful exercise of the exclusive rights granted to a patentee. The government may have exercised Return Mail’s patent rights, but it did not do so unlawfully, and as such it is not in the same position as a private party who has been charged with infringement.

The Summary of Argument is copied below, and the amicus brief is available here.

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

The United States Postal Service (“Postal Service”) wants to be a sovereign power. It also wants not to be a sovereign power. It exercises the right of sovereignty to take patent rights by the power of eminent domain. But it wants to stray beyond the inherent limitations on sovereign power so it can contest the validity of patent rights in multiple venues and avoid the duty to pay just compensation for a license it appropriates.

At the same time, the Postal Service asserts the private rights of an accused infringer to initiate a covered business method review (“CBM”) proceeding though it is immune from the duties and liabilities of an infringer. In other words, the Postal Service is trying to have it both ways, twice. It wants the powers of sovereignty without its disadvantages, and the rights of a private party without exposure to liability.

The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit erroneously ruled that the Postal Service can exercise both the sovereign power to initiate an administrative patent review, which is entrusted to the Patent Office, and the sovereign power to appropriate patent rights by eminent domain, which is delegated to federal agencies that may exercise patent rights. Congress separated those powers and delegated them to different agencies for important constitutional and jurisprudential reasons. Furthermore, the Federal Circuit ruled that the Postal Service can be both immune from liability for infringement and vested with the powers of an accused infringer. It did this by misstating what a “person” is within the meaning of United States law and by reading unlawfulness out the definition of “infringement,” as the Petitioner explained in its Petition.

In the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act of 2011 (“AIA”), Pub. L. No. 112-29, 125 Stat. 284, Congress created alternatives to Article III litigation concerning patent validity—inter partes review (“IPR”), post-grant review (“PGR”), and covered business method proceedings (“CBM”). IPR, PGR, and CBM proceedings are intended as alternatives to inter alia infringement actions in which an accused infringer might challenge patent validity. This suggests that the Government, which is immune from liability for infringement, is not a “person” with power to initiate an IPR, PGR, or CBM proceeding.

In jurisprudential terms, the Postal Service claims the powers and immunities of the legislative sovereign, who possesses the inherent power of eminent domain and is immune from liability for infringement. At the same time, the Postal Service tries to claim the powers of an accused infringer and so disavow the legal disadvantages of the sovereign. It cannot have both.

In fact, the Postal Service cannot infringe and cannot be charged with infringement. The sovereign who exercises the power of eminent domain and pays just compensation has acted lawfully, not unlawfully, and therefore has not trespassed against the patent. And the Postal Service must pay compensation when it appropriates a license to practice a patented invention. Vested patents are property for Fifth Amendment purposes, and the Government must pay for licenses taken from them, just as it pays for real and personal property that it appropriates.

To read the amicus brief, please click here.

Categories
Innovation Patent Law Supreme Court

CPIP Scholars File Amicus Brief Urging Consideration of Claimed Inventions as a Whole

U.S. Supreme Court buildingLast week, CPIP Senior Scholar Adam Mossoff and I filed an amicus brief on behalf of 15 law professors, including CPIP’s Devlin Hartline, Chris Holman, Sean O’Connor, Kristen Osenga, and Mark Schultz. We urge the Supreme Court to grant certiorari in TDE Petroleum v. AKM Enterprise and reaffirm that any analysis of an invention must be of the claimed invention as a whole.

Unfortunately, lower courts and the Patent & Trademark Office have been applying a test of patent eligibility that allows breaking up an invention into parts and then analyzing the parts separately. Sometimes, as in the case here, a court will completely ignore an element of the invention. This needs to be fixed. Any invention is defined by its entirety, not by its isolated parts.

As I discussed before, TDE Petroleum’s patent claims a method of operating an oil rig. Part of the method uses software. But as the claim discussed in our brief makes clear, the end result of the method is control of a physical well with a drill running inside the earth. However, the courts that have looked at this patent so far have only considered the function of certain software elements and pretend the oil rig is not important. Such unimpeded dissection of claims makes it easy to invalidate important patented innovation notwithstanding the contribution to the field.

The full amicus brief can be found here. In addition to showing that the claimed invention is a method of operating an oil rig, we show why the claim precisely parallels a claim to a method of molding rubber found patent eligible by the Supreme Court 36 years ago.

