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Copyright

Professor Ross E. Davies on the “Ebb and Flow in Safe Harbors”

shelves full of booksCPIP has published a new policy brief by Professor Ross E. Davies entitled Ebb and Flow in Safe Harbors: Some Exemplary Experiences Under One Old Statute and One New. Prof. Davies teaches administrative law, civil procedure, comparative criminal law, contracts, employment discrimination, legal history, legal profession, and torts at George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School in Arlington, Virginia, and the policy brief is the product of our two Safe Harbors and Private Ordering in the Creative Industries research symposia that were held in 2019.

In the policy brief, Prof. Davies compares and contrasts two seemingly unrelated statutory provisions that are often referred to as “safe harbors”—despite that term not appearing in either statute: the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) as codified in Title 29, and the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act (OCILLA)—otherwise known as Title II of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)—as codified in Title 17.

The introduction and conclusion are copied below:

Introduction

What do a grand, rather old statute rooted in the gritty world of coal and steel and smokestacks (the National Labor Relations Act, also known as the Wagner Act) and a splendid, rather new statute rooted in the sparkly world of silicon and plastic and computers (the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act, Title II of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act) have in common? A lot, of course, including this: neither contains “safe harbors” identified as such by Congress. And both contain “safe harbors” identified as such by other government actors. This article will explore some aspects of judges’ and bureaucrats’ discovery and development of safe harbors, comparing their long-term experience with the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and their shorter-term experience with the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act (OCILLA).

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Safe Harbors on the Horizon

Perhaps the best that can be said about safe harbors—and this is good, at least some of the time—is that they are rhetorically irrebuttable exemptions from broad prohibitions, and practically rebuttable presumptions subject to interpretive exceptions and glosses applied by courts and agencies in light of the policies underlying both the exemptions and the prohibitions. And that is what makes safe harbors distinctive: the duality of those policies and the laws implementing them. The samples from the NLRA suggest the endlessness of the search for balance between prohibitions and exemptions of this process (like much of statutory interpretation), and the samples from OCILLA suggest legislatures are not well-equipped to specify that balance clearly for judges upfront. And that may explain where we started, with the scarcity of “safe harbors” in statutes. Of greater practical importance may be the apparent long-term tendency of courts to treat safe harbors as havens for sailors (of whatever sorts) traveling in good faith, not for pirates (of any sort), no matter what disguises they don.

To read the policy brief, please click here.

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Copyright Infringement Internet Uncategorized

Second Circuit Deepens Red Flag Knowledge Circuit Split in Vimeo

a gavel lying on a table in front of booksThe Second Circuit’s recent opinion in Capitol Records v. Vimeo is, to put it mildly, pretty bad. From its convoluted reasoning that copyrights under state law for pre-1972 sound recordings are limited by the DMCA safe harbors, despite the explicit statement in Section 301(c) that “rights or remedies” under state law “shall not be annulled or limited” by the Copyright Act, to its gutting of red flag knowledge by limiting it to the nearly-impossible situation where a service provider actually knows that a specific use of an entire copyrighted work is neither fair nor licensed yet somehow doesn’t also surmise that it’s infringing, it’s hard to see how either result is compelled by the statutes, much less how it was intended by Congress. On the latter point, the Second Circuit in essence has written red flag knowledge out of the statute, reducing the DMCA to a mere notice-and-takedown regime. The reality is that Congress expected red flag knowledge to do far more work, incentivizing service providers to take action in the face of a red flag—even without a notice.

If there’s any good to come from Vimeo, it might only be that the Second Circuit has now deepened the circuit split with the Ninth Circuit in Columbia Pictures v. Fung on two issues related to red flag knowledge. Under the statute, red flag knowledge exists when a service provider is “aware of facts or circumstances from which infringing activity is apparent.” The two circuits are already split on the issue of whether red flag knowledge must pertain to the particular works that are being sued over in the suit. And now with Vimeo, the circuits are split on the issue of whether a service provider can gain red flag knowledge just by looking at an infringing work. The deeper the circuit split, the greater the chance an appeal will make it to the Supreme Court, which would hopefully clean up the current red flag knowledge mess.

In Fung, the defendant, Gary Fung, operated several piracy havens, including isoHunt, TorrentBox, Podtropolis, and eDonkey. The district court found Fung liable for inducement under MGM v. Grokster and denied him safe harbor protection under the DMCA. The district court’s decision came in 2009, two years before the Ninth Circuit first held in UMG v. Shelter Capital that red flag knowledge requires “specific knowledge of particular infringing activity.” It also came two-and-a-half years before the Second Circuit held in Viacom v. YouTube that red flag knowledge is only relevant if it pertains to the works-in-suit. Regardless, since the vast majority of content available on Fung’s sites was copyrighted, including specific content that he himself had downloaded, the district court held that Fung hadn’t even raised a triable issue of fact as to whether he had red flag knowledge. The fact that none of the works he had been sued over were the same as the ones he had been found to have red flag knowledge of was irrelevant.