Categories
Copyright Patent Law Trade Secrets Trademarks Uncategorized

Scalia Law Alums Help Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic Draft Influential Amicus Brief

jennifer-atkins
Jennifer Atkins of Cloudigy Law

Last spring, the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic at Scalia Law School filed an amicus brief on behalf of intellectual property law scholars in the Fox News v. TVEyes copyright infringement case. Assisting the students on the project was practicing IP attorney and Scalia Law alum Jennifer Atkins, who volunteered her time—and the time of her firm, Cloudigy Law—to work closely with the Clinic to craft a professional and influential brief.

Cloudigy Law is a boutique intellectual property law firm located in Tysons Corner, Virginia, that was founded by Antigone Peyton, another Scalia Law alum. Expanding the firm’s reach into all areas of IP law, Antigone recruited other Scalia Law alums including Clyde Findley and Jennifer Atkins to build a “cloud-based” intellectual property and technology firm that stresses client communication and offers an innovative service model that big law firms can’t match. Cloudigy’s attorneys stay on top of current developments in IP law through their Decoding IP blog, which includes podcast discussions of the issues important to their clients.

As a result of its unique approach and dedication to the client, Cloudigy has grown to eleven attorneys and technologists who offer high quality strategic advice to help identify and protect IP and realize its value. The firm uses sophisticated enterprise collaboration technology to effectively share knowledge and deadlines within its litigation team and with its clients. Cloudigy values the relationships it has built with smaller clients, and it has adapted and responded to changes in the legal services market to suit their needs.

Jennifer got involved with the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic through her Scalia Law alumni connections, partnering with Clinic Director and CPIP Senior Scholar Sandra Aistars and meeting with students to discuss project strategy. Because of her background as an appellate clerk for the Honorable E. Grady Jolly at the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and her extensive appellate practice experience as a partner with Kirkland & Ellis, Jennifer was a perfect match for the Clinic—according to Professor Aistars, Jennifer was an “ideal and impressive partner.”

Emphasizing the role of an amicus brief in litigation, Jennifer encouraged the students to assume perspectives different than those of the parties and to utilize effective writing techniques to produce an outstanding brief that would be useful to the court. As the students worked through drafts, Jennifer made valuable suggestions that helped them get at the underlying policy issues and flesh out a persuasive argument. Working alongside a seasoned professional through the amicus brief process was a truly invaluable experience for the Clinic students and something that they’ll draw on as they begin their legal careers. Jennifer also expressed her appreciation for the opportunity to guide the students through the process, saying it was a “great way for us to give back to our law school.”

As the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic begins another semester of work, connections with Scalia Law alums and IP professionals* will continue to provide the students with unique opportunities and to foster the mutually beneficial relationships that represent Scalia Law’s esteemed IP law program.

*Lawyers and IP professionals who would like the Clinic to weigh in on a pro-artist copyright case or who would like to explore other volunteer opportunities with the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic may contact Sandra Aistars at saistars@gmu.edu.

Categories
Uncategorized

The MovieTube Litigation: Who Needs SOPA?

Cross-posted from the Law Theories blog.

On July 24th, six major studios sued MovieTube for direct and indirect copyright infringement, trademark infringement, and unfair competition in the Southern District of New York. MovieTube is alleged to have operated twenty-nine foreign-based websites that streamed, displayed, and uploaded infringing copies of the studios’ copyrighted works. Not knowing the defendants’ true identities, the studios brought suit against the “John Does, Jane Does and/or XYZ Corporations” that allegedly operated the MovieTube sites. The district court allowed the studios to serve process on the defendants via email.

The remedies being sought by the studios have raised a few feathers. MovieTube operates out of Singapore, and the studios argue that it is “essential . . . that injunctive relief include orders directed at third parties whose services enable Defendants’ activities.” Since MovieTube relies on “domain name registries and other third-party service providers and their network of affiliates to carry out their activities,” the studios are seeking an order “requiring that: (i) registries and registrars disable the domain names used to operate the MovieTube Websites and (ii) third-party service providers cease providing services to the MovieTube Websites and Defendants in relation to the Infringing Copies.”

While some have suggested that the studios “didn’t get the memo that SOPA failed,” I think the real question is, “Who needs SOPA?” Everyone knows that SOPA never became law, and the studios haven’t brought any claims under SOPA. Moreover, even if SOPA were the law, it would make no difference here. SOPA would have only provided private rightholders with statutory remedies against a “payment network provider” or an “Internet advertising service.” Only actions brought by the Attorney General would qualify for statutory remedies against service providers such as registrars, registries, and search engines.

The studios instead argue that the court’s power to issue such orders comes from:

(i) 17 U.S.C. § 502, which allows a court to “grant temporary and final injunctions on such terms as it may deem reasonable to prevent or restrain infringement of a copyright;”

(ii) 15 U.S.C § 1116(a), which provides for an injunction “according to the principles of equity and upon such terms as the court may deem reasonable, to prevent the violation of any right of the registrant of a mark registered in the Patent and Trademark Office or to prevent a violation under subsection (a), (c), or (d) of section 43 [15 U.S.C. § 1125];”

(iii) Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d)(2), which imbues courts with the power to issue injunctions that bind parties, parties’ officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys and any “other persons who are in active concert or participation with” any such individuals or entities;

(iv) the Court’s “inherent equitable power to issue provisional remedies ancillary to its authority to provide final equitable relief,” which encompasses injunctions as broad as restraining defendants’ assets to preserve them for disgorgement of profits and equitable accounting . . . and/or

(v) the Court’s power pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1651 (the All Writs Act) to issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of its jurisdiction and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.

The question is whether the court has the power under these authorities to issue an injunction against MovieTube that binds third-party service providers. SOPA has nothing to do with it.[1]

After the studios filed suit, the MovieTube defendants shut down their operations. Nonetheless, a group of tech giants, comprised of Google, Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter, and Yahoo, filed an amicus brief arguing that “the proposed injunction violates Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65 and the safe-harbor provisions of the DMCA.” Specifically, the amici claim that an injunction against MovieTube couldn’t bind third parties such as themselves because Rule 65(d)(2) and Section 512(j) of the DMCA wouldn’t allow it.[2] I don’t think either of these two arguments holds much water, especially for service providers like these amici that link to or host infringing material.

Blockowicz and Rule 65(d)(2)

Rule 65(d)(2) provides that only three groups may be bound by an injunction:

(2) Persons Bound. The order binds only the following who receive actual notice of it by personal service or otherwise:

(A) the parties;

(B) the parties’ officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys; and

(C) other persons who are in active concert or participation with anyone described in Rule 65(d)(2)(A) or (B).

The amici argue that Rule 65(d)(2) can’t bind third parties like them since it cannot be shown that they are in “active concert or participation” with the MovieTube defendants. In support, they cite the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Blockowicz v. Williams. The issue there was whether nonparty Ripoff Report was bound by an injunction against some of its users that had posted defamatory material to its site. Ripoff Report conceded “actual notice” of the injunction, but it argued that it was not in “active concert” with its defaming users.

The Seventh Circuit agreed:

Actions that aid and abet in violating the injunction must occur after the injunction is imposed for the purposes of Rule 65(d)(2)(C), and certainly after the wrongdoing that led to the injunction occurred. This requirement is apparent from Rule 65(d)(2)’s text, which requires that nonparties have “actual notice” of the injunction. A non-party who engages in conduct before an injunction is imposed cannot have “actual notice” of the injunction at the time of their relevant conduct. . . .

Further, the [plaintiffs] presented no evidence that [Ripoff Report] took any action to aid or abet the defendants in violating the injunction after it was issued, either by enforcing the Terms of Service or in any other way. . . . [Ripoff Report’s] mere inactivity is simply inadequate to render them aiders and abettors in violating the injunction.

Thus, Ripoff Report was not in “active concert” with its users by simply continuing to host the defamatory material that had been posted to its site before the injunction was issued. The amici here claim that this same logic applies to them: “[E]ven if Plaintiffs had shown that the Neutral Service Providers rendered services to the Defendants, merely continuing to provide those services cannot amount to acting in concert.’”

Blockowicz is not binding precedent here, of course, but the district court could find it persuasive. I think it’s clear that the Seventh Circuit reached the wrong conclusion. The test is whether the third party has actual notice of the injunction and then aids and abets the enjoined defendant. It’s black letter law that anyone who publishes or republishes defaming material is strictly liable for the defamation. On the other hand, a distributor is not liable as a publisher unless it knows or has reason to know that the material is defamatory.