On appeal, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s holding that Fung had red flag knowledge as a matter of law. The opinion came out just one week after the same panel of judges issued a superseding opinion in UMG v. Shelter Capital reiterating that red flag knowledge requires “specific knowledge of particular infringing activity.” Importantly, in applying that standard to Fung, the Ninth Circuit did not say that the specific knowledge had to be of the particular works-in-suit. For whatever reason, Fung had failed to argue otherwise. Google even filed an amicus brief supporting the plaintiffs but nonetheless arguing that “the DMCA’s knowledge standards are specific and focus on the particular material that the plaintiff is suing about.” Apparently unaware that this actually helped his case, Fung filed a supplemental brief calling Google’s argument “fallacious.”

In the Ninth Circuit’s opinion, even though red flag knowledge had to relate to particular infringing activity, that activity did not have to involve the particular works-in-suit. Moreover, the Ninth Circuit held that the “material in question was sufficiently current and well-known that it would have been objectively obvious to a reasonable person” that it was “both copyrighted and not licensed to random members of the public.” Since Fung failed to expeditiously remove the particular material of which he had red flag knowledge, he lost his safe harbor protection across the board. Thus, the Ninth Circuit in Fung held that: (1) red flag knowledge that strips a service provider of its entire safe harbor protection does not have to pertain to the particular works-in-suit, and (2) material can be so “current and well-known” that its infringing nature would be “objectively obvious to a reasonable person.”

The Second Circuit in Vimeo parted ways with the Ninth Circuit on these two holdings. Since the “evidence was not shown to relate to any of the videos at issue in this suit,” the Second Circuit held that it was “insufficient to justify a finding of red flag knowledge . . . as to those specific videos.” The Second Circuit thus applied the red flag knowledge standard on a work-by-work basis, in direct contrast to the Ninth Circuit in Fung. Also, the Second Circuit held that “the mere fact that a video contains all or substantially all of a piece of recognizable, or even famous, copyrighted music” and was “viewed in its entirety” by an “employee of a service provider” was not enough “to sustain the copyright owner’s burden of showing red flag knowledge.” The court added that even “an employee who was a copyright expert cannot be expected to know when use of a copyrighted song has been licensed.” So while the Ninth Circuit said it would have been objectively obvious to Fung that particular works were infringing, the Second Circuit in Vimeo set the bar far higher.

Curiously, the Second Circuit in Vimeo didn’t even mention Fung, despite the fact that it was deepening the circuit split with the Ninth Circuit. One wonders whether the omission was intentional. Either way, the circuit split has only gotten deeper. While in the Ninth Circuit an infringement can be so obvious that a court can find that a service provider had red flag knowledge without even sending it to a jury, the Second Circuit says that courts can’t let a jury decide whether a service provider had red flag knowledge even with the most obvious of infringements. And while in the Ninth Circuit a service provider loses its entire safe harbor for failing to remove an obvious infringement that it hasn’t been sued over, the Second Circuit says that red flag knowledge has to be determined on a work-by-work basis for only the works-in-suit. Given this growing divide between the Second and Ninth Circuits, it seems like only a matter of time before the Supreme Court will weigh in on the red flag knowledge standard. And if the Court does finally weigh in, one hopes it will put common sense back into the DMCA.

Categories
Conferences Copyright Innovation Internet Uncategorized

Last Chance to Register for the Copyright and Technology NYC 2016 Conference

Tomorrow is the last chance to register for the Copyright and Technology NYC 2016 Conference. The conference will be held next Tuesday, January 19th, at New York University’s Kimmel Center.

In addition to Matthew Barblan and Devlin Hartline from CPIP, participants will come from the following organizations:

  • ASCAP
  • BMI
  • CBS
  • CCIA
  • Charter Communications
  • Cisco
  • Copyright Alliance
  • Copyright Clearance Center
  • Elsevier
  • Entertainment Software Assn.
  • Facebook
  • Getty Images
  • HBO
  • Imagem
  • NBA (National Basketball Association)
  • NMPA
  • RIAA
  • Scholastic
  • Sony Music Entertainment
  • SoundCloud
  • SoundExchange
  • Thomson Reuters
  • Time Warner
  • Twitter
  • U.S. Copyright Office
  • U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
  • UFC
  • Universal Music Group
  • Vevo
  • Viacom
  • Warner Music Group
  • Warner/Chappell Music

You can meet these people and many more!

To register for the conference, please click here.

Categories
Conferences Copyright Innovation Internet Uncategorized

Join Us at the Copyright and Technology NYC 2016 Conference on January 19

Co-produced by GiantSteps, the Copyright Society, and Musonomics, the Copyright and Technology NYC 2016 Conference will be held at New York University’s Kimmel Center on Tuesday, January 19th. CPIP is a proud Media Sponsor of the event.

The conference program is available here, and registration is still open here.

Jacqueline Charlesworth, General Counsel and Associate Register of Copyrights at the U.S. Copyright Office, will be the keynote speaker. The timing is very fortuitous, as the Copyright Office just last week announced a new study to evaluate the effectiveness of the DMCA’s safe harbor provisions in Section 512 of the Copyright Act. Among the issues to be studied are the “costs and burdens of the notice-and-takedown process” and “how successfully section 512 addresses online infringement.” These very issues will be discussed at the conference.

The conference panels will discuss topics including live streaming, notice-and-staydown, copyright management information, safe harbor eligibility, collective licensing, and mass digitization. CPIP’s Executive Director Matthew Barblan will moderate the panel on safe harbor eligibility, and CPIP’s Assistant Director Devlin Hartline will be a panelist discussing notice-and-staydown.

We hope you will join us for an exciting and intellectually rewarding event!