For example, a book publisher is strictly liable for publishing a defamatory book. A bookseller that sells that defamatory book is not liable for the defamation unless it knows the material is defamatory. If it learns of the defamatory nature of the book and then continues to sell it, the bookseller is considered a publisher and is liable for the defamation along with the book publisher. In other words, the passive book distributor becomes an active aider and abettor of the book publisher once it gains knowledge of the defamation and fails to stop selling the book.

Of course, this rule from the physical world does not apply when it’s done on the internet. Section 230(c)(1) of the Communications Decency Act provides: “No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.” While the statute on its face only grants immunity to a “publisher,” courts have interpreted it broadly to apply to a “distributor” as well. As the Fourth Circuit put it in the leading case, “distributor liability. . . is merely a subset, or a species, of publisher liability, and is therefore also foreclosed by § 230.”

Section 230’s immunity for a publisher extends to a distributor with knowledge because that knowledge transforms the distributor into a publisher. The plaintiffs in Blockowicz could not go after Ripoff Report directly because Section 230 granted it immunity from civil liability. The reason it had such immunity was precisely because the knowledge of the defamation transformed it from a passive distributor to an active publisher. The plaintiffs instead went after the defamers directly, asking the court to bind Ripoff Report under Rule 65(d)(2). The Seventh Circuit’s refusal to stop Ripoff Report from aiding and abetting the enjoined defendants left the plaintiffs without a remedy—an absurd result.

Turning back to MovieTube, the amici claim that an injunction against the defendants could not bind them since they wouldn’t be aiding and abetting the defendants. This is simply not true. As with defamation, it’s black letter law that a service provider that knowingly provides material support to an infringer is contributorily liable for the infringement. In other words, the passive service provider becomes an active aider and abettor of the infringer once it gains knowledge of the underlying infringement and fails to act. This is why service providers such as the amici remove infringing material once they receive notice that they are linking to or hosting it.

When it comes to copyright infringement, the amici cannot hide behind the broad immunities of Section 230. They instead can only hope to qualify for the limitations on liability found in Section 512 of the DMCA. Of course, these safe harbors don’t protect the amici if they learn of infringing material on their systems and fail to remove it. Under Section 512(d)(1), a search engine such as Google or Yahoo does not get immunity unless it, “upon obtaining . . . knowledge or awareness” of infringing material, “acts expeditiously to remove, or disable access to, the material.”[3] The same holds true under Section 512(c)(1) for sites like Facebook, Tumblr, and Twitter that host content uploaded by their users.

When a service provider learns of infringing material on its system and fails to remove it, it becomes an aider and abettor that is jointly and severally liable with the direct infringer. But this is only true when that service provider’s contribution to the infringement is material. The DMCA codified exclusions to the safe harbors for contributions that were decidedly material, such as linking to or hosting infringing material. However, things get hazier at the margins. For example, a panel of the Ninth Circuit once split over whether a credit card processor materially contributes by servicing an infringing site. Over the vociferous dissent of Judge Alex Kozinski,[4] the two-judge majority held that it did not.

The problem for Google, Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter, and Yahoo is that there is no doubt that their failure to act once they receive notice of infringing material unquestionably constitutes aiding and abetting. Not only is it enough to find them in “active concert” with their users under Rule 65(d)(2), it’s enough to hold them contributorily liable for the infringement. They aren’t like a credit card processor, where the materiality of the contribution is in doubt. It’s well-settled that what the amici do—linking to and hosting copyrighted works—constitutes material contribution. That’s why the safe harbors under Section 512, which codified the case law, don’t apply to service providers such as them that fail to remove infringing material upon notice.


[1] I get that many people are just playing the SOPA card for rhetorical effect. But some are also arguing that SOPA would have provided rightholders with these remedies, and since SOPA is not the law, the studios therefore don’t have these remedies available. This argument is simply fallacious. With or without SOPA, the issue remains whether the court has the authority to grant the studios the requested relief.

[2] The amici do not address the existence of such authority under the Lanham Act or under the court’s inherent equitable power, and neither do I. They do argue that the All Writs Act provides no such authority, but I leave that argument aside.

[3] See also Perfect 10, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., 508 F.3d 1146, 1172 (9th Cir. 2007) (“Accordingly, we hold that a computer system operator can be held contributorily liable if it has actual knowledge that specific infringing material is available using its system and can take simple measures to prevent further damage to copyrighted works yet continues to provide access to infringing works. . . . Applying our test, Google could be held contributorily liable if it had knowledge that infringing Perfect 10 images were available using its search engine, could take simple measures to prevent further damage to Perfect 10’s copyrighted works, and failed to take such steps.”) (quotations and citations omitted).

[4] See Perfect 10, Inc. v. Visa Int’l Serv. Ass’n, 494 F.3d 788, 816 (9th Cir. 2007) (Kozinski, J., dissenting) (“Defendants here are alleged to provide an essential service to infringers, a service that enables infringement on a massive scale. Defendants know about the infringements; they profit from them; they are intimately and causally involved in a vast number of infringing transactions that could not be consummated if they refused to process the payments; they have ready means to stop the infringements.”).

Categories
Uncategorized

Federal Circuit Should Reconsider Ariosa v. Sequenom: The Panel Decision Threatens Modern Innovation

Here’s a brief excerpt of a post by Devlin Hartline that was published on IPWatchdog.

In an amicus brief co-authored by Kevin Noonan of McDonnell Boehnen Hulbert & Berghoff LLP and Professor Adam Mossoff of George Mason University School of Law, twenty-three law professors urge the Federal Circuit to take a second look at the innovation-threatening panel decision in Ariosa v. Sequenom. They filed their amicus brief on Thursday, August 27, 2015, in support of Sequenom’s petition for rehearing en banc.

Before turning to the important points made by these amici, I’ll first explain what the Sequenom case is about and how the Federal Circuit panel reached the wrong conclusion in striking down Sequenom’s important innovation for diagnostic testing. . . .

To read the rest of this post, please visit IPWatchdog.

 

Categories
Administrative Agency Copyright High Tech Industry Innovation International Law Internet Inventors ITC Patent Law Remedies Software Patent Trademarks Uncategorized

Digital Goods and the ITC: The Most Important Case That Nobody is Talking About

circuit boardBy Devlin Hartline & Matthew Barblan

In its ClearCorrect opinion from early 2014, the International Trade Commission (ITC) issued cease and desist orders preventing the importation of infringing digital goods into the United States. The ITC’s 5-1 opinion has since been appealed to the Federal Circuit, with oral argument scheduled for the morning of August 11th, and the case has drawn a number of amicus briefs on both sides. Despite receiving little attention in media or policy circles, the positive consequences of the ITC’s decision are significant.

This case is important because the problem of the importation of infringing digital goods continues to grow. The ITC’s authority over digital goods can be a powerful tool for creators and innovators against a threat that has only gotten worse, and it would permit the ITC to go about doing what it’s always done in the intellectual property space—protecting our borders from the threat of foreign infringing goods. Interestingly, a look at the proceedings in the ITC and the briefs now before the Federal Circuit reveals how some parties now opposing the ITC’s authority over digital goods had argued for the opposite just a few years back.

The ITC Proceedings

This case began in March of 2012, when Align Technology Inc. filed a complaint with the ITC alleging that its only competitor, ClearCorrect Operating LLC, violated Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 by importing digital goods that infringed several of its orthodontic patents. Section 337, codified at 19 U.S.C. § 1337, makes unlawful the “importation . . . of articles” that infringe “valid and enforceable” patents, copyrights, or trademarks, and it declares that the ITC “shall investigate any alleged violation of this section on complaint under oath or upon its initiative.”

There are two statutory remedies available to a complainant in an ITC proceeding. The first is an exclusion order, which dictates that “the articles concerned . . . be excluded from entry into the United States.” Exclusion orders are issued by the ITC and enforced by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection. The second remedy is a cease and desist order, which directs any person violating Section 337 “to cease and desist from engaging in the unfair methods or acts involved.” The ITC enforces its own cease and desist orders through the imposition of civil penalties, recoverable in the federal district courts.

Align’s complaint with the ITC involved its patented Invisalign System, a “proprietary method for treating crooked and misaligned teeth” using modern plastic aligners instead of old-fashioned metal braces. Align alleged that ClearCorrect violated Section 337 by importing “digital models, digital data and treatment plans that . . . infringe or induce infringement of” its patents, and it asked the ITC to “issue permanent cease and desist orders” prohibiting ClearCorrect from importing the digital files. In response, ClearCorrect argued that “no articles” had been imported since the digital data associated with the teeth aligners were not themselves “articles.”

This was the primary bone of contention: The ITC only has statutory authority over the “importation . . . of articles,” and if digital goods are not “articles,” then the ITC has no jurisdiction. After an administrative law judge (ALJ) determined that the digital files at issue were indeed “articles” within the meaning of Section 337, ClearCorrect petitioned the ITC to review that determination. The ITC took the case and solicited comments from the public as to whether electronic transmissions are “articles” under Section 337.

The ITC ultimately sided 5-to-1 with Align. On the threshold issue of whether electronic transmissions constitute “articles” under Section 337, the ITC affirmed the ALJ’s conclusion that they do: “[T]he statutory construction of ‘articles’ that hews most closely to the language of the statute and implements the avowed Congressional purpose for Section 337 encompasses within its scope the electronic transmission of the digital data sets at issue in this investigation.” This was consistent, said the ITC, with the “legislative purpose . . . to prevent every type of unfair act in connection with imported articles . . . and to strengthen protection of intellectual property rights.”

Appeal to the Federal Circuit

Having lost at the ITC, ClearCorrect appealed to the Federal Circuit. There, it focused its arguments on the statutory question of whether digital goods constitute “articles” under Section 337.

Public Knowledge and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed an amicus brief calling the ITC’s decision “sweeping and unprecedented,” and they urged the Federal Circuit to reject the ITC’s “overzealous construction” of the term “articles.” Aside from the statutory issue, the digital rights groups suggested that there were “important reasons” why Section 337 “ought not cover telecommunications.” They stressed the “real and unanswered questions about the enforcement role” ISPs would play, and they noted how ISPs “could be required to actively block transmission of certain content.”

It’s worth noting that no ISPs were involved in the ClearCorrect litigation—only ClearCorrect itself was subject to a cease and desist order. But this ISP question seems to be the reason why the case drew their attention: The real concern wasn’t whether ClearCorrect had infringed Align’s patents; it was whether the ITC had the authority to issue cease and desist orders to ISPs. This sentiment was echoed in an amicus brief by the Internet Association, which includes Google, arguing that the internet “should not be restricted to national borders” because of “the unforeseeable but far-reaching results that would follow.”

The policy arguments made by Public Knowledge, the EFF, Google, and others were essentially circular: The internet should be “open” so we shouldn’t let the ITC “close” it. But that begs the question of what the ideal “open” internet looks like, and what illegal activities should or should not be tolerated in the digital space. We shut our borders to infringing physical goods. What makes infringing digital goods so special? A right is only as good as the remedies available to enforce it, so why should we give short shrift to the property rights of artists, creators, and innovators?

Align’s intervenor brief took the groups to task: “The amici briefs supporting ClearCorrect brim with hyperbole.” Align noted that the ITC “only asserts jurisdiction over the ‘articles” that are electronically transmitted, not over all acts of transmission.” It pointed out that it is the “owner, importer, or consignee” of the “articles” that violates Section 337, not the carrier, and it said that the claim that the ITC could issue cease and desist orders against ISPs for “data transmission activities” is “baseless.”

Supporting the ITC’s understanding of “articles,” an amicus brief filed by the Association of American Publishers explained that the ITC’s “authority over electronically transmitted copyrighted works is critical because . . . there has been rapid growth in digital publications.” It pointed to the rise in digital piracy “at the expense of U.S. creators and innovators.” It urged that affirming the ITC’s decision was “crucial” since it “will help ensure that unfair trade practices abroad do not harm the livelihoods” of those that “rely on copyright protection.”

An amicus brief filed by Nokia supporting the ITC also noted the importance of protecting intellectual property: “Stripping the Commission of its long-exercised authority over electronic transmissions could gravely damage the protection of valid patent rights through Section 337 investigations.” It pointed out that holding otherwise would lead to “absurd results” since the ITC would have jurisdiction over software “imported on a USB stick or CD-ROM” but not software disseminated by “electronic transmission.” Such a result would be “wholly contrary to the remedial purpose of Section 337.” Nokia concluded that the ITC’s “authority should not wax and wane as technology develops new methods of dissemination.”

The MPAA and the RIAA likewise submitted an amicus brief supporting the ITC. The industry groups pointed out that “illegal downloads and illegal streaming” account for most of the infringement losses they suffer, and they argued that “copyright protection is essential to the health” of their industries. They urged the Federal Circuit to affirm the ITC because “Section 337 is a powerful mechanism for stopping illegal electronic imports,” and doing so “would give effect to the intent of Congress that Section 337 protect U.S. industries from all manner of unfair acts in international trade.”

Who has the better argument here? Obviously, both sides argued that the text of Section 337 favored their positions. ClearCorrect and its supporters claimed that “articles” should be interpreted narrowly to include only tangible goods, while the ITC and its supporters wanted a read of the statute that allows the ITC to continue to fulfill its mission even as new technology and methods of trade become more common. What may come as a surprise, however, is that many of the groups now seeking to limit the ITC’s jurisdiction were arguing just the opposite a few years ago.

Remember the OPEN Act?

It may seem like ages ago, but it’s been less than four years since Congress debated the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the PROTECT IP Act. Those two bills would have explicitly afforded artists and creators robust tools to use in the federal district courts against foreign rogue sites that aim their infringements at the United States. Many vocal opponents of the bills supported an alternative approach: the OPEN Act. Under the OPEN Act, the ITC would have been given explicit authority to investigate complaints against foreign rogue sites that import infringing digital goods into the United States.

The OPEN Act’s sponsors set up a website at keepthewebopen.com where members of the public could see the text of the bill and suggest changes to it. The website included an FAQ to familiarize supporters with the thinking behind the OPEN Act. As to why online infringement was an issue of international trade, the FAQ pointed out that “there is little difference between downloading a movie from a foreign website and importing a product from a foreign company.”

When advocating for the OPEN Act as a good alternative to SOPA and the PROTECT IP Act, the bill’s sponsors touted the ITC as being a great venue for tackling the problems of foreign rogue sites. Among the claimed virtues were its vast experience, transparency, due process protection, consistency, and independence:

For well over 80 years, the independent International Trade Commission (ITC) has been the venue by which U.S. rightsholders have obtained relief from unfair imports, such as those that violate intellectual property rights. Under Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930 – which governs how the ITC investigates rightsholders’ request for relief – the agency already employs a transparent process that gives parties to the investigation, and third party interests, a chance to be heard. The ITC’s process and work is highly regarded as independent and free from political influence and the department already has a well recognized expertise in intellectual property and trade law that could be expanded to the import of digital goods.

The Commission already employs important safeguards to ensure that rightsholders do not abuse their right to request a Commission investigation and the Commission may self-initiate investigations. Keeping them in charge of determining whether unfair imports – like those that violate intellectual property rights – [sic] would ensure consistent enforcement of Intellectual Property rights and trade law.

Some of the groups now arguing that the ITC shouldn’t have jurisdiction over digital goods openly supported the OPEN Act. Back in late 2011, the EFF stated that it was “glad to learn that a bipartisan group of congressional representatives has come together to formulate a real alternative, called the OPEN Act.” The EFF liked the bill because the “ITC’s process . . . is transparent, quick, and effective” and “both parties would have the opportunity to participate and the record would be public.” It emphasized how the “process would include many important due process protections, such as effective notice to the site of the complaint and ensuing investigation.”

Google likewise thought that giving the ITC jurisdiction over digital goods was a great idea. In a letter posted to its blog in early 2012, Google claimed that “there are better ways to address piracy than to ask U.S. companies to censor the Internet,” and it explicitly stated that it “supports alternative approaches like the OPEN Act.” Google also signed onto a letter promoting the virtues of the ITC: “This approach targets foreign rogue sites without inflicting collateral damage on legitimate, law-abiding U.S. Internet companies by bringing well-established International trade remedies to bear on this problem.”

Conclusion

The ITC has been protecting our borders against the importation of infringing goods for nearly a century now. As technology and trade evolves, it makes perfect sense to let the ITC continue to do its job by protecting our borders against the importation of infringing digital goods. This is an important tool for our innovators and creators in combating the ever-growing flood of foreign infringing goods.

The fact that many of those who supported the OPEN Act are now supporting ClearCorrect suggests that for them this appeal isn’t really about whether digital goods are “articles” under Section 337. The ITC is an appropriate venue for all of the reasons the supporters of the OPEN Act publicized just over three years ago: The process is transparent, there’s ample due process protections, the commissioners are experienced and independent, and their decisions are consistent.

As the 5-1 opinion suggests, affirming the ITC’s decision should be an easy choice for the Federal Circuit. Let’s hope the Federal Circuit does the right thing for our artists and innovators.